The Subtle Allure of A Life More Ordinary (or the Brainwashing of American Women)
There’s something about magazines like Real Simple and TV shows like House Hunters that depresses me. I can’t quite put my finger on it, but every time I attempt a sit on the couch post-work I am irritated by things like Everybody Loves Raymond. There’s a part of me that is suspicious that these forms of entertainment have been created to make us believe that not only are you content with your life, but you are enthusiastic about it, a subtle (or not-so-subtle, in my opinion) brainwashing of home-improving, toddler-yogaing, exasperated-but-happy-at-the-end-of-the-day, we’re-the-same-kind-of-unique status quo. Welcome to the new yuppiedom.Maybe I’m just feeling particularly fed up with the new American dream this evening, as I sit in my underwear, toenails unpainted and unmanicured, eating Oreos with orange juice, wondering why I’m throwing 5 months of perfectly good conditioning down the drain. Maybe it’s that I’ve recently fallen in love and have caught myself twice already daydreaming into that magical land I call Not A Chance in Hell.
That place involves a relationship that can survive my apparent two-year statute of limitations with a guy who looks like a J. Crew model, a baby as cute and happy as the one that couple at the café has that will magically disappear when it needs to be fed/changed/burped or cries inexplicably, a house that requires little-to-no maintenance which of course we obtained at a steal, a thriving business that I built and doesn’t require me to be around all the time, and a Holly who does not feel overwhelming pinned-down and caged by it all.
Puh-shaw.
That’s when I turn off the TV. And call Real Simple to remind them, once again, that I unsubscribed two months ago. I fight off the sneaking suspicion that somehow, somewhere my father has bribed a Starbucks barista to spike my lattes with hormones. I have been told repeatedly that one day I will want all of these things. When I get a case of the I-just-want-to-be-upper-middle-class blues, I daydream another life.
In this life I usually am married, or in a long-term committed relationship. Yes, I am happy and content being single, but like many, I would like to have a companion through life. I think a character in Shall We Dance? sums it up best when she says people get married so that in a world of billions, one person says they will be the witness to your life. I agree with this.
At any rate, 90 percent of me says no to kids. This is mostly a financial decision in my mind. Yes, I know you can be financially well off and have kids also, but the majority of folks are not. Here are a few examples of childless couples who are financially better off than their peers (especially where it comes to retirement). And here’s an entire online community dedicated to couples who have chosen not to have kids for a variety of reasons. I take comfort knowing that I'm not the only one out there like me.
Mostly, though, this daydream life is about being able to do the things I am passionate about without any compromises or guilt feelings, such as diving tirelessly into my own businesses, having a partner who I still find sexually appealing, coming nowhere close to any variety of poop/snot/vomit, and traveling at will and on whim.
I have nightmare versions of both of my daydreams, too. There’s one that revolves around divorce, debt, failed parenthood and suburbia, and there’s one that mostly involves being alone for the rest of my life realizing at 47 that all I really ever wanted was a family. These things occur to me. It also occurs to me that none of these scenarios are realistic, and that in life we end up somewhere in the middle. The glory part is that I actually know that I will be happy whichever dream I pursue or end up with inadvertently (life has a way of surprising us). My happiness resides within me, whatever the exterior.
In the meantime, no more HGTV for me. Or Oreos for that matter.
Labels: children, life, love, personal finance, relationships, sex, work-life balance

11 Comments:
Ugh. I completely agree. Everyone says my biological clock will chime in soon, but do we have to talk about it in the meantime as an inevitability? Thanks for the great post :)
TV was created as a distraction so that people can escape from their own pathetic lives, 30 minutes at a time :) Good for you for not buying into that crap.
You are right, life has a way of surprising us but we have a say in it too. While it is normal to have those super scary daydreams about kids, poop, divorce, debt and suburbia (and they make my skin crawl!), in my unprofessional opinion, life would not play that horrible a trick on you.
I think it is wonderful that you are self-aware enough to see that no matter what life throws at you, you can survive and happy, in any case. I feel that that is a lesson that I keep having to relearn over and over….. my happiness lies within, my happiness lies within…….
The BF and I have talked about this extensively and decided that we don't want to have children for a variety of reasons. Fortunately we aren't married yet so haven't had to defend this decision to practical strangers the way that we anticipate. But we are steeling ourselves...
@Rebecca: Maybe I’m just embracing my inner 20-something. Call me crazy. ;) It took a lot for me to give up single life for a committed relationship with an amazing man; don’t ask me to embrace my biological clock until I’m at least 30!
@monicarol: It's definitely something I work at also. I dig your mantra - I think I'll adopt it.
@honey: Oh, it's gonna be ugly, I can guarantee it. When I started talking to my friends about the possibility of not having kids, it was like I was attacking them, even though they hadn't considered the possibility of NOT having them. It's interesting, to be sure. But, yeah, get ready to fight the kiddo question starting at the reception...
omg. My husband loves this show called Jon and Kate + 8. Basic premise: Jon and Kate can't have kids, so they go with fertility pills. They have twin girls. They want one more... and accidentally have SIX more.
So I sat down to watch one episode with him and by the end of it I was in tears, nearly hyperventilating. He just laughed at me. But that show depicts my absolute worst nightmare... so I can definitely relate.
@Holly--yeah, I know. A bunch of the fellows at the BF's engineering firm are Mormon, so god only knows what kind of comments we'll get...
@Monica--I haven't seen that show, but I've seen the commercials! Craziness, just craziness.
Usually the people who ask me why I haven't had kids yet have at least 2 kids themselves...SO, my reply to these nosy nimrods is always the same, "You all seem to be repopulating the earth just fine. I don't feel the need to contribute just yet." Bitter, maybe. But I don't get asked that question anymore ;)
I think there can be both. Suburbia, where I grew up, repulses me and I want no part of it. My wife and I are raising our kids in the city (as much as St. Petersburg is a city), and exposing them to what life is really all about. By doing so, we're not insulating ourselves into the homogenized crap that suburbia offers.
Don't run from your recent success. You are about to have it all, enjoy it.
The world is full of people that just love projecting their version of what they think is suitable for you. It's part of the reason why so many people struggle with their relationships - because they do what they think they should be doing based on what society dictates, or are driven by the fear of not meeting society's standards. Do what you want. I think if more women said what they really felt, they'd be less of us feeling so miserable!
I guess at the end of the day it's what you are happy with.
You don't have to do what society tells you to do ... but there are a lot of our thoughts that are being influenced by it .. without us even knowing it.
If you don't want to have kids then don't have them .. but i see what you are saying there is this social expectation to have them.
In terms of the financial thing, they are going to hit the money pot ... thats why its good to set yourself up first before you even consider having them.
Me personally .. will love to have heaps of kids .. Its a really important thing for me ...
But like i just said ... I'm going to work my ass off and get financially stable before i even think about having kids ...
Hot Alpha Female
www.hotalphafemale.blogspot.com
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home