Society

The Darkness Of The Womb

A hitherto unheard narrative over motherhood is beginning to be voiced바카라”notes of regret, confusion

The Darkness Of The Womb
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바카라œI am a 21-year-old single mot­her of a two-year-old child. I바카라™ve had feelings of regret since the day of her birth. I genuinely believe my mental health is bec­oming more uns­table as a result of not being ready for parenthood. I love my child immensely, but I genuinely hate the task of parenting daily. My question is that for people who experience this, does the feeling ever change or will I alw­ays be silently miserable? And if it does not, how would I be proactive in finding a solution? I am trying to find what is best for both myself and my child, given the situation,바카라 reads a recent (February 11) Facebook post.

A post such as this may elicit a range of reactions from people depending on which generation, region, caste and spectrum of ideology they inhabit at given times. For India, indeed the world, the very term 바카라˜mother바카라™ comes with a historical/cultural baggage spanning centuries (for instance, the proverbial Mother India and terming modern nations as 바카라˜motherlands바카라™). The reverence accorded to the term is deemed unq­uestionable, almost. But, confessions have always existed. If they were exp­ressed earlier in soft-spoken murmurs to und­erstanding friends, now, many of us have learned to make them on the virtual social, where the listener is a huge base of people, among them, the like-minded and the empathetic.

Thus, the taboos are breaking down and an inc­reasing number of parents, especially mothers, are today confessing to feelings of regret about having children. Whether openly discussing the bitterness they feel about having had to sacrifice their own aspirations and careers in order to adjust to the demands of bringing up children, speaking about resenting the loss of personal space and freedom that parenthood entails or talking about the crushing disillusionment of parenthood, they are expressing their deepest emotions on the issue like never before. So much so that several surveys and academic studies as well as close to half-a-dozen books on the subject have appeared internationally, with experts in the fields of sociology and psychology calling it a 바카라˜global phenomenon바카라™.

바카라œI was only 22 years old when my daughter was born and, at that time, I had regretted the dec­ision,바카라 says Mimi Raj. Twenty-four years later, even though the 46-year-old employee of a Calcutta NGO admits that it is her daughter, Shreya, whom she loves most in the world, she nevertheless confes­ses that those early feelings of regret have not completely disappeared. 바카라œI had to drop out of college to look after my baby. While my husband was going out with friends, partying, drinking and dancing late into the night, I had to stay at home and change diapers. It made me depressed, angry and resentful and to this day, even though I love my little girl, I feel that I was deprived of my youth.바카라

Another mother, Jhumli Bhattacharjee, a 41-year-old general manager of a luxury resort in Madhya Pradesh, recounts a similar tale of bottled-up grievances. She cherishes her daughter, Srestha Sinha. Yet 14 years ago, when Srestha was born, Jhumli바카라™s life had turned so completely topsy-turvy that she immediately regretted the dec­ision. 바카라œMy marriage fell apart and I found myself having to raise the child alone,바카라 says she. 바카라œMy husband and I had disagreed on the timing to have children. He wanted to wait but I felt that I was at the right age. Also, I wanted to have at least two to three children so that ours could be a house full of laughter and the pitter-patter of children바카라™s feet. But after our first child was born, he never stopped blaming me for imposing the 바카라˜burden바카라™ of fatherhood on him. We quarrelled all the time and one day he just left. I was saddled with the entire responsibility of bringing up our daughter with no support from her father. Suddenly, the idea of being a mother was not the delightful thing that I had imagined it would be. It became a lesson in why people should think twice before making this kind of a life-long commitment.바카라

And the feeling is shared by many. ­Another post on Facebook reads: 바카라œI have 10-month-old twins, and I hate my life. My husband is in the army, so he바카라™s away a lot. I hate the monotony...since having them, I바카라™ve become increasingly bitter, depressed and angry. I want to start over but my husband will not sacrifice his car­eer and won바카라™t have full custody. I don바카라™t want to be a single mum. I바카라™m not keen on adoption. As I바카라™m in the UK, they (the children) would just be taken into the care system and I wouldn바카라™t know if they were ok. Open adoptions are not legal here. Does anyone have any other opt­ions or advice? Starting to feel like my only option is to suck it up or hand them over to social service.바카라

One of the first to drag the taboo topic to the public domain was French author Corinne Maier, a mother of two children, who in her 2007 book, No Kids: 40 Good Reasons Not to Be a Mother, delineated the downside of parenthood to a world accustomed to glorifying it.

It has taken ­India longer to come to terms with the fact that regret after parenthood is not an unc­ommon experience. 바카라œI thought I was the devil personified,바카라 says a Calcutta mother. When she tried to talk to her mother and mother-in-law, they were horrified, so she kept the feelings to herself.

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Mimi Raj with her daughter, Shreya

The difficulty for parents ­is to admit to these feelings, even to ­themselves, ­because of the ­associated guilt.

Photograph by Sandipan Chatterjee

바카라œStigma is mainly the reason that parents don바카라™t open up when they feel these emotions because society conditions us to beli­eve that these are 바카라˜unnatural바카라™,바카라 says consultant psychiatrist Dr Debashis Ray. 바카라œBut pre and post-natal depression has exi­sted before psychology could diagnose it. While these feelings could be temporary or intermittent, it could also be a lifelong experience.바카라

Of all the parents that Outlook spoke with, more mothers than fathers said that they experienced doubt and regret. Mimi바카라™s husband, Sanjay Raj, for instance, spoke of an entirely different experience. 바카라œThe only time I felt a tinge of regret was when I was dissuaded by friends from taking part in a high-speed motorcycle race. 바카라œ바카라˜You are a father now,바카라™ my friends reminded me바카라™, 바카라˜You can바카라™t lead the life of a carefree bachelor. If something happens to you, what will happen to your daughter?바카라™바카라

The difficulty for mothers and fathers is to admit to these feelings, even to themselves, because of the associa­ted guilt. 바카라œThe fear that their children would misconstrue these emotions to mean that they are not wanted makes it doubly problematic,바카라 says Dr Ray.

바카라œThe resentment is about my own unf­ulfilled dreams of going to college, pursuing a career,바카라 says Mimi Raj. 바카라œI don바카라™t blame my daughter for it.바카라

Jhumli Bhattacharjee agrees. 바카라œIt was my choice to have a child and I should take full responsibility and I do. Yet, the circumstances under which I wanted to be a mother have completely turned on its head. It made me rethink motherhood. I am more disillusioned now. But Srestha is still the centre of my life.바카라

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