don't you know what causes that?
The Fam 2002 |
Today, a friend passed on to me a blog post entitled “Top
10 Ridiculous Responses Regarding My Third Pregnancy.” As a mother who has
four children, all of the responses on the list were familiar to me. As a mother
who had four children in four years, I could think of a few more that didn’t
make this girl’s list.
She left off “Were you born in a barn?” and “You need some
hobbies.” And another favorite, almost always asked in the grocery store: “Are
they ALL yours?”
My kids are all teenagers now, so I remember these comments
with a smile. They don’t offend me – I understand that most people don’t have a
file folder for people with “larger families”, although a family of six is not
extraordinarily large. It doesn’t bother me to be mentally filed under “Hillbilly”,
“Catholic” or even “Mormon” – people are just doing their best to process
reality. I remember flying to Cincinnati one Christmas with two lap children
and two in car seats. A sweet young Mormon couple on the next row carried on a
knowing conversation with us for most of the flight before realizing we were
actually just Southern Baptists with no sense of moderation. We deplaned leaving them as baffled by our
family planning as our Southern Baptist friends were.
Over the years I’ve developed some responses to these repeated
awkward questions. For example:
“Don’t you know what causes that?” – “Clearly. We’re so good at it
we should patent the process.”
“Are they ALL yours?” – “No, I just think WalMart is so fun that I
go pick up extra toddlers to bring along with me.”
“Is your husband getting snipped?” – “Already has. It was a
non-event, really – nothing a bag of frozen vegetables couldn’t mend. Can I
serve you some more peas?”
The trickiest one to answer, in my case, is, “Did you mean
to do that?” If I say, “Yes, who doesn’t want four kids in four years?” I’m
basically insane. If I say “No”, I’m an idiot. The truth is, I’m not sure what
my answer is. The question itself implies far more control over conception than
even I can claim to have.
And that’s the real reason we should be careful about these
kinds of questions. Yes, they’re funny, and yes, I’m a big fan of
self-deprecating humor, but it’s not me that these questions can hurt. It’s my
friends and family who know with great clarity that conception is a miracle because it is one they have not experienced. It’s
the people I love who ache for fertility to be their scandal.
During the Four Years of Much Pregnancy, my dearest friend
was infertile. She came to my baby showers and listened to the jokes. She came
to my hospital bed four years in a row to hold the latest Wilkin. She cried
tears of joy for me, but I know she carried her sorrow with every casserole she
brought to my home. I would have.
So I suggest that we stop saying these things to the woman
whose arms are full of children for the sake of the woman whose arms are not.
Because the answer to “Don’t you know what causes that?” is not a what, but a Who. I don’t know why God gave me children effortlessly and withholds
them from others who would make fantastic parents, but I know this: Fertility
is not a curse, it is a gift. It is a scandalous miracle.
So the next time you see a mother with a herd of small
progeny, just say “What a blessing!" And maybe offer to help her get those groceries to the car. Or offer to put her kids through college. Any or all of these responses would be just fine.