The decision to have a baby can be loaded with romance, but it also comes with a fair amount of uncertainty. On the one hand, there is the possibility of joy and new meaning in your life, but on the other, it requires you to sacrifice your freedom and flexibility.
This man and his spouse weren’t ready for it. He made a post on the subreddit ‘Parenting,’ describing how detached his wife was from her role of being a mom, and even though at first it sounded like there was plenty of room for the benefit of the doubt, the subsequent updates the man released on his family revealed a much grimmer reality.
This couple weren’t ready to have a baby
Image credits: Carlos Santiago (not the actual photo)
But they realized it only after the birth of their daughter
Image credits: Sarah Chai (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Kampus Production (not the actual photo)
Image credits: workingwifethrowaway
As the story went viral, people started guessing the reason behind the woman’s indifference
New moms go through a lot after delivering their child, but as time goes on, they usually find strength in themselves
Image credits: Sarah Chai (not the actual photo)
The postpartum period begins after the delivery of the baby and ends when the mom’s body has nearly returned to its pre-pregnant state. It often lasts 6 to 8 weeks and involves them moving through many changes, both emotionally and physically.
However, experts highlight that this stage also involves the mom and her partner learning how to care for their newborn as well as how to function as a changed family unit.
Aurélie Athan, a reproductive psychologist at Columbia University, compares it to the awkwardness of adolescence. “It’s a holistic change in multiple domains of your life,” she told NPR. “You’re going to feel it perhaps bodily, psychologically. You’re going to feel it with your peer groups. You’re going to feel it at your job. You’re going to feel it in terms of the big philosophical questions.”
Caring for the baby day in and day out is particularly difficult in that first year, but as parents get the hang of things and become more confident, they start to recognize the person they were and have always been.
Talking to the same publisher, clinical psychologist Pria Alpern suggested that rather than thinking about it as a loss of identity, motherhood should be reframed as an evolution, a stage that empowers you. However, the Redditor’s wife did not do this.
Later, the author of the post released an update
Image credits: Pavel Danilyuk (not the actual photo)
Image credits: workingwifethrowaway
He then provided a few more details in the comments
And made another follow-up post full of unsettling revelations
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Image credits: workingwifethrowaway
He then made the final update
Image credits: Oană Andrei (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Engin Akyurt (not the actual photo)
Image credits: workingwifethrowaway
It’s difficult to justify this couple
Image credits: Pavel Danilyuk (not the actual photo)
For much of the country’s history, placing a child up for adoption was an obligation, not a choice, generally for poor, single women. In the decades after World War II, more than 3 million young pregnant women were “funneled into an often-coercive system they could neither understand nor resist,” Gabrielle Glaser explained in her recent book, American Baby. They lived with strangers as servants or hid in maternity homes until they gave birth, only to be pressured into closed adoptions, after which biological mothers and their babies had no contact.
However, since the mid-1970s—the end of the so-called baby-scoop era—the percentage of never-married women who relinquish their infants has declined from nearly 9 percent to less than 1 percent.
Now, of the nearly 4 million American children who are born each year, only about 18,000 are voluntarily given up for adoption.
Adoption is permanent. It’s a big decision, but there are plenty of ways to get support that will help you. A good place to start is by talking to a social worker at the hospital where you have the baby or to adoption services in your state or territory (listed below).
The decision this couple made is not only a big one, but it’s permanent, and the fact that the main—and, quite possibly, only—reason behind it was inconvenience, leaves little room for empathy.