Q: My partner and I have been together nearly six years. We love each other and are both very committed to making the relationship work. Hereās the thing, though: I definitely want children, and heās still deciding. I love him so much, but kids (or the lack thereof) are a deal breaker. I donāt want to continue the relationship (as painful as it is to say) if he never wants to have children.
Heās started speaking to a psychologist about it, which is great. My problem is that I keep hoping heāll come back one night saying, āWe worked through all my fears and now Iām definitely ready to make a baby,ā which I know is unrealistic at best.
So the question: How long do I wait? What if he never decides? A āno, neverā is painful, but at least itās clear. āI think so, in the future, but not nowā was fine three years ago when kids first came up, but it isnāt enough anymore. Iām ready for kids now, but would be happy to wait up to five years until heās ready⦠as long as Iām not just waiting on a āmaybe.ā
How do I stay sane, support him, and keep our relationship strong when we both know that weāll beak up if he makes a particular decision? And, if years go by and he still hasnāt made a decision, how will I know when itās the right time to give up hope? How will I have the strength to leave someone I love?
ā Anxiously Waiting and Wanting
A: Dear AWW,
Many moons ago, I met the guy I would marry and within hours of our first chat, he told me he didnāt want kids. This was late 2006, and I hadnāt yet been introduced to the term āChild-Free.ā I also didnāt yet realize that when someone says they donāt want to have kids, they almost always mean it, so I plunged into our whirlwind relationship (fifteen weeks of dating followed by a courthouse elopement) assuming that heād change his mind. Why did I have this assumption? Because I knew I wanted kids, and part of what attracted me to my husband was how good of a father I knew he would be. I knew he was the kind of influence I would want on my child, the kind of partner I could successfully co-parent with, and the kind of husband who would be supportive.
And you know what? I was right about him. We have a now seven-year-old son who we both love to pieces, and my husband was nothing but excited from the very beginning (FYI, having a baby was his idea). But within months of our sonās birth, my husband calmly told me that there was no way he was interested in having a second child. Itās not that he didnāt love being a parent, and itās not that he didnāt love me, but he knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that he was done with one. In other words, he knew his limit.
A few months later I started editing a now-defunct parenting site, and the term Child-Free became part of my vocabulary. I found myself regularlyāand fiercelyādefending the Child-Free online and off. What once seemed so alien to me (a la, āWho wouldnāt want kids?ā) started to become something I could at least understand, even if I couldnāt relate. Even though my husband was in the āone child onlyā camp, I still wrestled with the idea of having more (much to the detriment of our marriage), before ultimately arriving at a happy place with the family that I have.
Now is a great time to ask why Iāve spent three paragraphs making this about me and not you. Hereās why: sure, my husband changed his mind, but he did so a handful of months after we got married, and we conceived our child a year and a half after the date (which means about two years after we got together). It didnāt take him years to arrive at a point at which he knew he wanted kids⦠it was more like it took him a few months into our relationship to arrive at a point at which he realized he did want one kidāhe just didnāt want a kid with any of his exes. In other words, he was open to parenthood with me, but not necessarily with anyone he had dated before me.
If you are in a position to be able to make the choice yourself (aka, parenthood isnāt foisted upon you due to circumstances beyond your control), then I think deciding that you want kids is not a decision to be taken lightly. Likewise, deciding that you definitely DO NOT want kids should be taken equally seriously. You guys have been together six years and you say heās still deciding, but the way it sounds to me is that heās already decidedāheās just waiting for you to make YOUR decision about the future of your relationship.
Of course, things are unpredictable, and itās entirely possible that one day soon heāll decide that in fact, he does want kids after all. Or maybe heāll decide heās not sure, but heās willing to have a kid because he loves you so much, and he knows you want a child badly. And if that does happen, thereās no rule that says he wonāt end up wildly happy you both dove into parenthood together (it definitely happens)⦠but what I keep coming back to is that youāve already been having this chat for six years, and thatās a pretty long time to waffle.
I know that letting go of someone you love while you still love them is the worst. It truly, truly sucks. But youāre talking about being open to spending another five years letting him make up his mindāmaking it eleven years total that youāre still not becoming a parent, and thatās just a long, long time. Ask yourself this: Is having a child more important to you than being with him? Is it fair to either of you to put off what sounds like an inevitable decision? Or would you rather take the painful path now, break up, and eventually open yourselves up to partners who see eye-to-eye on all of your important issues?
If having a child is the deal breaker that you say it is, then I think you know what youād rather do with those five years. You could do all kinds of things with them, like meet someone new. You could even meet someone and have a kid in that time span. Likewise, your partner could also move on and meet someone who agrees with him on the kid/no kid issue. You both could move forward and live the life youāre each imaginingābut not with one another. I donāt think heās a bad person for not wanting kids (like I donāt think you are for wanting them), but I do think that his answer is clear⦠and that it has been for a long time.
Iām not saying that every relationship should end over the kid/no kid question, and I sincerely hope that people chime in with responses with many examples of happy situations that have grown out of the crossroads you find yourselves at. I think, ultimately, you have to know what is possible for you, and what your limits are.
The ache of not having a child when all you want in the world is to have one is a very real, very painful thing (and having a kid you donāt want just to keep your partner happy is, too). It sounds like you already know thatās not an ache you want to live with for much longer, so now itās just time to admit it to yourself.
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