The ‘No kids’ debate continues

Writer Anne Kingston takes on the impassioned—and often cruel—reader letters about her controversial article

by Anne Kingston on Thursday, August 13, 2009 11:59pm - 420 Comments

We knew “The Case Against Having Kids,” the August 3 cover story, would elicit response and debate. But we weren’t prepared for the deluge—well over a hundred letters and more than 1,000 comments on Macleans.ca (at last count). Clearly, the subject struck a nerve—and as one email indicates, even a gastrointestinal tract or two: “Disgusted,” was its subject line. “It made me nauseous to read the article…in fact, I’m not even sure what was the point of the article aside from promoting yet another fad and the ultimate age of selfishness.”

So to recap the point of the article: to examine the small but growing strata of people who are choosing not to have children. The moment was ripe: Corinne Maier’s manifesto No Kids: 40 Good Reasons Not to Have Children, which sparked furor in France last year, was about to land in North America. Increasingly those who are voluntarily childless are taken seriously as a statistical cohort and as the subject of research. Additionally, a number of high-profile women, such Cameron Diaz, have recently said they have no plans to have children.

The topic is so new in mainstream discussion that many readers assumed it has to be anti-child—reading “The Case Against Kids,” rather than “The Case Against Having Kids.” One inflamed letter writer even suggested it’s not safe to send trick-or-treating children to my house on Halloween (It is! Honest!). A pregnant woman expressed her displeasure, concerned the article could affect her domestic harmony: “But I have got to say that I, being a mom-to-be for the first time, due in 5 weeks did NOT appreciate my husband being welcomed home after a hard day at work to this headline.” Some readers complained the story was one-sided: “I presume you’re going to give equal space to “The Case For Having Kids,” a reader fumed, as if civilization itself didn’t provide that.

Most of the mail came from parents, which isn’t surprising: despite declining fertility rates in Western society most people do have and continue to have children. Many wrote to testify that being a parent is the most wonderful and gratifying experience life has to offer—the corollary being that those who opt out are deficient somehow. Chris Boyd, who writes that he has one young child after years of thinking children weren’t for him, summed up the sentiment: “I now feel genuinely sorry for those who focus on their selfish existence too long and end up lonely and bored and childless,” he wrote, adding:  “Oh, and number two is due in December, I guess our lives are over based on 40 Good Reasons to Not Have Children. Really, I could give you 100 reasons you should.”

Ironically, such judgment is at the very core of the stigma felt by those who are childless by choice: The fact they don’t want what so many people desperately want, that they’re opting out of an experience frequently described as life’s most profound, makes them suspect; they’re viewed as  social outliers or “selfish.”

One email referred to people without kids as “living a ‘lifestyle’ of barren self-gratification.” Yet that wasn’t my observation researching the story. Many people who choose not to have children had given thoughtful, careful (sometimes anguished) consideration to the decision. They were acutely aware that parenting is an experiment, one they cannot control, and they weren’t willing to take the risk for varied reasons. Others just knew intuitively from a young age that they weren’t cut out for parenting. As one woman told me: “I don’t think I could be the kind of mother my children would deserve.”

There’s a reflexive assumption, it seems, that people don’t have kids because they want more stuff—bigger plasma TVs, holidays, a SubZero fridge. Reader Melanie Wallace echoed another viewpoint, one voiced by childless people I spoke with: that she believes she can make a greater social contribution if she didn’t have children. “I, too, do not feel the ‘calling’ to parenthood, and very much appreciated your efforts to help your readers understand that those of us who choose to remain child-free are not narcissistic ego-maniacs,” she wrote. “On the contrary, we are often giving back to the world as much as any traditional parent. Through choosing not to parent biological children, I have found that I have the time, energy and resources to “nurture” the world and the people already in it in new and creative ways.”

Some expressed gratitude that Maclean’s was addressing the topic and hoped that it would foster greater understanding—and result in less pressure being placed on those who don’t want children to have them. One woman wrote: “Many people seem to think that they are entitled to give me their two-cents worth on my decision not to bear children. I hope this article enlightens the public as to how rude, inconsiderate and ignorant their comments are.”

(The tone of some of the mail suggested they weren’t imagining the censure: “Bravo to those brave—k child-free couples,” one reader wrote.  “If they fail to see how their genetic seed could possibly enrich this world, I for one, do not want their progeny either. Perhaps they should go one step further and voluntarily sterilize themselves, lest they change their minds once that biological clock starts ticking.”)

