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FARMINGTON, UT, United States
I am a traveler, artist, photographer, writer, and nature lover who likes to be alone. Always ready for an adventure, but often scared to step outside my comfort zone. It's time I face my fears. This blog is about all of that and then some. It's Simply My Life put into words and pictures. It's me discovering me. Come along for the ride!

Monday, May 7, 2007

I'm Neither an Outcast Nor a Mother

I don’t have children nor do I want any. I have absolutely no maternal instincts unless it’s to shelter an orphaned kitten. I have no regrets and don’t feel like I’ve missed out on anything. I never realized, however, just how segregated from society my choice has made me until I attended a coworker’s barbecue. Some quick introductions were made when my fiancé and I arrived, but for the most part we were left on our own to mingle. I work with most of the men that were there, but I didn’t know any of the women except for one.

Situations like this make me very uncomfortable. I hate having to make small talk with strangers and intended to stay close to my fiancé. He, along with all the other men however, quickly migrated to the garage leaving the woman folk to socialize in the living room. I was in a dilemma. Should I venture into male territory and cause a ripple in the testosterone level or suck it up and hang with the ladies? I decided to stick with the girls and plopped down on the sofa to chit chat with complete strangers.

The one woman I knew, Melissa, had her three-week old infant with her. I acknowledged he was a cutie-pie, which he was, and made the obligatory goo-goo gee-gee noises and poked his little belly, but beyond that what else was there to say? Apparently there was plenty. After a few minutes my urge for a very strong drink became unbearable and I thought my head would explode. Gross things were being discussed in such detail that I almost vomited. Twice. A conversation about Sue’s water breaking and how she thought she had just wet her pants lasted nearly ten-minutes. Then Melissa plopped out her boob and started nursing, although she had the graciousness to cover herself with a blanket once the baby was in position, but still…Yuck! A discussion about the benefits of breast feeding soon followed.

I had no idea what these women were talking about since I have never experienced anything remotely associated with pregnancy, child birth, or child rearing. At first I tried to be involved, adding a ‘wow’ or ‘really?’ in all the right places, but it was awkward. I even thought about telling the story of how I fell off the porch when I was a toddler and caved in my forehead, but changed my mind. It didn’t seem like it would be appreciated among this group of strangers. There was absolutely nothing I could add to the conversation. I tried hard, but when the topic turned to diaper changing and all the crap (literally) that comes out of babies, my mind began to reel. I couldn’t stay focused enough to contribute an ‘ah’ or even an ‘ew'.

There must be another woman who I could talk to that didn’t have children, but as I looked around I realized I was the only one. There was no escape. Kids were everywhere – cuddled in their mother’s laps, sucking on a boob, crawling on the floor, running around in the backyard. I had nothing in common with these women and felt like such an outsider. The mothers sensed my distress and further isolated me by not including me in their conversation of all-things-children.

If I had had kids I would have easily bonded with these women. I too could be laughing about sleep deprivation, debating the use of disposable diapers versus cloth, complaining how quickly kids outgrow clothes bought just a couple months prior, and experiencing all the joy children bring to the world, but I couldn’t and it made me angry. Angry, because these women made me feel like a pariah, because I had purposely chosen not to add to the already overpopulated planet. And then I felt sad. Not for me, but for those seated around me. After listening to them prattle on and on about their children, I realized they had absolutely no lives of their own.

They couldn’t discuss the latest movie, because they hadn’t been to a movie in years unless it had talking penguins. No one traveled, because it was too much to carry around car seats, strollers, diaper bags, and everything else that accompanied a small child. They didn’t have time to watch sports or television in general, because they were too busy shuttling their kids back and forth to school, dentist appointments, dance class, etc. and when they were able to watch television it was Barney, Blues Clues, Sesame Street or some other children’s program. Their hobbies were their children’s hobbies: soccer, Little League, ballet, swimming. Their world revolved around their children. I wondered what would be left of them once their children were grown and moved away. They could be soccer moms for only so long.

Finally I excused myself and no one seemed to notice, because they were busy raving about ‘onesies’ and how you ‘can never have too many’. I went into the garage in search of my fiancé and found a space where I felt more at ease. Even though I was the only woman in a group of men, I didn’t feel like such an outcast. Here I could talk about current events, sports, work, and about life in general. It was great because not once did we discuss the bodily fluids that randomly spew from small children.