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Who’s Your Daddy?

Kathleen | 13 December, 2007 00:35 | (1756)

  

As single mothers, my friends and I have to deal with a certain elephant in the living room (this is where I would usually insert a joke about my weight, but I’ll give myself a break today). Whether asked aloud, whispered behind our backs, or silently wondered about, the question is always there in other folks’ minds:

 

“Who’s the father of her kid?”

 

Taken as a group, my circle encompasses most of the possible reasons a woman finds herself as a single mom.  One of us is a divorcée; one, a widow.  One is a woman who stopped waiting for Mr. Right and decided to go it alone, via a donor she chose at a sperm bank.  One is a woman (who stopped waiting for Mrs. Right) who chose her best friend to be her donor.  And one of us is just a good ol’ fashioned “oops” brand single mother.

 

And I’m not telling you who is who.

 

Because that’s the point.  With all due respect to those people who are dying to know, it’s really no one’s business but ours.  Whether we actively chose our situations or fate thrust them upon us, it is our private matter, and one we can choose to share with you, or not.  But it has to be up to us.

 

I understand that the majority of mothers in our society are, in fact, with partners.  So yes, it is natural to assume some things when you meet a woman with a child.  But when I was pregnant (and oh-so-hormonally cranky), nothing sent me into a tizzy faster than going to my weekly check-ups in the same office, with the same chart (albeit different doctors) that held the same personal information, and having the doc-du-jour placidly skim my information and say “so, will your husband be joining us today?”  I finally made them put “SINGLE PARENT” in big block letters on the front of my chart.  And still I was asked.

 

The same goes for house-hunting.  On every walkthrough I went to, the real estate agent would ask “will your husband be wanting to see the property as well?”  One time, after I said “no, there is no husband,” the agent paused and said “soooo… it’s just you that would be making this decision?”  I smiled tightly and said, “Yup.  But I think I just made it.”

 

Well-meaning strangers in supermarkets get a lot more slack.  But sometimes it’s still hard.  “Oh,” cooed one woman, “I bet she’s Daddy’s little girl, isn’t she?”  “Well, it’s just Mommy and Nana, really.”  “But she’s mostly Daddy’s little girl, isn’t she?”  At this point, you just have to smile and push your cart down the next aisle before you throw a can of stewed tomatoes at someone.

 

It’s not to say that all single mothers are reticent to tell you their stories.  But speaking personally, if I feel backed into a corner by a blunt question, I do get riled.  I think I expected society to judge me harshly, so when the issue comes up, I automatically go on the defensive.  But it’s not to say I won’t tell you – on my own timetable. 

 

Certainly, if you’re dating a single mom, I think you have the right to know, if you’re planning on pursuing a serious relationship with her, whether or not some other person is going to factor into the equation.  But if it’s not an issue for her, hopefully her date will see it’s not an issue for him/her, either.

 

Until we single moms decide to say “hey, by the way, about that thing we haven’t talked about…”, please: just walk around the elephant.  And watch where you step.

 

 Next time: Silent Night (Would be Nice)

... [Reply]

Interesting stuff. I think the "elephant" is a decent analogy for many things in life. It is truly amazing how disrespectful some people are when it comes to their curiosity - their desire for information supercedes their capacity for politeness.

Hopefully more people will take your advice...for many different situations.

Posted by: Christopher | December 13, 2007, 01:27

On the flip side... [Reply]

And playing devil's advocate...

Having had many opportunities observing children (and probably being childlike at heart myself) I've often discovered that once a person's curiosity is sated and "the mystery" is gone, then the issue at hand becomes... well... a non-issue. It becomes a fact of life, and everyone can just move on. It's the mystery of not knowing that makes an issue larger than it deserves to be. Simple, straightforward honesty always has seemed the best policy to me.

Posted by: KAW | December 13, 2007, 08:33

no flip side... [Reply]

Unless you are a physician, gathering data while preparing to cure an often-fatal affliction of a child born to a single mom, "not knowing" is how your curiosity will be answered. Adoption agencies legally protect paternal privacy, against the howls of those who demand to know.
Suppose your curiosity (and rudeness) is answered with "Oh, Daddy will be out of prison in ten years." You will not "move on", unless you mean with the next rude question. Privacy is a right. Maturity will teach you exactly why.
Child-like questions are expected from children, and may be answered in loving simplicity. Prying or thoughtless questions deserve any fitting response a mom deems necessary. The expectation of a perfect nuclear family is a recent societal anomaly. The truth is far removed from that expectation, and still is only the business of those who live their lives as they choose. Those individuals bear the responsibility of bringing up those little loved ones, they deserve a huge ‘hats off’, and their children deserve a loving pat on the head as they pass…

Posted by: RayJ | December 13, 2007, 22:35

[Reply]

Sounds like a bunch of kids raising kids. Irresponsible behaviours and the like. Society doesn't need more rebellious audults acting like teens. We need responsible adults setting an example. It should be obvious, Don't encourage young girls into getting the wrong idea just because you need confirmation for poor choices....

Posted by: Martha | February 18, 2008, 19:38

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