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Let's Panic: The Book!

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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
who Will Ruin Your Body, Destroy Your Life, Liquefy Your Brain,
and Finally Turn You
into a Worthwhile
Human Being.

Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

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At LET'S PANIC ABOUT BABIES, Eden Kennedy and I share our hard-won wisdom and tell you exactly what to think and feel and do, whether you're about to have a baby or already did and don't know what to do with it.

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« Briefly, before the year ends | Main | About last night »
Saturday
Dec052009

Only

We're walking home from school.

"I was thinking," Henry says. "I was thinking it would be good to have a little brother."

I can't help but picture it. Henry holding a little boy's hand, guiding him as he toddles down the sidewalk next to us. He would have been such an excellent big brother.

"Or a sister," he says. "Yeah, actually? I think I want a sister. Because I like the girls I'm related to. So I think if I had a sister, I would like that."

I am murmuring noncommittally. "Huh!"I say. "Hmm!"

"So," he adds, looking at me, "can I get one?"

"I don't think it's in the cards for us, sweetie," I finally say.

"What does that mean, in the cards?"

"It means I don't think it's going to happen."

"That's okay," he says quickly. "That's fine. I was just thinking. "

I try to point out the advantages of being an only child. The quality time with us. He does not appear convinced.

"It could be fun, though," he says.

"Yes," I agree. "It could be."

*

When we made the move back to the city from the suburbs, part of it was because we realized we weren't going to try again. There are so many reasons, and if I give them, I'm afraid someone's going to pop up in the comments to argue that our reasons aren't good enough. "Oh, you can still have a second even if X!" this imaginary person might say. "My precious miracle came about even though we also thought Y and Z and you might be the same way so keep on trying!"

No. It's not going to happen.

And I am sorry. I am. It's so much more satisfying for everyone else, to have a successful pregnancy after a miscarriage. It's expected. You keep on trying, and then eventually you get pregnant and it all works out and the miscarriage becomes an unfortunate blip in your otherwise upbeat narrative. I realize that this is kind of a bummer.

*

Henry hasn't asked about a sibling for a long, long while--long before I had the miscarriage. It's interesting that it's come up for him now, just as my essay appeared in The Sun and I've been sort of overwhelmed by the feelings stirred up by the publication and its response.

I have to admit, I feel a little strange about all these Sun readers emailing me, responding as if I still feel the pain of the miscarriage as acutely as I did back when the essay was written. I wrote it well over a year ago, and when I finished, I felt like I had exorcised something. I exorcised it and saved it in a Word file and then I was free. And now all these people are expressing their sympathy, when that pain has dulled to an occasional ache, and I feel like I'm pretending to be something I'm not. Like I need to tell them they've made a mistake.

Then as I'm responding to them, something bursts open. All that pain I thought I had purged, that deep, awful well. It's right there, and I want to scream. Then I want to thank all these people who wrote to me, because part of me was afraid it was gone. Nope, still there. I still miss that baby I thought I was going to have. That baby who would have been one year old just a couple of weeks ago.

So many people writing to me want me to know about the children they had after their miscarriages. The happy endings they wish for me. I know they're hoping to make me feel better, I get that, but all I can think is, there won't be a second for me. And then I think: because I'm too selfish.

I am ashamed. Because I've made a decision, and at the heart of it, I made it for me. Scott and I made it for us. And for Henry, but who can really say what's best for him, at this point? I'm afraid we're doing Henry a disservice. That we're leaving him alone as we get older and more helpless, that we're depriving him of a soulmate and ally, someone to build forts with or whatever else I imagine he'd do with a sibling when I'm really beating myself up over my decision.

I wonder if he'll forgive us. I wonder if he'll hate us for it. I wonder if he'll be glad.

Of course I know, rationally, that only children can be happy and successful. I know that Henry's happy and well-adjusted and loved beyond measure. I do.

But it keeps coming up. They think I'm selfish, I think, when other parents ask me if Henry is an "only." Stingy. Not willing to spread myself just a little too thin. I want to give them my reasons. My very good, well-considered reasons. But I'm afraid they'd argue that those reasons aren't enough.

Henry is not an only, I want to say. Henry is enough. Can't that be the question? "So, was Henry enough for you?" I could confirm that without a trace of shame.

Just look at him, I could say.

Look at my boy. Look at all that I have.

at the beach

Reader Comments (245)

Alice. I get that. I get all of it. Every word. And what you just said is perfect. Thank you for your honesty. I wrote you a week ago, can't recall what I called myself, but I want to be anonymous, and I just said I would be waiting for your response. But, I think, just reading you as you are, your honesty, his words, is perfect. I don't need another response. Keeping it real is good enough for me. I wish I could meet you in person to take you for a drink, or just hug you and say I love you. Because I do.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterjts
I get it. (Believe it or not, I get the "You're only going to have two kids? Don't you want your girl?" quite often.) And I do get that when I say to someone, "Is he your only?" that they're often offended, but that's not what I mean. I mean to be polite, to make sure you've had a chance to talk about everyone in your family before the conversation moves on. But I still see the [understandable] defiance flare up in people's eyes, and I wish society's overall attitude didn't make them feel that they have to defend their family.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAimee
Henry is enough. That's all we need to know.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered Commentermosprott
Love this! We are the parents to an only. I always say it (a second child) just didn't work out that way for us. Wasn't that we didn't try wasn't that we did, just never happened. We like our life the way it is, so here we are! She's 18 and in college now.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBecky
Alice, this post is beautiful. Beautifully written, beautiful sentiment. Just beautiful.
Beautifully written, and what a sweet photo. There will also be people who think it's selfish to have too many kids. I related to his asking though, because my son, who had brother, wants a baby...and he says "please, please, please" like it's a lego set and eventually I'll give in. Tough for me, as I'd love another.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterNicole Pelton
Thank you for your honesty and sincerity and for such a flawless piece of writing. And be assured that only toucan know what is right for you. And that selfishness simply doesn't enter into the equation.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBig Dot
I have lurked forever but never commented. I don't know why ... you write so beautifully and poignantly.

