Why Women Are Choosing to Be Child-Free
Women's Health US|March - April 2024
The choice can be liberating, yet stigmas persist. Here, how to cut through the noise with clarity and confidence to make the decision that's right for you.
Amy Wilkinson
Why Women Are Choosing to Be Child-Free

When Devin Propeck-Silva, a 38-year-old business owner in Portland, Oregon, meets someone new, the introductions follow the same script. "After they find out I'm married, they ask how many kids I have. (I don't have any.)

Then they ask when we're planning to have kids. (We're not.)" That's when the vibe shifts, and Propeck-Silva tries to fill the silence by reassuring the person that she and husband Matt love kids (they're a proud aunt and uncle!) despite not wanting their own children. "I feel I have to explain my decision and clarify that I'm not a monster," she says.

For those who are child-free by choice, confused and critical responses are nothing new. In 1974, Marcia Drut-Davis, a 34-year-old substitute teacher, experienced this on a whole new level when she appeared on a segment of the TV show 60 Minutes in which producers followed her and then-husband Warren as they broke the news to his parents that they didn't intend to have children. Within a day of the episode's airing, Drut-Davis says, she was blacklisted by her school district and received death threats-all because she owned up to the radical notion that she didn't want to be a mother.

"I was terrified," Drut-Davis, now 84, says of the response. "I shut up about it for many years. I didn't say a word." Perhaps unsurprisingly, her husband at the time didn't suffer the same ill consequences, she says. "His job wasn't affected; his friendships weren't affected.

Mine were. I was less than a snail at the bottom of the ocean." Fast-forward 50 years-through the rise of women in the workforce, third-wave feminism, and the #MeToo movement-and, despite some awkward dinner party banter, the convo around being childfree has gotten a little easier, a little less fraught for many with a uterus.

This story is from the March - April 2024 edition of Women's Health US.

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This story is from the March - April 2024 edition of Women's Health US.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

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