Well, folks, cats out the bag. I’m not so young anymore. I think it was last year, maybe the year before that I got the arthritis diagnosis, and its only been going down hill from there. I’m pretty sure if I eat ice cream three nights in a row, I can see the extra roll. I’m fairly certain that the lines around my eyes are there even when I’m not smiling, and I’m 99% sure the days of sleeping on plywood in hostels are behind me. At least the part about waking up and feeling spry.
I mostly kid, I am actually staying in a pretty rough camp-style situation right now and bask in the simplicity. Even the dirt and bathing out of a bowl have charm, at least in the short term. But I am getting older and the one area I truly feel it is in the womb. Okay, I don’t actually FEEL it in the womb, but you know what I mean.
I’m 34 years old. I decided somewhere around 25 that I wanted kids. I actually remember the exact moment. I was laying in bed with my partner at the time. He lived in a simple little yurt that was full of love. He had a dog that followed us everywhere, I’d lay my coat down as a blanket for him outside of restaurants while we ate. One morning he climbed up on the bed between us. Playful and panting with pleasure. That was the moment. I realized I wanted a little kid to bust into my room in the morning, wake me up from my likely much needed slumber, and scream “Mommy” at the top of their lungs. Or “daddy,” so I realize that my birthing them has little to do with how they choose their favorite parent.
The years to follow were ones in which I finished my degree, gave up drinking and tried my hardest to learn what a healthy relationship looked like. I had flailed about in open relationships for the years prior avoiding intimacy and commitment. I was used to distracting and finding comfort in another connection, rather than working through whatever the initial bond was triggering within me. I studied psychology and did training to be able to counsel with a local organization. I even upgraded to be able to support couples, in hopes that the education would help me in my own pursuits of family.
I dedicated my time to men who were open to the potential of children and fought my way through a lot of discomfort in hopes that with enough effort, I’d end up in love, married, and on the trajectory of the sweet little family I longed for. When my nephew was born, my maternal drive kicked in with even more fervour. I loved fighting to get him into clean diapers and reading to him until he fell asleep.
I was in a relationship with a man who was always uncertain, but open. We had a tumultuous relationship, mostly. However, he was willing to work on things, stuck with me through a lot of personal struggles, and allowed me a lot of freedom to travel and tackle new things. He got on with my family, had drive, and said he loved me daily. We worked through countless struggles that, in hindsight, were just born from a foundation of incompatibility.
Last July, after nearly a year of doing long distance, I decided to end it. I’d met someone who showed me the things I longed for and wasn’t getting in my relationship. Simple things, like listening to music rather than watching TV, talking openly and with emotion, sharing spiritual pursuits and perspectives. I didn’t connect with him beyond a friendship, but the insight into a more fulfilling connection helped me step away from the man I’d been planning my life with.
The grief process was different than others prior. Rather than grieving the loss of the relationship, which I didn’t much as I’d already got used to living alone and not seeing him often, I grieved the loss of the life I wanted. I felt, even then, at a young 33, that choosing to leave that relationship greatly diminished my chances of ending up with family. In the year to follow, that brings me to today, I attempted to date a few people. I made sure that the possibility of kids was there in the first few conversations, not wanting to waste any time. When one hopeful attempt fell apart, I took a job that I thought may pay me enough and offer me maternity leave. I thought perhaps I should plan to do it on my own, rather than leaving my one life dream to fall, even partially, into the hands of another being.
In March, as we all know, a global pandemic rocked the world. I went from working full time between two cities, studying therapeutic yoga, and volunteering to doing, well, nothing. To being confined to my home and restricted to the company of my family. To be honest, aside from the financial worry, this was a welcome reprieve. I started walking daily, focusing on my mental health, and embracing the time to reflect. I was met with hurdle after hurdle. Some personal and some global. At some point, I hit a wall. I’m not sure what exactly the conclusion of the wreckage was, either some form of acceptance, or some level of apathy. Regardless, I let go. I decided that maybe I had no idea what was supposed to happen. That maybe I didn’t really want to have kids on my own, and that if I didn’t want to do it on my own, did I REALLY want it? Was I capable of it? When the majority of my life has been spent saving to travel, could a life filled with adventure fulfill me? Perhaps even more so? I let go, on a deep level, and for whatever reason, I really could.
I don’t exactly understand how I went from kids as my driving energy to not caring, or even wanting it anymore. I don’t know if its maybe the uncertainty of the world, the sheer volume of emotional stress over the past 6 months leaving me too depleted to care, or simply a shift in my truth. But today I am approaching life with an energy of openness. A lack of control. A lack of intention beyond making it through, one day at a time. And you know what? I’m ok with it and it is a lot more fun.