Sunday Tribune

Positive info for girls on pregnancy

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FERTILITY experts think we should use sex education to tell girls how to get pregnant.

Sex education traditiona­lly focuses on the nuts and bolts of sex with an emphasis on contracept­ion. At my school, boys and girls were separated. A lady from the local health clinic came to talk to us girls.

I assumed she was the nurse, though she may have been the receptioni­st or the lady who came round once a week to donate her copy of Women’s Weekly. Who knows? It was in the 1980s.

She popped a condom on a banana, told us about the pill, the coil and the “rhythm method”, and then she was gone, leaving us to wonder if the boys had also had a fruit-based demonstrat­ion.

The message I got from home and school and every magazine or programme aimed at me was: “Do not get pregnant, plenty of time for all that when you’re much older.” I heeded it with an obedient “okay” and didn’t entertain the idea until I was in my thirties.

So I spent my twenties “building my career”, ie getting drunk on the comedy circuit. I didn’t actually focus on my career until my thirties and decided that if I was to have a child, I’d probably have to feed it so I’d better stop boozing and write jokes instead.

Now, doctors and fertility experts are urging school to teach girls how to get pregnant rather than just ways to avoid it. Again, not sure what plans they have for boys. Perhaps while the girls are learning about ovulation cycles, the lads will be coached on how to fashion a sling out of a paisley print shawl.

The point is that they fear girls will be left with the assumption that getting pregnant will be easy and that they will be able to have children at the time of their choosing.

The average age for first-time mothers is rising. I was 34 when I had my first and my second was born on the eve of my 40th birthday.

Barely a day goes by without my looking at her and thinking, “Phew! Just in the nick of time!” I felt like Indiana Jones when he grabs his hat from under the falling stone door a split second before it would crush him. (Please don’t ever tell my daughter that she is a hat to me.)

There are a great deal of eggshells scattered on any terrain where fertility and having babies is discussed. No one wants to make younger women feel pressured with the passive aggressive coos of “Tick tock! You don’t want to leave it too long!” In my opinion, “tick tocking” in someone’s face should be classified as a “womb crime”, along with, “so, you trying for another yet?” when you’ve barely stopped smarting from the first.

No one should make an older woman who has not had children feel she must explain herself. It’s rude to ask and they have the right to blow a raspberry and stomp off if you say, “But won’t you be lonely when you’re old?”

Actually, I said this to my 46-year-old, child-free brother who blew a raspberry in my face and stomped off. I am not perfect.

It’s a good idea to properly discuss the fact that conceiving is not easy for everyone and that IVF is not a guaranteed safety net. Why not do this in school and allow girls to be realistic about their biology and choices? It’s also okay to discuss the pain of being unintentio­nally childless.

Without boring you with info on my fallopian tubes, I was told at 33, I had to start trying soon. I was lucky to get my son as quickly as I did.

My divorce meant we didn’t have the second child together. When it looked for a while like I wouldn’t have another, I was inconsolab­le. I would also charge everyone who said to me, “But why can’t you just be happy with the one you’ve got?” with a “womb crime”.

Schools should also mention the importance of a supportive community when rearing a child and of flexible employers, so that people don’t feel like once they’ve had a baby, they’ve moved to a parallel universe where careers and socialisin­g are a thing of the past.

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