advertisement

For family's sake, let go of idea of third child

Q. I want to consider having a third child. My husband is adamantly opposed - indeed, our second was an oops. (I actually miscarried a third pregnancy, also an accident.) I've kind of been in denial about the depths of his opposition, but really I know he's not going to change his mind.

So how do I (a) forgive my husband for not wanting a third, because I can't help but feel angry at him, and (b) accept that it's not going to happen - when I just don't want to give up the dream that someday I'll be snuggling a newborn again?

A. You want to consider a third child, but you can't. You "can't help but feel angry" at your husband, but you actually can help it. You don't want get over it, but you have to.

Because to keep indulging your desires over reality will, if not already then soon, make you a bad spouse and a bad parent. Your husband needs you to respect his limits; he's already met you at a darn good definition of halfway, since you now have more children than he wanted and fewer than you wanted. What more do you want from him - transformation into somebody else?

Your kids, meanwhile, take their emotional cues from you and your husband, so they need you both to model maturity, healthy choices, mutual respect, and a freely chosen commitment to the collective good of your family over individual preferences that, if acted upon, would damage the whole.

I do sympathize; a baby is less of a want than an ache. It is understandable, too, that letting go of the baby idea will come with reluctance and a wave of grief.

You just don't have the luxury of taking this depth of feeling as license to go wherever those feelings take you. Cry, stomp, whine to your friends, acquire a therapist just for this purpose, yes, then let it go.

As for how to "forgive" your husband, I suggest following his lead. He's still by your side, right, after not one but two "oops" pregnancies? Either you're singularly bad at managing birth control, or he has grounds to point out the cloud of suspicion under which you lately reside (and either way you're overdue to discuss his getting a vasectomy). You both have let each other down - as spouses inevitably do. Neither of you can provide everything the other needs.

When you are ready to accept this, chances are there are newborns who badly need snuggling in a hospital near you. The right volunteer opportunity could match your need with a vulnerable someone else's - with nothing for anyone to oppose.

Q. I know this is a silly, self-indulgent question but I'll ask it anyway. How do you "get past" the nagging feeling you are being gossiped about? Former friend took up with former "frenemy" and now I hear from neither.

A. You start by just assuming you're their Topic A.

Then you realize that in all but the rarest situations, you can live a full, rich and satisfying life while people, unbeknown to you, are ripping you to shreds.

It might cost you some friends, yes. But they'll be the friends either saying the mean things, and who wants those, or the ones believing the mean things without checking the facts or applying some basic skepticism - and who wants those? Focus your energy on other people, the ones you wouldn't describe in a letter as "former friend" and "former frenemy," and leave the vultures in peace to pick over what they must.

Since no one is Topic A forever - and since your friendships with them have apparently run their course - the next healthy assumption is that they have other things to talk about than you. These sequential assumptions are a helpful little two-step toward humility.

As for the rare times when someone's gossip harms you, the process is actually the same - invest in people who are good to you, know you can't control the rest - except with higher stakes. Either way, any negativity they share reflects on them far more than it ever will on you.

Q. My parents are terribly negative, backbiting people. A year ago Husband overheard them talking viciously about us and our children. Understandably upset, he confronted them. They fled but have since concocted a story about how he threatened them (I was there, didn't happen). They now refuse to discuss it with us but try to contact our elementary-age kids directly.

My siblings have all learned never to confront our parents and are telling me now that's just how they are, plenty of blame to go around, just reconcile for the kids' sake, etc. It bothers me that they can't at least stand up for my kids. How do I deal with siblings who want peace at all costs?

A. "You deal with them. I'm done." Contacting your kids directly? Yikes.

• Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, or chat with her online at 11 a.m. each Friday at www.washingtonpost.com.

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.