“The idea of having children terrifies me. Truly, on a deep level.”
A 31-year-old married woman has opened her heart in a letter to Mamamia. She says that deep down, she’s uncertain if she should be trying to get pregnant or not.
“So all my friends are having babies and my sister has two adorable little girls who I do truly love,” she explains in the letter.
“My friends keep on asking if hubby and I are ‘on the baby train’ and I say yes, because I’m not not on the baby train. We are ‘trying’, but maybe we shouldn’t be.”
The woman, who wants to remain anonymous, is aware that her fear of having children is at least partly due to her mother’s experience.
“I feel pretty responsible, along with my three siblings, for ruining my mum’s life. I mean, she stayed in a relationship with a man she hated for a long time for us, and still now has not left – because it’s ‘too late’, and she’s ‘old and unattractive’.”
Sydney psychotherapist Jodie Gale has worked with women who feel the way this reader feels.
“It’s about helping this woman realise she is not to blame for her mother’s choices,” Gale tells Mamamia. “She has internalised her mother.”
Gale says it’s common for women to feel fearful and uncertain about the idea of becoming mothers.
“You get some women who ‘just know’ they want to be a mother, but I would say the majority have at least some level of ambivalence, even once they’re pregnant.”
She says in therapy, she helps women tease out the underlying reasons for their ambivalence.