The author and her newborn son.
I turn 51 this year, and one of the many things I’ve learned during my five decades on this planet is that our dreams rarely manifest exactly as we envision them. We can spend years longing for something and then, when it finally comes, we don’t realize it or we’re disappointed because it doesn’t look quite the way we expected.
Tôi chưa bao giờ mơ rằng một gia đình “bình thường” đã có trong thẻ cho tôi. Đó là điều đã xảy ra với những người khác. Những người giỏi hơn trong việc tìm thấy chính mình ở đúng nơi vào đúng thời điểm. Những người không được bảo vệ bằng trái tim của họ. Những người không bị phá vỡ. Nhưng một phần trong tôi khao khát điều đó. Tôi nhớ đã nghĩ rằng một gia đình yêu thương phải cảm thấy như là nơi an toàn nhất trên thế giới.
Trong suốt cuộc đời trưởng thành của tôi, tôi đã được một nhóm các bác sĩ và chuyên gia nói chuyện nhẹ nhàng nói rằng tôi sẽ không bao giờ thụ thai một đứa trẻ một cách tự nhiên. Mặc dù có những lúc tôi cân nhắc những con đường thay thế để làm mẹ, nhưng cuối cùng tôi cảm thấy hài lòng với cuộc sống không có con của mình. Tôi là một người mẹ chó và một người dì, và tôi thích những vai trò đó. Tôi cũng là một cô gái miền núi: phiêu lưu vào núi cao mỗi cuối tuần trên chiếc xe Jeep của tôi hoặc đi bộ để nhảy vào những hồ nước kết tinh xa xôi. Tôi yêu sự tồn tại của cô gái độc thân phiêu lưu và sự tự do của tôi. Tôi đã có kế hoạch đi du lịch, tiếp tục xây dựng công việc kinh doanh sáng tạo của mình để tôi có thể làm việc từ bất cứ đâu và thu thập những câu chuyện mà một ngày nào đó, chỉ có thể, biên soạn thành một cuốn sách.
Một tháng sau sinh nhật lần thứ 46 của tôi, tôi đã bỏ lỡ một khoảng thời gian. Mặc dù tôi đã tình cờ hẹn hò với ai đó, tôi cho rằng, xem xét lịch sử của mình, rằng đây là thời kỳ mãn kinh cuối cùng cũng ngẩng cao đầu. Một vài tuần nữa trôi qua và tôi bắt đầu có một số triệu chứng khác bất thường đối với tôi. Tôi nghĩ rằng đây là những dấu hiệu nữa cho thấy hormone của tôi đang thay đổi. Nhưng – có thể theo ý thích bất chợt, có thể theo sự thúc giục của người bạn thân nhất của tôi, có thể trong một trực giác bùng nổ – tôi đã mua que thử thai tại hiệu thuốc địa phương và đi vào phòng tắm tại Whole Foods liền kề để lấy nó.
I sat there in the stall staring in disbelief at a very crisp, clear blue line in the little window on the test stick. Surely this was an error — yet another artifact of my hormones gone awry. I immediately consulted Dr. Google and learned there is a kind of ovarian cyst that can release hormones that mimic the signs of pregnancy. That was it. I was certain I had one of those cysts. I just needed to get the confirmation from my doctor.
That confirmation wouldn’t come. What would arrive was a phone call from a jovial nurse, the announcement that my HCG levels were so high it was in fact possible I was pregnant with twins, and a referral for an ultrasound that would reveal what was now undeniable: I was pregnant. PREGNANT. Impossibly. At 46. With a man who was certain about few things in life save for the fact that he didn’t want to be a father.
The author and her partner, unwitting parents at midlife, in 2023.
He was a performing circus artist — an aerial acrobat seven years my junior. We’d dated briefly several years prior and had at this point been rekindled for a few months. Our connection was mostly physical and it was far from serious. On our first date, I texted my best friend, “I’m not gonna spend the rest of my life with him, but he sure is cute.” He told me on many occasions that he didn’t want to have kids, and I thought I couldn’t conceive, so we were well-matched, in that regard at least.
