The early days - making the big decision
Simonne Walmsley's personal account of trying to start a
family continues. Here she ponders the idea of planning a
pregnancy.
I've had more time than most to plan a pregnancy and consider
what having a baby will mean for me. Things are taking their time
with us. I'm not an expert on any aspect of this, I've just had
more time with my thoughts, and to listen to other
people's. It's been a roller coaster so far, and I'm learning
as I go how to deal with the ups and inevitable downs that come
with trying to conceive (as in exactly how much chocolate you need
in the pantry at any particular stage of your cycle). Perhaps what
I have to say in this column will help you do the same, and that's
why I'm here.
Assuming that you have the luxury of planning, and don't find
yourself, out of the blue, staring bemused and shocked at a
positive pregnancy test wondering how on earth it happened (aside
from the obvious), deciding to start a family is a big
decision. Huge. Probably the biggest decision you will
ever make. It leaves everything else in the dust…deciding to move
in together or get married, buy a house, shift to a new town or
city, embark on a new career, the works. In fact, in the
panic-attack stakes, post-big-decision, you'll be wanting to have a
good supply of paper bags in the house. I think I
hyperventilated more times after we first decided to try for a baby
than I did while planning my wedding, and that's saying something.
Although it creeps up on you to an extent, wanting a baby, and more
so for women than men too, when it actually comes down to deciding?
To actually doing it and throwing away your contraceptive pills or
whatever else you've been using to avoid a pregnancy up until that
point? In a nut shell? Aaarghh!
When I say that it creeps up on you, I mean that I believe most
people have an idea whether they want children and a family in the
future. It has been factored in somewhere along the way, and you've
given it some basic thought, even if it's simply that last week,
while you were following the devil's spawn around the supermarket,
wondering along the way how much time you'd get for strangling the
little demon, you vowed there and then amongst the spray cleaners,
that your children will only ever behave like perfect angels (or at
least, surely electric shock collars will be legal for kids by
then?). Seriously though, you might buy a house taking into
consideration whether it will be a family home or is in a good
school zone, or you do your OE before you get married and 'settle
down', those sorts of things. Your thoughts float in that general
direction every now and again, even though usually at that point
the whole 'kid thing' is still very much looming out there as a
decision for 'future us' to make.
So, when do you get to the point where you're ready to go down
the baby road? And perhaps, more to the point, how do you know
when it's right? I have no idea. Having a baby will be the
biggest responsibility you ever take on. How do you anticipate how
your life will change and brace yourself for it? Pass. I think
everyone just wings it and that the only people who have an idea
what you may need to know to prepare for a baby, or exactly how big
a shock it's going to be, are the people who have them already…
which is a fat load of good to us newbies. I don't imagine the
enormity of it all hits you until you hold your baby in your arms,
look into its eyes for the first time… and make a grab for the gas
again. Looking back at you is a brand new person that is your
responsibility to keep safe, to mould and to raise the best you
can. Yikes.
Initially, like many men, my husband was rather petrified of
becoming a father. Baby discussions usually resulted in him
searching the house for somewhere to hide (if they do manage to
slip past you, try looking in their man-sheds, wardrobes, behind
the couch and if all else fails, hold their xbox out the window and
threaten to drop it unless they reappear). It can take them a
while to get their heads around such a big decision… the imminent
life change, the increased responsibility, possible financial
constraints and the likely curtailing of future collecting of man
toys, among other things. Our beloved boys will usually run for the
hills temporarily. Most blokes are pretty happy to cruise along
forever with the status quo in tact, and I think that it usually
takes the proverbial putting of foot down by the hopeful-mum-to-be
to get things moving.
The big thing that you really have to consider with blokes,
especially if you meet resistance on the baby thing, is not to
freak out that he doesn't want children (unless of course he
actually says that he doesn't want children, then feel free to
freak out completely), he probably just needs a bit of space to
mull things over. As women our biological clocks have been
ticking away, and we get to a point where we are distinctly aware
of our monthly cycles, the purpose behind it all, and our hormones
(which men are terrified of) are starting to stamp their feet. But
men don't experience that. They just blissfully cruise along until
their wife or partner sticks a foot out in front of them so to
speak. Mind you, having said that, once they realize it's curtains,
they're pretty practical sorts! It didn't take long for my husband
to put two and two together and realize how much… uhh… you know…
would be involved in trying to make a baby. He was pretty cheerful
about it all after that.
So, when it comes down to deciding to start trying for a baby?
It's a big ol' decision, and there is a lot to making it. You and
your husband or partner won't necessarily come to a point where
you're ready to try for a baby at the same time either, which can
be hard on one or both of you, so it's important to communicate and
make an effort to understand each other's thoughts and feelings
about it all. It's the most important thing you'll ever do, and the
biggest challenge you'll face. It's certainly not all teddy bears
and cute clothes. Some of the things we talked about when we
first started talking about children were some of the hardest
things I've talked about in my life, but you have to approach the
possibility of becoming a family as a team, and I feel it's really
important to know that you're both on the same page. Or, you know,
when it comes to the shopping side of it, at least in the same
chapter.
Click here
to read more from Simmone as she decides when is the right time to
start buying for baby.