Jodi Day, Founder of Gateway Women, based out of London just posted an wonderful blog article called “Do you ever get over not having children?” I think there are important messages here, including the compassionate description about how countless women (“childless by circumstance”) feel about not having the children they dreamed of, hoped for and expected; as well as the importance of having to face grief fully and directly before getting to the other side of resolution, peace and transformation.
Please do share thoughts and feelings about this article:
There are two sides to the question “Do you ever get over not having children?” And it really depends on who’s doing the asking.
One is incredibly insulting, as in, “Aren’t you over that yet?!”
While the other is “Will I ever feel good about my life again?”
The fact is that if you were to have had children, and by some tragic event, they had died, nobody would ever expect you to be ‘over it’. Indeed, if you ever were, you’d be considered heartless – that terrible fairytale nasty: a bad mother. Every Christmas or Mother’s Day, people would be sensitive towards how hard those celebrations must be for you. And if they forgot your loss, they’d feel terrible about it. Your loss would be considered life-changing.
Yet if you’ve spent years (decades even!) of your life longing and planning to become a mother, and for a wide variety of reasons, some of them mundane, some of them tragic, you ended up without a family, you’re expected to just ‘get over it.’ But it’s not the flu; it’s not something you ‘get over’. You lost your family! You lost the chance to be a mother, to be a grandmother, to give birth to another life, to be the person that brought your partner’s children into the world, to be a grandmother. To have a hand and say in shaping the next generation. To have the respect of others, a place in the community of mothers and a say in how things are done. So, no biggie, really. We really must all be making a fuss about nothing…
Now, I am not for a moment trying to downplay how awful it must be to lose a child, a family. It must be like having your heart torn out of your body. But the grief of the childless by circumstance, for some women, is as disabling, as life-changing.
We cannot grieve what we have not loved because grief, in my view, is part of love. And whether you held your children in your arms or not, if you grieve for them, you loved them. The children that childless women loved were real to them. And the loss of those children is real too. And without mourning those lost children, we will never ‘get over it’.
Not having children broke my heart. Why didn’t I have them? Well, it was a 15-year journey through infertility, denial, codependency and bad luck. (That’s the short version!) But grief healed my heart bigger. I am not the same person as I was before I grieved that loss. Because grief, like love, transforms us. We are never the same person again. What once was an open wound in my heart is now a scar – a tender spot – and it has changed me.
I have not ‘got over’ not having children, but rather my heart has healed around that loss. It is a part of me, a precious, tender part of me that gives me a depth of compasssion for others who suffer that was always in me, but which now has fully blossomed in my character.
Loss like ours doesn’t have to ruin our lives – it can transform it:
I have more courage now, because having healed this wound, I trust my resilience.
I have more empathy now for all disenfranchised groups, because I understand what it is to be stigmatised.
I have more patience and tolerance now for awkward and difficult people, because I know that each of us is carrying around an invisible wound, leaking pain from so many ungrieved losses.
I have more faith now, because I have understood that grief is the gift of love, not a cruel kicking when I was at my most vulnerable.
But I couldn’t have done this alone. Grief, like love, cannot exist in a vacuum; it needs to be held in the tender heart and understanding of another.
In my experience, the only people who ever understood, really understood what it felt like to not be a mother, were women like us – the childless by circumstance. No one else ever understood the depth and breadth of my loss, my future, my identity as a woman, my place in society and amongst my peers. And in that understanding, my grief finally felt heard, held, understood. And so it did what it longed to do – it healed my heart so that I was ready to love life again.
Will you ever feel good about your life again? Yes, once you have done your grief work. But you cannot do it alone. Grief is a form of unrequited love. It is not a poisonous illness trying to deform your life. It is a loving energy that wishes to heal you. You cannot wait it out, and you cannot repress it. It is patient and strong, like all love, and it will out-wait you. And you will grow ill and weary from the effort of trying to avoid it, out-run it, out-think it.
How to do your grief work? Seek the company of your fellow Gateway Women. Comment on the blogs. Join the Gateway Women Meetup Group. Ask to start a Meetup in your own area. Join the Gateway Women Private Community Forum on G+. Come to a workshop. Just get out of your head and preferably out of the house.
Not being a mother has left a scar on my heart that will always be there. Always be tender. And can be touched and bring me to tears for surprising reasons.
But I can live with a scar, grow with a scar.
Grief heals. Life goes on. And I am part of the flow again.
This post originally appeared here: http://gateway-women.com/tag/online-networks-for-childless-women/
Andrea
THank you, Jodi. You moved my heart a little closer to healing today. To know that I can grieve what I didn’t have while understanding that my grief comes out of love.
joann
Terrific article! This is the type of info that should be shared across
the net. Shame on Google for not positioning this put up higher!
. Thanks =)
Ann Monticone
It was wonderful to finally read something so affirming about being childless. Childlessness affects people on so many different levels, both emotionally and societally. We live in a family-centered world, and what I’ve experienced as a divorced, childless woman, is a feeling of exclusion. What has been most difficult for me has been the loss of friends to motherhood and grandmotherhood. Spending time with them has meant going into their orbits — hearing their complaints, boasts, etc., in essence, everything about their lives. I become an extension of their world, and my life barely gets a nod.
Thank you for giving voice to the pain and loss, giving permission to grieve, and giving hope for healing.