avatarAli Hall

Summary

The article argues for the acceptance and value of childfree and childless women in society, challenging the negative stereotypes and societal pressures they face.

Abstract

The author of the article expresses frustration with the societal stigma attached to women who are childfree or childless, emphasizing the importance of their role in society. The piece criticizes an article that labels childfree women as selfish and detrimental to societal cohesion, arguing instead that the choice not to have children is valid and that non-parents contribute significantly to the community. The author cites scientific evidence of ingroup favoritism among parents, which often leads to the marginalization of non-parents. The article also refutes the notion that childfree individuals are selfish, pointing out that both parents and non-parents can be selfless or selfish based on their actions and motivations. Furthermore, it highlights that many childfree people have deeply considered the implications of parenthood and have chosen not to have children for various reasons, including personal desire, financial considerations, and the state of the world. The author advocates for a society that respects individual choices regarding parenthood and acknowledges the diverse ways in which people find fulfillment and contribute to society.

Opinions

  • The author believes that the choice to be childfree is often met with undue criticism and that childfree individuals are unfairly labeled as selfish.
  • The article suggests that the decision not to have children can be as thoughtful and selfless as the decision to have them.
  • It is argued that non-parents, through their contributions to society, such as volunteering and charitable work, are integral to societal cohesion.
  • The author criticizes the hierarchical and reductive view that only parents can be people of value.
  • The piece challenges the pronatalist narrative that equates fulfillment with parenthood and uses fear to encourage reproduction.
  • The author points out the hypocrisy in society's view of parenthood, noting that while parents are often seen as self-sacrificing, non-parents are seen as lacking in value or contribution to society.
  • The article emphasizes that regret can be associated with any major life decision, including having children, and that the potential for regret should not be used as a weapon to coerce people into parenthood.
  • The author advocates for a more empathetic understanding of the diverse paths to fulfillment, including the choice to remain childfree.

How Childfree and Childless Women Are An Essential Part Of Society’s Cohesion

Please stop attacking, criticizing, and othering the non-parents in this world!

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

My jaws clenched as I continued reading to the very end. An article entitled Childless-By-Choice Women Are a Big Part of Society’s Deterioration* sent my emotions on a roller coaster ride.

It reads like something from Keep Sweet: Pray And Obey.

Initially, I felt anger. This anger turned to mild amusement before settling on feelings of pity. Pity directed at the author of the offending piece.

It makes empty and underdeveloped claims against the childfree. It reveres parents as heroes (even Christ-like!) while simultaneously brandishing people, correction — women — who choose to forgo reproduction as selfish.

I have known my whole life that I don’t want to be a mother. This offending article is problematic for many reasons.

This hostility to the childfree is commonplace. But the offending article doesn’t just attack the childfree; it is shamefully insensitive and cruel to the childless.

Articles like the offending piece widen the divide between parents and non-parents — whether they are non-parents through choice or circumstance.

Science has already evidenced ingroup favoritism between parents, which supports the lived experiences of many childfree and childless people.

Once I was done with my swearing, laughing, and then pitying, my fingers started itching with the urge to respond.

“Intelligent parents grasp the idea of living childfree and the value of this decision for them and their children, first and foremost. Only extremely stupid and inconsiderate parents want everyone else to pop out as many babies as possible.Dr. Verena Brunschweiger.

Why do people choose not to have children?

The author of THAT article links to this humorous and honest piece and refers to it as a “rant,” then the said author dares to state that this other writer’s reasons for not wanting children are inadequate.

Do you know the best reason for not having children? Not wanting them in the first place.

We don’t habitually ask someone why they had children and then judge whether they provide virtuous enough reasons. Yet, perfect strangers feel entitled to gatekeep our reasons for not wanting children.

A recent study by Pew Research found that 44% of Americans between 18 and 49 years old are unlikely to have children. The large majority of the participants don’t desire children.

Other reasons cited in this study for forgoing parenthood include:

  • Medical reasons.
  • Financial reasons.
  • No partner.
  • Age.
  • State of the world.
  • Climate change/environment.
  • Partner doesn’t want kids.

The only reasons to have children in the first place are if you desperately want them and you will be a phenomenal parent.

According to the author of the offending piece, protecting our happiness is not a reason to forgo childbearing. And yet, many people have children in an attempt to increase their happiness levels.

So which is it?

A quick reminder, the path to happiness and fulfillment looks different for all of us. Life is not a universal experience. The most sensible thing to do is to follow your own yearnings.

Childfree people are as selfish as parents!

Whenever someone attacks those who choose to be childfree, a ubiquitous “argument” is that opting out of having children is selfish!

Oh, this makes me laugh. Calling people “selfish” for choosing not to have children is the most pervasive childfree bingo around.

The Pope famously pedaled the “selfish” term in 2015 and then again in 2022. Yes, that’s right, a childfree man calls people selfish for not having children. What’s a religious leader supposed to do when the population of his congregation is at risk? Blame and shame the world into reproduction, of course!

If it’s selfish to lead the life of your own calling, then both childfree and parents are selfish, and the childless are stuck living a life of infliction.

