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S. McCann's avatar

As a person on the very opposite end of the reproductive spectrum (a never-baby-wanter who accidentally made the start of a baby (with an IUD, mind you) and then had an abortion and then had surgery to make sure I never accidentally started brewing a baby again because by god is it hard to ever feel safe again after a body-betrayal like that)… I am struck by the fact that though our stories are at face value polar opposite, I think there are some similar mosaic pieces: desperation, hopelessness, feeling crazy to have our body/reproductive status match our internal desire and state.

After my abortion, my husband got a vasectomy. Logically that should have been enough to make me feel safe having sex, but the thought that my body could still get pregnant again (by other means, mostly involving insane scenarios since we are monogamous), was absolutely intolerable. It was beyond reason, I had to make sure conception was absolutely impossible under any and all circumstances. So I got a bilateral salpingectomy— NOT tubal ligation, since those can fail, as I learned in similar fear and desperation-fueled Internet rabbit holes. And I have felt so much anger towards men as well for all the situations that make it hard to be someone on my side of the spectrum, I’m sure I don’t need to elaborate.

Of course that’s a much simpler cut and dried solution than the journey of trying to conceive and I appreciate that difference. And I’ve wondered how a story of an unwanted pregnancy might feel to people who are TTC. Painful maybe. Probably. I hesitate to bring it up. But I also don’t want us to feel like we, on our different sides of the spectrum, are opposed to each other. What we’re both dealing with, in our own ways, is a physical and psychological wrestling with our bodies, living inside this patriarchal system. Hearing and understanding each other can maybe bring us together?

Anyway, I hope that doesn’t come off as insensitive. I really appreciate reading about your experience and you’re very courageous to share it, thank you for letting us Internet strangers in.

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Kathryn Vercillo's avatar

Thank you so much for sharing all of this truth.

I haven't wanted biological children myself. I was a foster mom at one time and I think I want to foster-adopt an older sibling group again someday. But if I had wanted biological children, I'm not even sure what that would have looked like, with the partners that I had who were definitely not ready. I've experienced the pain of being on a different timeline than my partner in other ways. It's hard being two people trying to make one life.

As for when I've felt most crazy ... probably when trying to fit my mental health and creative drive and personal ambition into a money-earning box that didn't work for me.

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