- they are expensive
- they smell
- they're noisey
- they're needy
But, then, I met someone who totally changed my outlook. I could see myself spending, oh, I don't know, forever with him. For the first time since I was a little kid, I thought of marriage as something more than a piece of a paper. I could almost see myself wanting to start a family with him. Because, let's face it, if you know who I'm talking about, we would have produced some pretty damn adorable offspring. Not that I wasn't still terrified by the prospect of having a child. But, alas, that relationship met its demise and I was left brokenhearted.
In the days of self-pity and sadness that followed, I did a lot of over analyzing. It didn't help that, around this same time, my facebook newsfeed was blowing up with engagement and baby announcements and wedding photos. I won't lie, I took some joy in seeing the occasional "so and so went from in a relationship to it's complicated/single" because it meant I wasn't the only one that was miserable.
I found my mind drifting back to my feelings on children. Why didn't I want them like so many of my peers? Why does the sight of a pregnant stomach make me cringe, rather than feel excitement for the person with it? I just always thought I didn't have a maternal bone in my body and photos like the one below always seemed to prove it. Can you see how terrified and awkward I look holding Karen & Jon's cutie Amy when she was just a few days old?!
But, working at a nightclub where we regularly have shows with a teenage audience has helped me realize what my "problem" is. It's not that I don't like children. It's not that I'm disgusted by them. It's that I'm scared. In addition to being fragile little things when they're born (and, let's face it: I am exceptionally clumsy), they are real live human beings. As a parent, you not only pass on your genetics but you raise them and influence the person they become. Previously, I was scared thinking "hey, my parents did an amazing job with Pat and me; I don't know if I could do that." Now, seeing hundreds of drunk, high, misbehaving, slutty teenagers at our shows I am even more terrified.
(Above: 1 of 3 flasks we confiscated from minors at last night's White Panda show)
I know there's a bad apple in every bunch, that some parents just don't care, but seeing all these kids in one space makes me think there is no way they can all have bad parents. Try as hard as you might to lead your children to make the right decisions, to hang out with the "right" crowd, to behave and use their brain, the ultimate decision is made by them. No one is dumping a bottle of booze down their throat, or forcing them to make out with strangers in front of a crowd, no one is forcing them to try (or regularly use) drugs.
I now realize that I am terrified that I will try to raise a child and end up with one of the delinquents that I hate. One of the 2 teenage girls I had to carry out of the ladies room last night because they were passed out on the floor or toilet. One of the many girls and boys I had to point out to security because they were so drunk they couldn't stand without using their friends as a crutch or were asleep in a corner. One of the many we confiscated flasks or water bottles filled with booze from. One of the kids who got carted away in an ambulance. Who had a stranger's hands down her skirt in front of 1000 people (or had his hands in her skirt). I am horrified that those kids exist and that perfectly normal, goodhearted people with values similar to my own could have been the ones that raised them.
So, thank you to The White Panda, Mac Miller, Chris Webby and countless other acts that have performed here for making me realize that I don't hate children...I just never want them. I will be perfectly fine with my cat and no baby. Reesie might sometimes leave me a hairball or a little vom on the floor, might have a bit of poop caught in her fluff, but at least I don't have to worry about her going out and wreaking havoc on the world.
