No Child of My Own
Last
week’s excellent CreakyChat on family
planning and rheumatic diseases brought up some memories.
I remember the moment I decided not to have
children of my own.
My mother is pushing my manual chair
through the old part of Rigshospitalet, the hospital where I spent several
years waiting for hip replacements. The hospital where I go to see my
rheumatologist. Where we have just been, on one of the regular checkup visits
to see how I’m doing.
The older area is composed of a multitude
of red brick three-story buildings, each containing a different department,
different offices, all connected by elaborate tunnels underground. Both my
sister and I were born in one of those buildings. I remember visiting my mother
while she was on bedrest, holding on to my sister who, just like me, was in a
rush to get out. I remember the old linoleum, the tall windows, the smells of
beds, babies, and breast milk.
It is early summer, on the cusp between May
and June. All the trees are a bright, fresh green with new leaves, the contrast
with the red brick of the old buildings brightening the day even more. The sun
is shining from the high summer sky and I can feel its warmth on my face and my
arms. I can feel the wind in my hair, hear it rustling the leaves.
Yours
is the genetic form of RA. The words of the
rheumatologist are still running through my brain, each of the seven falling
with a weight like an earthquake. I'd had a test with my last round of blood
tests. Nothing mandatory, but it would help RA research, so of course I did it.
After all the years of living with this disease, all the pain, everything it
had put me through, I’d do anything to help research. This test was the show
which kind of RA you had.*
Behind me, my mother is talking about how
this makes no sense, because I am the only one on both sides of my family who
has RA. Well, with the possible exception of a distant aunt, but nobody is
really sure if that’s what she had. Her words hang in the air around me, but
are nothing compared to his words, still alive, still throbbing, carried on the
wind, whispered in the leaves.
Yours
is the genetic form of RA. The implications of this
are stacking up, one by one. I add them up, do the math, see the future. In the
space from the bottom of the steps of the building - the place I went for a regular
checkup and heard these words that will change my life - to the curb, I make the decision. I will not have children
of my own. Will not expose a child to the risk of developing the disease that
has caused me so much pain, that has stolen my childhood. In that moment, I
give up something I didn’t know had been part of my dreams for the future.
I was 17 years old.
It’s not long before I develop a plan. I
decide to adopt and for many years, know that when the time comes, a little
girl from China would find a mother in me. I carefully save my toys and
favourite books to pass on to her. I read stories about families who adopt to
get ideas on how to help my child celebrate both her cultures and families. I
read about Gotcha Day and
decide to celebrate that with cake and a party. I think about how I grew up and
the traditions I want to carry forward. About celebrating the first snow day
with my mother’s rich, homemade hot chocolate and Aunt Anna’s buns. About the
way my parents always respected and solicited my opinion, even as a small
child. I think about the ribbons my mother tied in my hair every morning before
I went to school. I carefully save ideas and customs, and just as carefully put
together a parenting philosophy.
Although these years in my 20s and early
30s are fairly quiet on the RA front, I know that with this disease and my
disability, I cannot raise a child alone. I know I need a partner and although
I have yet to meet the man with whom I want to spend the rest of my life, it’s
always part of my future. Of what will come. Someday, I will meet that man and
we will make a life together. A life that will include a child. Maybe even
children.
I remember the moment I knew I would not
have children of my own.
I am in my living room, facing the TV. It’s
turned off, the blank void of the dark screen loud and vivid with the
afterimage of the movie I’ve just watched. Nine Months Later, it was called, a
fluffy bit of nonsense about a man facing his commitment phobia when his
girlfriend gets pregnant. For some reason, the last scene of the two of them in
the pyjamas, dancing slowly with the baby between them has hit me hard. I`d
looked at this construct on the screen and realized this would never be me.
Realized that even if I found someone special, it would be years before we
committed to the rest of our lives together and then more years for the
adoption process. And that by then, I would be too old to adopt. Too old to
have a baby. The weight of time is overwhelming as I realize that I will be too
wrecked, too tired from my RA to give a small child what it deserves. That I am
out of time and that which has always been part of my future cannot be.
I was 37 years old.
I am blessed with a circle of friends who
have had children for me. Well, obviously they had children for themselves (or so I let them believe), but
their generosity in sharing these wonderful little ones — many of whom are now
grown — has allowed me to fill my life with kids, to be something for these
kids, to play a role, to develop customs, traditions, and amazing
relationships. I have two beautiful goddaughters, of whom I am immeasurably
proud. I am the Other Mother to two wonderful and handsome boys (okay, young
men), without whom my life would be much less interesting. I am Moster to my
sister’s children and forever grateful that she shares them with me. The Boy has a boy and I get to inflict myself on him (the poor kid). And I am
the (occasionally crazy) honourary aunt to so many other lovely, clever,
gorgeous kids without whom my life would not be as rich as it is.
And I have my dream of a parallel reality
in which I never had RA. There, I have two girls, lean and rangy with white
blonde hair. I raise them on my own on an old farmstead and we are surrounded
by animals. Cats, dogs, a couple of horses in the barn, a goat and some
chickens. I have raised them with the traditions and customs and ideas I collected
over the years. Our house is cozy and warm, filled with love and friends and
great debates. On winter nights, we all pile into my bed, and sleep surrounded
by the cats and the dogs while the snow howls outside.
*1979
was the dark ages of RA and much of the information they had then was wrong.
There is approximately a 5% chance of a first-degree relative (sibling or
child) getting RA.
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