The Daily Telegraph - Features

‘Just one more’: the women addicted to having children Mother-of-five Jools Oliver, 47, adores newborns so much that she is retraining as a midwife. But other women never feel ‘done’ with having babies. Caroline Corcoran finds out why

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When she was only a few days old, Emily Watson’s daughter Clover went to sleep in a flower crate, which had just delivered the bouquets to a wedding. “The news that we were having her had been a shock,” laughs Emily, 34, a wedding florist from Cambridge. “I had wanted a fifth child but my husband was done at four, so he had a vasectomy. Six months later, though, we found out I was pregnant. I already had a wedding booked in just after my due date so there was no choice: the baby came along to work.”

While many would be horrified by a post-vasectomy pregnancy, Emily was excited. “I’m one of four myself and I thrive on the fullness,” she says.

In a world of Instagram posts of big families in matching pyjamas next to alarmingly neat Christmas trees, the image of baby Clover snoozing in a flower crate while her postpartum mother gets back to work is a refreshing­ly realistic picture of life in a large family.

Celebrity couples such as Jamie and Jools Oliver present a pictureper­fect public image of life with a large brood. Jools Oliver, 47, who has been candid about not being able to conceive a sixth child, has decided to retrain as a midwife to express her passion for newborns, sharing the news on the podcast Postcards from Midlife.

“I think I just want to hold newborn babies left, right and centre. It’s the dream job, catching newborn babies,” she said, explaining that, looking back, she wishes she had gone straight to college to train as a midwife.

Other famous families – such as the Beckhams (four children), the Tennants (five) and the Ramsays (six) – also project a romanticis­ed version of life in a large family. It’s one we are gripped by.

Part of it is the status, surely. We are in an economic crisis and the average cost of raising a child in a two-parent family is £150,000, increasing to £200,000 for single parents. Arguably, there is no better way to demonstrat­e you’re financiall­y solvent than raising half a dozen children.

In 2022, there were 1.247 million “big families” in the UK (those with three or more dependent children) – 1.7 is the average number of children per family.

With a big family, you make other pronouncem­ents too. You are organised enough that you can create costumes from Supertato to The Cat in the Hat for World Book Day and you have the mental capacity to deal with a plethora of class WhatsApp groups. Quite a feat for most working and juggling parents. But a big family usually means a lot of compromise.

“I knew I would have enough love for every child,” says Kelcey Kinter Folbaum, from Atlanta, Georgia, who has five children aged between 10 and 19. “But time and money are different things. You give up certain things when you have a big family. Fancy ski vacations are not in the cards.”

At points, Kelcey felt conflicted. “There wasn’t enough of me to go around,” she says. “But as they’ve got older and more independen­t, it’s become so much easier.”

For women like Emily and Kelcey, a gaggle of children is simply the family narrative. They opt for large families out of maternal instinct and a desire for a full, bustling home.

In other instances, though, experts argue that the reasons for pursuing a large family can be more complex, often worrying.

“When it’s not financiall­y viable ... it may be time to question why,” says clinical psychologi­st Dr Amber Johnston.

“From a neuropsych­ology perspectiv­e, that can be about trying to fulfil unmet needs that are normally based in childhood experience­s, particular­ly involving attachment issues or love that has never quite been felt.”

When women give birth, their bodies are flooded with oxytocin, which is so closely aligned to that feeling of being loved that it is often referred to as the “love hormone” or “cuddle hormone”.

If love is something that has felt absent or limited in life, having a baby can feel like it is a way to fast-track to that state, especially when oxytocin hangs around in the body for a good 18 months to two years. In fact, the NHS recommends you wait 18 months in between having babies, in order to allow your body to recover.

That also comes on the back of the dopamine that is present in pregnancy from “wanting and waiting for something special to happen,” says Dr Johnston.

“These chemicals are our internal pharmacy,” she adds. “And yes, they can be addictive.”

Another part of parenthood that some women find hard to leave behind is the feeling of being “needed” after years of running to hungry newborns and coughing toddlers. When children grow up and require a mother’s presence less, that can unsettle some.

While most mothers will fill that gap by clawing back a little of their pre-baby life, some will return repeatedly to the baby starting line to fend off the inevitable.

“As children need you less, you may find you have lost a sense of purpose,” says the family counsellor Matthew Adam. “Then there’s a thought: ‘I know how I can create that sense of purpose. By having another child.’

“It’s the same in women who love being pregnant. The identity of being a pregnant woman may stop you having to answer the question of who you are on the other side.”

It’s a concern, as it suggests the loss of other parts of an identity, outside of being a mother. “If we feel something is missing, we may try and find it by doing more of the same and having another baby,” says Dr Johnston. “In reality, it may be better to look at other parts of your identity. Making more connection­s with other women who you go out with may be a better way of filling that space than doing the same thing again and again with more children.”

Having newborn after newborn can also be a way of avoiding the complexiti­es of a real world that can, in 2024, be overwhelmi­ng. That nightmare boss can fade away into the background along with war zones and election results.

“There is a sort of grief as they grow,” Emily admits. “If you have another one, you know you can hold on to that phase for a bit longer. It’s addictive.”

Now, though, Emily is embracing the next era of motherhood with her husband David, 39, and children, Daisy, 17, Blossom, 11, Buddy, 10, Albie, eight, and Clover, six. “It feels strange when they don’t need you as much, but I’m also excited about the things we can do together as they get older,” she says.

For those who find it harder to move on from the newborn years, Dr Johnston recommends shifting the focus.

“Instead of the ‘just one more’ thought of a future child, it’s about being mindful of what you have in front of you now,” she says.

“That involves shifting from the dopamine experience, which is about wanting and seeking, to oxytocin, vasopressi­n and serotonin, which are about being grateful and content with the attachment and love that are here in front of you now.

“It’s a different drug and it’s a different feeling. There is a skill involved in shifting that focus but that might be where, if this is something you’re struggling with, you look to get some help.”

‘Oxytocin and dopamine are our internal pharmacy. And they can be addictive’

 ?? ?? Blooming marvellous: florist Emily Watson and her five children
Blooming marvellous: florist Emily Watson and her five children
 ?? ?? Five alive: Jools and Jamie Oliver in 2016 with newborn River and their four older children
Five alive: Jools and Jamie Oliver in 2016 with newborn River and their four older children

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