The Guardian (USA)

I don't want children but being an aunt is the joy of my life

- • Lara Holmes studies and writes about the relationsh­ip between feminism and comedy Lara Holmes

“Zia, can I have some Mentos?” my seven-year-old nephew, Samson, asks me this every Wednesday when I pick him up from school. When I’m fuelling up my car before I get him, I stock up on rainbow Mentos from the servo to ensure he will not be disappoint­ed. It is a ritual I adore.

I have never desired to have children. Whatever that feeling is, I don’t know it. Since I was a teenager, this proclamati­on was met with a monologue of why I am a defective woman. I was told I could never understand what it means to love a child. That I must hate children, that there was only one real way to have them in your life; to have your own. I internalis­ed this narrative and rejected the idea of children being important to me, believing I was missing the child-loving gene.

As a natural progressio­n from this message, I never thought about the role of aunt in the same way I had about the role of mother: legitimate. I always thought of aunt, or Zia as we say in Italian, as just a way to identify who was kin. In 2013 I became a Zia and was ready for it to mean nothing. To my surprise, it is the happiest experience of my life, and my notion of Zia-dom changed when I started making my life choices around what could give me more time with my nephew (Samson, 7) and niece (Ophelia, 3).

I upgraded my car so I could fit both of their seats in it, I give them baths, help with their homework and we have a weekly sleepover. My love for them erupted out of me, challengin­g how I felt about children in general. Caring for and helping to raise these two children is a central part of my life, but it does not dictate my life as it would if I were a mother. It is this intense love and tiny insight into motherhood that confirms for me more than anything that I do not want children.

Adrienne Rich states that motherhood is a patriarcha­l institutio­n. It shames mothers into a specific set of expectatio­ns that are impossible to attain. Mothers are judged for allowing their children to use devices, co-sleeping, engaging in paid work, not engaging in paid work, being fat, being thin, breastfeed­ing, using formula – the list goes on. I have seen what must be sacrificed – body, career, relationsh­ips – and how this is never enough for a culture that is always wagging its finger at you. I have witnessed the bravery it takes to be a mother in a patriarcha­l world, and I do not wish to cast myself in that net. It is the act of mothering, Rich defines, which is the potentiall­y empowering experience.

Mothering is the work done by anyone who loves and cares for a child, states Andrea O’Reilly. If women know they can partake in mothering without being a mother, its less likely patriarcha­l motherhood can control them with impossible standards.

This is the intersecti­on I choose to live in. I must state that while I perform mothering, I do not understand the multifacet­ed intricacie­s of being a mother. It is important however that perspectiv­es of women like me – who love children but have no desire to have their own – are made active members of this narrative, rather than being branded as selfish and unaffectio­nate.

People ask me what my “problem” is. Some don’t seem to believe I love Samson and Ophelia so deeply. They don’t see the role I have in their lives as legitimate. They don’t think of an aunt’s love as anything special; I didn’t until I became one. An aunt’s love is not the same as a mother’s, but it is just as real.

I am deeply involved in my niece and nephew’s lives. I have discussion­s with them about race and consent. I know Samson’s library day is Thursday. Ophelia will only drink out of the glass with the pictures of trees on it. It is this effortless love I was falsely told I was incapable of feeling because I don’t want children.

I have spent my whole life knowing I don’t want children and believing I couldn’t love them. Now, I know the truth: I can be child-free while experienci­ng the bliss of loving and being loved by children. Being a Zia is the joy of my life, and I don’t need or want anything else. When will our culture at large start to see it this way?

 ?? Photograph: ArtMarie/Getty Images/Vetta ?? ‘Caring for and helping to raise these two children is a central part of my life, but it does not dictate my life as it would if I were a mother.’
Photograph: ArtMarie/Getty Images/Vetta ‘Caring for and helping to raise these two children is a central part of my life, but it does not dictate my life as it would if I were a mother.’

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