I am a mom, mind you. I am not sorry I am one. I think I stink at it, but I also think they'll get over it, and I try to do my best, and what more can you do? It's a lot better and worse than I expected. The usual. And I still draw and write and use my mind so that when time permits I can continue my stuff, and when they're older I can do still more of it.
But I have been hearing from time to time women saying they've always wanted to be moms ever since they were little. I remember my college roommates saying they used to plan their perfect wedding as girls, and I can only assume those are the ones who always wanted to be moms. I just chalked it down to being at a Christian college, in my Church we tend to run into that sort of thing more. And that's fine for them I guess, but I thought it was odd. I never did that. So when I started hearing more recently the phrase "I've always wanted to be a mom," I was really puzzled. This was just from women on one of those TV nanny shows. And it was more than one. I asked my husband what kind of nut job spends her childhood dreaming of having children of her own and he said he thought that was probably normal.
Well, I don't understand this. He's NT but he's, well, a dude, so he doesn't necessarily know this for sure. Is it an NT thing? Or did I never dream with anticipation of such a huge responsibility because I'm a youngest with and overwhelmed mom who had 9 kids, and there was just no glamour in that? In thinking it over, I never played dolls in the way my daughters do, tending and feeding and the like. I liked the functional miniatures dolls sometimes had and setting them up in miniature arrangements like the real thing. I still collect the nice ones... But I never played baby dolls that I can remember.
But I used to dream of being a writer, artist, ballerina, archaeologist, and dozens of fascinating and exciting careers. I dreamed of meeting my soul mate. But never, ever did I want to be a mom. I dreaded the idea for a long time. And one day I decided to, I'm glad to say. Felt right at the time and turns out it was.
Did any Aspies here always want to be parents?
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"Pack up my head, I'm goin' to Paris!" - P.W.
The world loves diversity... as long as it's pretty, makes them look smart and doesn't put them out in any way.
There's the road, and the road less traveled, and then there's MY road.