Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Book Review: Two is Enough by Laura S. Scott

Published October 2009 by Seal Press

The assumptions people often make about the voluntarily childless troubled me because they didn’t come close to capturing my complex motives.

Laura Scott was happily childfree and increasingly frustrated by other people’s reactions to her choice. Curious to understand the “childless by choice” and eager to give them a voice, she set out to create a sociological study to identify the most compelling reasons to remain childfree and to better understand the decision-making process of those who decide to do so.

Two is Enough: A Couple’s Guide to Living Childless by Choice presents Scott’s findings, gleaned from surveying 171 childless by choice individuals andconducting in-depth interviews with many of them.  Scott’s goal is not to convert or convince anyone to make the choice to remain childfree. This book is not a polemic for childlessness. Scott’s only agenda is to push society to move beyond the assumption of parenthood and to “redefine gender roles and what we call family.”  Currently,

The question is not “are you planning to have children?” It’s “when are you having children?”

This assumption of parenthood persists even while the assumption of marriage has lost its power in modern society.

In Two is Enough, Scott emphasizes the message that parenthood is a choice, not an imperative to be fulfilled, an inevitable consequence of marriage, or simply the next step that must be taken in order to meet familial or cultural expectations. She encourages individuals to think deeply and deliberately about the decision and hopes to help the childless by choice gain greater acceptance in contemporary society.So, what’s the most compelling motive for remaining childfree?  Scott’s participants most commonly rated this statement (out of eighteen possibilities) highest:

I love our life, our relationship, as it is, and having a child won’t enhance it.

My husband and I are seriously considering not having children, and I’m here to tell you (as I told Trish and Swapna on Twitter this weekend) that I believe it…because it’s my most compelling reason, too. The other high-ranking motives include valuing freedom and independence; not wanting to take on the responsibility of having a child; having no desire to have children or not maternal/paternal instinct; wanting to accomplish or experience things that would be difficult if one were a parent; and wanting to focus time and energy on one’s own goals and interest.

“I don’t enjoy being around children” ranked thirteenth out of the eighteen motive statements, and “People I know have not realized the rewards they expected as a parent” ranked sixteenth. I mention these because I think it is commonly assumed that people who don’t want children of their own must not like children at all. I know I have encountered that response, and that’s just not the case. With five nieces and three nephews, my life is full of children.  And I like it that way. I also like being able to return them to their parents and retreat into the quiet of my own house after spending time with them.

I think it’s also worth discussing the idea that seeing other people’s experiences fail to live up to their expectations can be a deterrent for those contemplating parenthood. I know that my friends and family members who have children love them dearly. And I know that there are beautiful, heartfelt, unbelievably meaningful moments of pride and connection and emotion…but it seems like they’re pretty few and far between, buried beneath loads of stress and worry, and the couples rarely seem truly happy. If having children means potentially sacrificing the quality of my relationship with my husband, then I’m not interested. As Scott says, “I value a strong and enduring relationship with a life partner more than I do the prospect of parenthood.”

So, how can people go about deciding whether having kids is right for them?  One of Scott’s research participants gives this suggestion:

At least twenty times a day for the next week or month, ask yourself the following question: “How would having children change what I am doing now?

Also, talk with your partner. A lot. And be prepared to feel the sting of social criticism or stigma because choosing to be childfree “is a fundamental challenge to the way most people see the world.”

Scott’s interviews with childless-by-choice couples revealed the importance of being “on the same page” and indicated that women—at least the ones in her study—often feel more affected by the assumption of parenthood because it carries with it the idea that motherhood is the mark of womanhood, and many people can’t make sense of how a woman who is not a mother can really be a woman at all.  Her participants also expressed frustration with the assumption that the intentionally childfree are selfish or immature—many of them felt that not having children would allow them to make greater contributions to society—and will someday regret their choice.

To these sources of frustration, Scott says that “the assumption that the only path to responsible adulthood is parenthood is another tired remnant of a pronatalist culture,” and “the specter of regret seems to be a cultural assumption more than a real fear harbored by the childfree.” In short, people who choose not to have children are just as responsible and mature as those who do, and they are not doomed to regret their choice.  Parenthood is not for everyone, and it shouldn’t be forced (by social, cultural, or family pressure) on anyone who doesn’t want it, nor should individuals or couples be punished, stigmatized, or ostracized for making the choice that is best for them.

Two is Enough provides excellent guidance and insight for individuals and couples considering the childfree choice, with words of wisdom from people who have been there and done that.  Author Laura S. Scott argues against the pronatalist assumption of parenthood, identifies and explores the most compelling reasons for remaining childless, examines the decision-making process and the four primary types of childless-by-choice individuals, and provides suggestions for living childless by choice in a society that seems to be obsessed with babies. But this isn’t just a book for the childfree.

Scott’s thorough research and thoughtful interviews with childless couples shed light on how and why people decide not to be parents and will be interesting and useful for anyone who wants to understand the decision. If I had my way, Two is Enough would be required reading for all, as we move toward a more inclusive, accepting society with a more contemporary definition of family.

Visit the Childless by Choice Project’s website and blog for more information, including the survey Scott used in her research.

Thanks to Seal Press for providing me with a  review copy of this book.

[Via http://thebookladysblog.com]

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