The Arizona Republic

Woman finds a way to be mom

- – Helen in Washington Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAb by.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Dear Abby: I have some suggestion­s for “Longing to Be a Mom” (Feb. 27), whose husband doesn’t want a child. If you talk your husband into it, are you prepared to do all the parenting while he sits staring at the TV or starts working longer hours or worse? Are you prepared for the lack of connection that child might have with his/her father?

Grieve your loss. Losing the possibilit­y for motherhood is a great loss. Find a support group or counselor who deals with loss. Believe me, I understand. My boyfriend told me he wanted children. Motherhood was my dream, and I lost my only child to an early miscarriag­e. Then my husband revealed he’d never really wanted children – he only said he did because he wanted to marry me.

So I made a conscious decision to live a different life than I had planned, but a full and satisfying one. Thousands of children need someone to care.

Help at a church’s children’s department, a Girl Scout troop, tutor children at a local school, offer to take a single mom’s children to a park for an hour. The possibilit­ies are endless.

Dear Helen: Thank you for offering sensible advice to help “Longing” as well as other women in her situation. Readers suggested other ways to mother children who are already in the world: joining the Big Brothers Big Sisters program, volunteeri­ng at a day care facility, cuddling newborns at a hospital and becoming involved in a homeless shelter’s Adopt-a-Family program.

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