Unplanned Childlessness
“My daughters are in their thirties. They always hoped to marry and planned to be starting a family by now. It is so hard to see them grieving this loss.”
It’s a common story we hear among our peers. Their single children are in their twenties, thirties and forties. Many of these are well past the age at which their parents married and began families.
As one’s educational investment expands in time and expense, marriage and family get delayed. Once embarked on a career, the fear of demotion or being overtaken by colleagues convinces young professionals that marriage and family are too costly.
When finally, the time is ‘right’, for too many couples, conceiving is not as easy or as quick as expected. Years of heartbreak follow, often with demanding and problematic infertility treatments that ultimately fail.
It is devastating to be in this predicament. The reality of involuntary infertility is acutely painful for the couple, but also for their parents, who often grieve the absence of grandchildren.
Fertility Decline
Social scientists refer to this as Unplanned Childlessness, a phrase that haunts us. We came across it through the research of Dr Stephen J Shaw, a British data scientist and documentary filmmaker who has illuminated some troubling trends in fertility.
A fertility rate of 2.1 children per woman is statistically the minimum required to maintain a population. The rate is always applied to women rather than men, as their role in fertility is more critical and time-limited.
In many developed nations, the rate has been below replacement level for decades. Because the impact of declining fertility is cumulative and takes 20-30 years to manifest, it may not be obvious at first glance, especially if population growth and economic stimulus are propped up with immigration.
His global data analysis showed something unexpected: the family size of those who do have children is not changing significantly. Rather, the decline in birth rates is driven primarily by the rise in the number of childless women.
In other words, women who have children are generally not having fewer children than previous generations. What has changed, is that more and more women are not having any children.
For example, in Australia, the proportion of childless women has almost doubled from 9% in 1981 to 16.4% in 2022.*
Real Lives
But this is not just about statistics and public policy. This situation is very personal for a lot of people because for many, like our friend’s daughters, childlessness is not a choice.
While some women (and men) do choose to forgo parenthood – and that is a choice that should be respected – for many, childlessness is imposed.
Their childlessness is due to circumstances completely beyond their control. Some actively sought a suitable mate but were unable to find someone to be their partner and parent of their children. In this instance, it’s not an issue of infertility, but of partner dearth.
Increasingly, however, childlessness is the unintended consequence of well-intentioned but under-informed choices. We regularly encounter couples who voluntarily delayed childbearing, believing the opportunity would be available at a later time.
They believed that their fertility would be intact until their fifties, and that technology would solve any diminishment. They discovered too late, that their biology has real limitations.
We all make decisions based on the information available to us at the time. As we mark World Childless Week (16-24 September 2024), our question is this: Are our young people given all the information they need to make truly informed choices about their fertility management?
So many people tell us that they wish someone had warned them. That in addition to the messages that taught them to fear unplanned pregnancy, someone had also told them about unplanned childlessness.
___
Republished with thanks to SmartLoving. Image courtesy of Adobe.
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Interesting. Nearly 70 now I became a Christian at 36 and prayed for a Christian husband until I was 50. Did not want children outside marriage. Christian men my age wanted younger women. Have numerous female Christian friends in same situation. Many of us had no choice. Where were all the Christian men?
Yes Sylvia where are all the Christian men? I know quite a few beautiful Christian girls who won’t compromise by marrying just anybody. They want a committed Christian and so they remain single. 😢
In the church I attend it’s a case of where are the Christian women. Young men outnumber young women by about 4 to 1. As a result, few appear to be interested in marriage as an early option and the culture now regards it as something of an optional extra . As for having children, that is off their radar.
Perhaps you should have a church meet up with the churches low on men :p
This article has exposed the lie that fertility continues in women into their 50s which is nonsense, as is that fertility treatments will solve the problem. My specialist in the 1970s advised me that the best age for a woman to conceive was about age 24. We had no money, slept on floor at first, ‘fridge was an ice-box, but, I decided to have children while I was able and not wait. The problem with fertility and declining populations is the fault of The Pill ! My daughters waited until they got degrees , got lumbered with HEC debts, prioritised careers led by womens’ magazines telling them they had lots of time. Result was regret that they could only have one child at age 40 as their fertiility had declined . Yes, where are decent men in today’s society ? It is a problem ! Rare as hen’s teeth .
This seems like an obvious thing to overlook, but society is teaching that the way God made nature doesnt need to hinder us. Which is incorrect.
The ‘career’ first attitude seems to come from the equal rights movement. Women wanted to have it all – but we cant. It is either impossible, or too much for one person to handle. The decision needs to be made in your twenties – marriage and children or a career.