But here’s the thing. Many childfree people have agonized about whether they can give a child a good life and if parenting is for them. The films To Kid or Not To Kid and My So-Called Selfish Life illustrate this decision-making process beautifully.

Also, my favorite novel, Wild Egg, by Jennifer Flint, follows the protagonist’s journey of inner turmoil while trying to establish if motherhood is for her.

It’s time to flip the rhetoric. It is not selfish to choose not to have children.

While some childfree people simply do not want children, many have put the needs of their unborn children before their own. Yet, ask any parent why they decided to have children, and the answer usually starts with:

“I wanted ….

Ironic, isn’t it?

I would argue it is selfish to manipulate society into reproducing with impunity in a world with an alarming population growth rate.

Heck, America has almost half a million children in foster care! Isn’t it selfish to continue having biological children when so many children need a home?

In his enlightening video, the spiritual leader, Sadhguru, even goes as far as to say we should award women for choosing not to have children. And in this candid and vulnerable piece, author Andrea Askowitz claims parenthood has rendered her selfish.

Let me be clear, I don’t think having or not having children is selfish. It’s time to cut out the “selfish” BS!

I advocate for everyone to do what is right for them on the reproduction front. I am by no means shaming biological parents or suggesting everyone should adopt. I’m merely shining the light of hypocrisy in the eyes of the author.

Is doing what you want to do a sacrifice?

The problematic author refers to sacrifice several times. I mean, what a martyr!

In one fell swoop, the author alienates not only those of us who are childfree by choice but also those who are childless by circumstances:

“The sacrifices you make when you have children are things you need to exercise to be a person of value — from a quality employee to a reliable friend, and especially a loving spouse.”

So you can only be a “person of value” if you have children!

This is offensive to a wide range of non-parents. It is hierarchical, reductive, and tragically unkind. Please, will someone tell Angela Merkel, Oprah Winfrey, Jennifer Aniston, and Dolly Parton that they have no value as people!

The author says life is about “blood, sweat, and tears.” That may be the meaning of her life, but it certainly isn’t the meaning of mine. This part is where I start to feel pity for her. Is that honestly how the author sees her life? Is she even happy?

Misery loves company

In my experience, the people most bothered by my childfree status are those who didn’t realize parenting was a choice.

The childfree resisters resent that I managed to avoid the parent trap. They harbor an “if I had to do it, you should too” frustration. This anger and internal unhappiness with their life circumstances add venom to their spittal.

The author preaches that we must all experience a curtailment of our freedom, desire, and personal needs to live a life of fulfillment.

Hell, no, lady! I am a Scottish lass after all, so in the slightly edited words of William Wallace:

“You can try and make me have children, but you will never take my freedom!”

Pronatalists love to weaponize fear

Those who believe child producing and rearing is the only path to fulfillment often use fear to try and galvanize a mating frenzy.

The author talks about the childfree going down a “dangerous route,” describing it as “one that’s not particularly safe for the individual and one that will surely lead to a deterioration for society as a whole.”

What a load of unsubstantiated codswallop.

The author closes her piece with the threat of regret.

The truth is, I may regret not having children. But having a child, which I vehemently don’t want, in a bid to avoid possible FOMO in later life would be utter lunacy. Not to mention abhorrently unfair on any child! Interestingly there are more cases of parent regret than regret over choosing not to have children. A Facebook group with over 44,000 followers is dedicated to this cause.

Non-parents are an essential part of society’s cohesion

The author boldly claims that the childfree are responsible for societal deterioration. Her words shame and minimize a growing section of society.

I spent 5 years as the chair of a voluntary community group. None of my committee were parents. I gave up several weeks a year to volunteer at a camp for terminally ill children. Most volunteers were not parents.

Non-parents are responsible for creating a whopping 42% of charitable foundations.

Laura Carroll is an internationally known expert and leading voice on child-free choice. She has collected data since the 90s with over 5,000 online surveys. She has established that many childfree people work in the helping profession and are more likely than their siblings with children to take on care responsibilities of aging parents.

This article suggests our empathy levels shrink and expand during our lifetime. It explains that when people become parents, they turn their empathy inwards, leaving less empathy available for the outside world.

People without children are not the death of society. Hell no! We step up and keep society functioning while parents turn inward to raise their children. And this is ok; we all have our roles to play in the big melting pot of society.

My favorite reflection of a childfree life is the case of this 85-year-old widow, who says she:

“Would live the same life one thousand times.”

Like most childfree people, I have immeasurable love in my life. I cherish the connections I have with invaluable souls.

My eternal hope for society is that all those who want children will have them, and the wishes of those of us who don’t want them will be respected and honored.

In the words of Florence and the Machine:

“I am no mother, I am no bride, I am King.”

🙏Thank you for reading my story Ali Hall

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Yael Wolfe also wrote of her reaction to that article; check out her eloquent words here:

If you want to read more articles from a childfree perspective, here is my library of 20+ articles from all different angles.

A slightly different version of this story was originally published here.

*I’m not linking to this offending article, but if you want to find it, a simple google of that title should bring it up.

Childfree
Life
Parenting
Feminism
Society
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