That is collaboration with the monstrosity surrogacy is. Same for single mothers who arbitrarily remove the father from the family planning.
Discussion
Should a woman whose fertility window is closing completely give up the opportunity to have a child because Mr. Right hasn’t shown up?
Weirdly I have had men offer to get me with child but with no offer to stick around and raise it.
A chivalrous man will be a husband and a father. Not just sire your offspring and leave. Why would a woman seek those out, though?
It is certainly a matter of the circles you have inserted yourself into.
I have not sought these men out. Nor are they my friends or in my circle. It’s like a pickup line with some men.
You focused on that though and skipped over my previous question. Should a woman miss out on being a mother simply because she hasn’t found a husband in time?
A fatherless child to fulfill one's desire.
Why not do it the right way and offer the child a father and a mother?
Your question lies in the field of noncommittal relationship. That is clearly to be avoided.
My question was very clearly worded so as to say when time is running out. A woman does not have an infinite fertility window. So to default to a woman should find a good man to partner and have children with is again skirting the question. Yes it’s ideal. I’m asking about when the ideal hasn’t panned out.
Adoption is also very well.
You are not unlovable, and certainly should not think of yourself as only available for noncommittal relationship.
Commitment is what takes both parts to profess the vows of honor each other as man and wife for the rest of your lives.
Accept children lovingly from God and bring them up according to the law of Christ and his Church.
The promise of being true to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health. Love you and honor you all the days of his life. Until death do you part.
I’m going to stab in the dark and say based on teachings and capitalization (🤣) Fabiano is a fellow Catholic.
This is a deep teaching by the Church that while I believe it’s true, it’s hard to hear for many today. Things have changed which make it so. Members of my family struggle with infertility (including us) and adoption is a very very hard process. Marriage is also becoming difficult for many as culture changes (both positively, and negatively).
I say all of this to say, while I agree with Fabiano, I have nothing but compassion for the difficulty of the decisions made by young (and getting not so young) people. It is very difficult to say to a good person that they should not be a parent if they desire to have that joy.
I hope life gives you good opportunities to make such a thing happen if you desire it, and I’ll pray it is as close to the ideal as possible. As I would any good soul like you. That is my approach.
That was really beautifully said.
And that is a conclusion after skipping a few steps.
By no mean was I trying to tell you you do not deserve to be a mother.
Deserving it has nothing to do with this situation.
The struggle is real. For different reasons you may be in this situation.
Trust you can have what you want, not exactly the way you are seeking for.
The best thing you have in you now is the strong will of seeking for motherhood.
Commitment brings two parts, equally willing.
And of course I agree with nostr:npub1wtuh24gpuxjyvnmjwlvxzg8k0elhasagfmmgz0x8vp4ltcy8ples54e7js.
You certainly have what it takes to be a great mother.
That is sweet. I feel like I really shouldn’t have offered a personal anecdote after asking a general question. I feel like it confused the discussion. I emphatically was not asking if I should make a run on a sperm bank or have a short term relationship solely to get pregnant.
While I have been very open here about my desire to have a partner and children. I’ve never personally desired to have children without a partner. I always saw myself creating a nuclear family.
I’ve known women who had different viewpoints. Knew that if they hadn’t met “the one” by a certain age they were taking matters into their own hands. I will say anecdotally those women seem happier than the women I know who did the equivalent of grabbing a guy before the lights come on at the bar.
I personally don’t believe that the decisions I make for myself should be foisted upon others. I definitely don’t believe any religious beliefs I may have should factor into someone else childbearing decisions.
I have no hang-up about single parenting, but an alternative plan would be for the woman to freeze some eggs until a partner is found.
Freezing eggs instead of embryos has a much lower success rate. To me it seems more like a money grab. As well as something to give you a false sense of security. I’ve seen friends go through the egg retrieval process and it is intense for the body with its own possible complications. There are other considerations about the age you are when you become a parent beyond just viable eggs.