Are You Having Another Baby?

 

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I have this routine down. It’s very well rehearsed. I know how to answer this question in a way that shuts down the conversation, because it’s a conversation that hurts to talk about. The questions that go something like:

“Are You Having Another Baby?”

“Is it time for number three?”

“So, when are you planning the next one?”

When asked I smile brightly. I shrug and say “Oh no – We’re not having another baby. We’re finished.” The painful truth is though – I don’t feel finished.

But I laugh and roll my eyes. I say “I’m done. So done. I’m tired, I’m over it. Katelyn still wakes at night. I’ve been sleep deprived for so long. I’ve loved having my babies, but I’m looking forward to the next phase of my life.”

While my heart still tells me there’s another baby out there waiting for me to be his or her mother. There’s a piece of me that doesn’t feel like it’s dropped into place. I don’t feel complete.

I see myself pregnant – I touch my belly and remember what it was like. I see newborn babies and I wish I could do it all over again. I gaze enviously when I see big families, even if they look chaotic; I want that. I truly want that. With all my heart.

But here’s the the “but”. And it’s a big “but”.

My partner doesn’t.

He just doesn’t. He’s ready for no more babies. He doesn’t want any more.

And I accept that.

I have to accept that.

Because no part of me really wants to bring a baby into the world that we both don’t 100% want.

Even if I thought I could talk him into it; even if I think if he truly understood how important this was to me, he might say yes. Not for him. For me.

But we can’t have a baby together for me.

That’s not enough.

It’s both in – all in – or not at all.

Because there will be hard days, and extreme exhaustion, and the last thing I ever want is to feel guilty about having another baby. Guilty that I talked him into it, that he didn’t really want this, that this wasn’t his plan. Even if I know we would make it work, we’d pull it together, we’d stretch the budget – and I know with absolute certainty that he would love any baby of ours – it still isn’t fair.

I go through waves, I can almost talk myself out of it. I can get to a point where I think I might be done having babies, but I guess I wouldn’t be trying so hard to convince myself I don’t want another baby, if I didn’t want another baby.

But the truth is if he said “Lets have another baby” I’d be there in a heartbeat. But it is what it is. And two children is enough – they have to be enough.

So, if you ask me and I smile, and laugh and joke, please still at least act as though you believe me. You might hear the tension in my voice, or my overly enthusiastic protestation, but please, just let it go. Because I have to.

Have you been in this position? How did you move forward?

 

Rachel Stewart

Rachel is the founder of Parenting Central. She is raising two children, boy and girl, with her partner. Rachel is obsessed prams, car seats, carriers and all things baby. She has worked in the baby industry for several years, for both suppliers and also in a retail setting and has developed a passion for connecting parents with the right products to make their lives easier. When Rachel isn't playing with prams she's enjoys crocheting, drinking coffee (sometimes wine) and spending a little too much time on Facebook.

16 Comments

  1. I’m not having a third. The health risk to me is too big and I really fear that what people say about three being no harder than two cannot be true. 😉 My two are pretty hard work. And honestly, Master 2 would not make a good middle child. 😉

    1. I worry about that too! And I’m also not sure my littlest would be suited to being a middle child. She does love babies and younger tots, but she gets annoyed at them very quickly too….

  2. I’m not having a third. The health risk to me is too big and I really fear that what people say about three being no harder than two cannot be true. 😉 My two are pretty hard work. And honestly, Master 2 would not make a good middle child. 😉

  3. I worry about that too! And I’m also not sure my littlest would be suited to being a middle child. She does love babies and younger tots, but she gets annoyed at them very quickly too….

  4. I would find this incredibly hard. In the end, I won the battle of let’s have a third child (although he never said no. he just said ‘maybe’. And then we conceived twins, which was pretty funny, I s’pose. And I still have an ache in my heart for another! Although it’s pretty easy to shut that one down….

  5. I would find this incredibly hard. In the end, I won the battle of let’s have a third child (although he never said no. he just said ‘maybe’. And then we conceived twins, which was pretty funny, I s’pose. And I still have an ache in my heart for another! Although it’s pretty easy to shut that one down….

  6. We have three sons and I do not feel at all ‘done’. I don’t honestly know if I will ever have that feeling that our family is complete. I do think your acceptance of your partner’s decision not to have more babies is admirable.

  7. We have three sons and I do not feel at all ‘done’. I don’t honestly know if I will ever have that feeling that our family is complete. I do think your acceptance of your partner’s decision not to have more babies is admirable.

  8. We only have one daughter who is now 17 months and starting to think about a second. I’m sick of the “when are you going to have another baby?” Constant questioning though!

  9. We only have one daughter who is now 17 months and starting to think about a second. I’m sick of the “when are you going to have another baby?” Constant questioning though!

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