I am an only and can't imagine it any other way. An only doesn't miss having siblings -- you can't miss what you never had. As a child, as a teen, as an adult, it's been fine. More than fine, actually; to quote you, it's been "enough".

You've made the right decision for your family.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterPaula
Are there any choices where someone won't say "that's selfish"? Because Aimee and Nicole are right - there's someone to say it if you've had two kids, too. Or three. Or more. Or none, like my husband and me.

I think people just want to feel a connection, and to feel that connection through having made extremely similar choices. And if they like you and relate to you, they can't understand how you made a different decision than they did, or they feel betrayed by discovering that you made different a decision. It's not judge-y, exactly, though I admit that people sometimes are that, too.

Anyway, I mostly wanted to say thanks for writing - your writing is a joy to read, even when it's sad.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMK
It's unfortunate but true that just because you want another baby doesn't make it possible. It's also an incredibly difficult decision fraught with what-ifs and potential regrets - and you are very strong to decide that Henry is enough.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered Commentera
How timely. I just wrote these words yesterday:

"I occasionally feel guilty that [my daughter] will not have a sibling given how much she wants one, and lightly and fleetingly grieve that she will be my only child.But I'm also utterly content that my family is complete."

So thank you for sharing. So much.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered Commentermosey along
This is such a personal decision, and it's all yours. Thanks for sharing these feelings--it's hard to admit your own doubts. All you really need is to find your own peace. Great writing!
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterEmma
I think one of my BIGGEST peeves in life is when people take a stance on SOMEONE ELSE'S childbearing decisions. It is such a deeply personal thing for so many reasons.

I love that last bit about your amazing boy not being an "only" but being "enough". I had that same thought when we were struggling to have our second and I was starting to think it was not going to happen.

I hope that you do not spend too much of your precious time feeling ashamed or selfish. I find you to be quite the opposite because a selfish woman would not share such tender parts of herself with all of us. Thank you for that!
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMichelle
I get this. Obviously our reasons are totally different, but I feel very unsure about the whole question of whether or not to have a 2nd baby. My daughter is just so... all-consuming. She sucks up all the air in the room. And I adore her, but I can't fathom how I'd manage with two. People do, of course, I just don't know how. And I don't know if it'll be too late by the time I decide I'm ready.

For what it's worth, I don't think you're selfish at all. You're doing what's best for you & your family, and anyone who judges you for that can go to hell.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered Commentercindy w
This is beautiful.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSuperjules
I'm so glad you're still posting and writing. It makes me want to respond, so...

I'm almost there. In my life I have had 9 miscarriages, one perinatal loss (because, of all things, a cord accident), and I have one son. I'm almost 39. I'm tired. I would like another child, but I've decreed one more year and that's it.

Not all sibling relationships are great; your family is the configuration that it is. There is no ideal family, just your own.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterShandra
My son is an only. Do I wish it was different, that he had a sibling? Sometimes. But is he enough? Yes, definitely.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBarb
Read your Sun essay, flipped straight to it when I saw your name and loved it. Phenomenal writing and what struck me most was how unfinished the whole thing was, but then that is how life is really. We never conclude a chapter or get closure. It all stays with us in some way or another. The decision to do it or not do it and why, a million reasons either way, all correct, and the heartbreak of it will be with you always. And, you have shared this ugly/beautiful stuff in a very public way and that is, in my opinion, the exact opposite of selfish.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMental Momma
My friend Joy Behar is an only and she had only one child. Not only did she never regret it (she got more love) her daughter doesn't regret it either. (she got more as well)

Joy turned out fine. I, on the other hand, have a sister. And often wish I had been an only!
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSuzy
I'm an only and I need to emphasize what others have said. You are enough. Scott is enough. Henry is enough. Being an only isn't a bad thing, in fact it's often really, really good. Are there things that can be tough about it? Sure. But no more things than are tough for someone with any number of siblings. You made the right choice, no matter what your reasons, and it's certainly not selfish to have done so.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKizz
I am not original, as I realize I'm about to say something everyone else has said, but this was a really beautiful post. Perfect.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAlicia @bethsix
Yes, look at all that you have. Happy endings aren't the same for everyone.

I'm an only child. I can remember being sort of surprised to hear my mother say once, "I always wanted three children..." when I was an adult. She had never given me the slightest inkling that more was what she may have wanted when I was growing up. "We got it right the first time," my dad would say when people asked if I was the only. There were moments during my childhood when I thought a sibling would be fun to have, but to be honest, I felt more deprived when I didn't get the Barbie Dream House.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLeslie
What an exquisite post. This is my first visit here and I feel like I've stumbled onto something beautiful and rare.

This passage is pure poetry: "Henry is not an only, I want to say. Henry is enough."
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKristen
I'm an only child myself and my mama had an abortion after I was born - after that, she wasn't up for another pregnancy.

Henry will be just fine. I would have liked to have a sibling when I was a kid, but I wonder if I would still have the super-close relationship I have with my mama if I had to share her with a sibling or two. There are definitely trade-offs, but what matters is that he's loved.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSonja
This is such a beautiful piece of writing. Really amazing. Clearly this is the right decision for you and you have said it so well. Thank you!
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterabbyglassenberg

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