There is a ray of hope for anyone disturbed by the ‘Get Britain Fertile’ campaign ad (pictures of Kate Garroway made up to look old and pregnant, ostensibly a ‘friendly reminder’ that fertility doesn’t last forever, but with an element of ‘aren’t older women gross? Wouldn’t it be, like, disgusting if they were pregnant?’ thrown in too). In an Atlantic article reprinted in the Observer last Sunday, Jean Twenge, a psychology researcher, suggests that our ideas about female fertility are based on questionable data: apparently it’s not as difficult to get pregnant after 35 as you think.
This is welcome news in lots of ways: having a few more years to conceive will undoubtedly make some women’s difficult decisions a bit easier – in Twenge’s case, it would have saved her a lot of angst after getting divorced aged 30 and fearing she wouldn’t have children. And, if we really are skewing data to that extent, it confirms feminist suspicions that there’s something a little bit strange about our obsession with declining female fertility.
But whether the ‘cut off point’ is 35 or 40, there’s still going to be the kind of media ‘baby panic’ that made Twenge so anxious. Her discoveries won’t change our obsession with women ‘missing out’ or the fact that it’s always discussed in terms of neglect or irresponsibility: ‘leaving it too late’, ‘gambling with your biological clock’, ‘wasting your fertile years’ or, from fertility expert Emma Cannon in the Sunday Times Style magazine, ‘like making friends with a great-aunt just before she dies, in the hope she might leave you some money, having ignored her all your life. It’s all too little, too late.’ Seriously.
I’m going to suggest something radical here: maybe not all women are feckless idiots, failing to pay attention to their singular most important asset. Maybe they don’t see themselves solely as baby-making machines. Maybe they’re human beings, trying to organise their lives in a sensible and pleasing way, making good and bad decisions, while negotiating all the different factors beyond their control. Obviously if you’re thinking about having a baby, whether or not you’re physically able to could be something of a dealbreaker – but whether you can afford it, whether you want to, who you want to do it with: these are not exactly negligible concerns either. Taking time to work these things out doesn’t strike me as particularly irresponsible, whereas suggesting that women should have children just because they can really does. Perhaps we don’t like the idea of women controlling their reproductive lives as much as we think we do.
Being able to make choices means that you might make the wrong choice. I can’t say for sure that the Daily Mail is wrong and that there aren’t women out there stroking their flat stomachs, looking around their giant houses, considering their glittering careers and thinking, ‘Maybe I should have got pregnant by that man I met on holiday; my life would be immeasurably better if I had. If only a campaign had reminded me of my ageing womb akin to a great aunt with terminal cancer, perhaps I would have bucked my ideas up and remembered what being a person with a uterus is really about. Sigh.’
Of course, I’m sure plenty of women do regret not having children – just as plenty of women regret having them or not having a career or all the hundreds of other things we can’t reverse due to inconvenient factors like biology or death. But the only solution to regret is having no choices at all. Failing that, you could try remembering that, unless you’re in Sliding Doors, there’s no way of knowing if your ‘alternative life’ would have turned out any better. Try to ignore the ‘baby panic’, and just do the best you can with the situation you find yourself in.
-KMB
There’s also recently been talk of reducing benefits for teenage mothers, to stop teenage girls getting pregnant in order to get free housing. Firstly, I seriously doubt that this is why teenage girls do get pregnant, secondly, it takes two to tango, and thirdly, it seems that getting pregnant when ‘young’ or ‘old’ is socially not ok and you basically have a window between 24-30, otherwise it’s just. not. on.
I have to counter this by saying – very sadly – that actually there are a lot of teenage girls who genuinely do get pregnant for precisely that reason. I had hoped that such “facts” were merely Daily Mail hype, but I volunteer at a youth club and was astonished by the girls there (around 12 or 13) saying brazenly that they weren’t going to bother with exams or homework because they’d just “get pregnant and then the government have to give you a flat”. One of the other volunteers, who is in her 20s but comes from the same background as them and knows girls who did precisely that, said “well they do have to house you, but chances are you’ll end up in some hostel which is basically a crack den living with a load of prostitutes. You don’t just get given a house” but they simply refused to believe her. They kept saying “nah, they can’t do that, they have to give you a place of your own, that’s why I’m just going to have a baby”. It was so sad, and I didn’t know what to say in response.
Anyway, slightly off the point of the article, but I thought it was worth adding nonetheless . . .
At last, the most sensible and balanced view I have seen on women’s fertility in a long time!
I made a choice not to have kids. A choice. And no regrets, no silent tears at nighttime, no mums threatened that I might steal their man, no ball breaking careerista. Nor do I have the perfect life that many imagine childless women enjoy (because we’re so free and feckless). I still don’t know what I want to do when I grow up (I’m nearly 50). But wasn’t that the point of the Women’s Movement –> that the choice was mine to make?
If there is one thing that came from me doing my family tree (ah, unemployment) it’s seeing that even in the past women were having babies later on. My grandmas Mum was 38 and her mother (my Grandamas Grandma) was 43! So suck on that fertility police!!!