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How We Talk About Motherhood Matters – Nadya Williams

“Like a Trap You Can’t Escape” begins the title of a recent BBC article. Can you guess what the piece might be about? What might one of the foremost English-language news outlets describe in this horrific way? Might it be gambling? An addiction? Perhaps a disease? Extreme poverty? Or maybe just a really terrible job with a nightmare boss but really excellent health benefits, so you feel trapped but can’t quit?

None of the above, as it happens. The answer is: motherhood. 

Profiling the phenomenon of women who regret having children, the author of the piece suggests that this regret is remarkably widespread. Women she interviewed—some of them also participants in anonymous online forums where they first made their regret known—admitted that if they could start over, they would never have had children. Understandably so, the author suggests. To have children is to surrender one’s autonomy, to allow another person to take over one’s free moments, finances, hopes, and dreams. No more impromptu vacations. No more sleeping in. No more joy. No more savings in the bank, either. 

This conversation is nothing new. The genre of essays attacking motherhood—painting it as a path to nothing but misery, regret, and economic disaster—is now quite worn. This doesn’t mean we should simply ignore this conversation. Nor should we ignore the problems this type of essay reveals about the modern world’s attitude to not only mothers and children, but also people more broadly—a category to which mothers and children, of course, belong. 

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