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  • Doin' it all4 NoBaby

    There are times I want to be a mother and think I'd be a good one, and times when I question my abilities. At 35, the clock is ticking, even though my FSH level is normal (for FWIW). But it's an emotional roller coaster, my spouse can't make up or at least hasn't made up his mind. I'm scared to want a child because I'm scared I might try to have one, and be a truly horrible mother or regret it for some reason, no matter what positive thoughts I may have now. I can try to live with any regrets I might have in NOT having a child, but it would be worse to have regrets WITH a child. I generally love kids and have even been a youth mentor, but can't come up with a good reason to have a child of my own. Pardon the analogy, but if I were to get a dog, I'd go to a shelter, not a breeder! So while I might want just even one child of my own, I feel it would be better to adopt and be a parent that way. Unfortunately, I just don't know if I'd have the strength to adopt and get over any sadness wondering "What if I had had my own?", so I probably won't ever adopt. Am I selfish? Maybe for not having the strength to adopt. In any case, at my doctor's appointment tomorrow, I am requesting a tubal, and the sooner the better. Anyone who thinks I'm selfish or not wired right for choosing to be child-free won't have to worry that I'll pass my genes on to anyone else.

  • Jade

    I don't understand why people believe it is their business to make rude comments about my decision not to have children. I used to tell them it's none of their business, but I now turn the question back on them and ask what in the world possessed them to have kids. This has worked like a charm.

    Oh, and I am a Clinical Psychologist with eight years of experience working with kids and teens. This means that I went to school for ten years (after high school) and sacrificed A LOT to get to where I am today. At no point during this journey would I consider myself selfish. In fact, I chose a profession that would help society. I no longer work with kids and teens, however. Can you guess why? It was because of their PARENTS. Parents who would not follow my recommendations to improve their children's physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being. Parents who felt that because I don't have children, I am not qualified to work with their children, despite my education, clinical experience and the good reputation I have in my community. I no longer tolerate their nasty comments and ignorant attitudes, so I have changed my areas of practice and am happier and making more money now than ever before.

  • Soolie

    I always think that the question we should all be asking ourselves is not "do I want to have children?" but "why do I want to have children?". When I hear people say that it is selfish to chose to not have children, it infuriates me. How is choosing to not have children selfish? What are the reasons to have children? If you can answer one reason that has nothing to do with yourself, then I applaud you.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/SeanStok SeanStok

    Well put.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/PhilCP PhilCP

    Very nicely stated.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

    Hi. You've heard of adoption, per chance?

    Call me when we're out of orphans. And not just the infant white ones.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/sea_n_mountains sea_n_mountains

    good job Gaunilon. a valuable post indeed.

  • jkg

    Well done +1

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/keith_c keith_c

    Agree completely. Kingston was being a good Maclean's journalist and deliberately attempting to stir up some controversy. Which is fine! If it's a more serious, less tabloid article, (ie. a more boring one that doesn't get us enraged) she would not have used as two of her main examples some pretty horrific people: Corinne Maier, whose extreme-left politics actually helped get Sarkozy elected in France amid populist outrage at her previous book about how great it was to be a public sector worker leeching off the state

  • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

    (1) The reason the first post of this article achieved 1000 comments was because something went massively wrong with comment threading, and many threads ended by being repeated umpteen times. The actual comment count was probably more like 150.

    (2) As I said in the first one, no one should be stigmatized for choosing not to have children. There are lots of parents who are unfit for the job and should not have taken it on. The decision to have kids because of societal expectations, a desire to "fit in", a mistaken notion that having kids will fix other problems, or a desire to have some sort of gratification from the experience is a bad decision. These are selfish reasons, and the consequences can be catastrophic – high likelihood of a ruined life for the kid who ends up with an unfit parent.

    (3) The best (earthly) reasons to have kids are as follows:
    (a) These are new human beings. If you like people and recognize that they are the greatest creation on the face of the earth, you see the worth of raising new (good) ones to make the world even better.
    (b) These are your country's future citizens. If you love your country and want it to persist, someone has to raise the next generation and do a good job of it. If you think you're up to the job, recognizing how important it is, you should do it.

    If the article had struck the tone expressed in some of the comments, namely "Having kids is a big deal. Those who choose not to do it, with a tear in their eye, because they recognize the stakes should not be stigmatized." Unfortunately the tone was more along the lines of "kids are a nuisance…they impact your career, your budget, your freedom, etc. Why have them?" a la Corinne Maier. This is blind self-absorption. Many people choose to remain childless with a much more mature attitude than the author exhibits. She didn't do them justice.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

    There are hundreds of couples looking for children to adopt. Thousands in the US. Many of these pay tens of thousands of dollars to adopt abandoned children from China. I've known one such couple, and I know several trying to adopt and being told to wait in line.

    Get informed Thwim. And cut the snark about racism. It's a non-issue here.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

    And yet there are thousands of children living in foster homes looking to be adopted.. just not the infant white ones.

    It's not racist, it's just a fact. There are plenty of kids out there, so your points about the earthly reasons to have children are completely irrelevant until there's a shortage of kids who need parents.

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