Now I had to bestow on him a piece of news that could forever alter the course of his life. I remember driving to his apartment the evening I planned to tell him, half in a daze, almost numb with uncertainty. We had already made plans for that particular night — get pho and hang out at his place listening to podcasts — so I remember him opening the door with a smile, then ducking back inside to grab his coat. I recall that, as usual, he was warm when he hugged me, warm and strong. And he seemed happy to see me. My heart was leaden in my chest as I asked him if we could sit down for a minute before we left. As soon as we did, I began to cry. He put his hand on my knee and looked at me in a way that said, “Hey, whatever it is, I’m here.” You have no idea, I thought.
I managed to utter the words, and he managed to receive them, setting in motion a period that was both miraculous and fraught. I felt stunned, terrified, sad, thrilled, hopeful and humbled all at once. He felt disempowered, grieving for a future he’d envisioned that might not come to fruition in the ways he’d hoped. I think back on that time as both a whirring blur and a slow-motion free-fall.
We attended therapy together, spent hours and hours talking about all the possible scenarios. He promised he’d be there for me no matter what I decided to do, but he also begged me not to have our baby. I came close so many times to assuring him that I wouldn’t, but I always, inexplicably, stopped short. I wondered: If I chose to have an abortion, would I have regrets? And would that experience, and those regrets, leave me forever heartbroken? I also thought about how I’d be in my mid-60s when this child graduated high school, and about the end of those solo summer days high in the mountains, the travels, and the book.
While I’ve always vehemently supported a woman’s right to determine what she does with her own body — and while I was very clear about the choice in front of me — the gravity of that choice, now that it was mine to make, was almost too much to bear. I felt crushed under the weight of making it for the both of us. For the three of us. Crushed and paralyzed. In my state, in-clinic abortion is legal into the second trimester, and other options are available until a fetus is viable. I would need every single minute, hour, day, week and month I could get to process my own conflicting emotions, to be counseled, to get clear with myself, to gain some level of certainty that I was making a decision that was truly right for me, that was pure of heart, that was mine.
Ultimately, my choice was to meet my child.
The author and her family.
When I finally knew what I was going to do, and when I eventually began telling my friends and family about the decision I’d made, what stood out to them was the unlikeliness of my story. I got pregnant naturally at midlife, after decades of infertility. Their faces lit up with the news that perennially single me would now, along with my soon-to-arrive babe and his inadvertent father, have a family. Congratulatory texts arrived from people I hadn’t spoken to in years, cards came in the mail, packages appeared containing hand-knitted baby blankets and wise, loving notes. People used words like “miracle,” “wonder,” “blessing,” “full circle.” And so much of that was true. It was a wonder. My son was a tiny miracle.
But the journey of the midlife mother is rarely so black and white. No matter which road leads us to motherhood, we each end up in a place where we have to reconcile the woman we spent half our lifetimes becoming with the mother we’ll spend the rest of our lives being. Even after my son was born, big and healthy after an uneventful pregnancy, I found that my identity was still firmly rooted in the soil — for lack of a better word — of childlessness. I still felt like the woman at the party who couldn’t relate to the moms in the corner swapping milestones, like the auntie whose nieces confide in her things they’d never tell their moms, like the single gal sneaking peeks at the handsome dad in the grocery store wearing his baby, wondering about the partner waiting at home, and if it would ever be me.
I still felt like her because I still was her. But I was a mom now, too. This clumsy dance of identities is one of the more profound grapplings of later-in-life motherhood: straddling adjacent chapters, one just beginning, the other not yet closed, attempting in real time to bridge the two. It’s disorienting to lose access to things we’ve always known. But we also get the thrill and delight of peeking into new places in our hearts that we didn’t know were there before and of discovering new pieces of ourselves in the process.
Four years later, I’m a mother and partner, fully immersed in a family of my own. It doesn’t look like the family I imagined. My son’s father and I stumbled from non-exclusive dating into sudden partnership and parenting in a matter of months. Our road to becoming parents together, and eventually a family, has been a winding one, but we are a family nonetheless. We rallied to bring our child into an environment of love and laughter and kindness and mutual respect. Along the way we had to get to know ourselves, each other, and a new vision for what the rest of our lives would look like. We are still growing and fumbling and learning every day but we are among the most devoted parents you’ll ever meet.
And now, I find myself planning different travels, collecting different stories, working on a different book.
One recent weekend, my partner packed me up and sent me off to my cabin in the country on my own so I could write, refresh and connect with the land where I grew up. While I was there, a neighbor invited me to pick apples from her tree. I picked a huge bag full and then brought them back to the city, to my boys, and made a lovely apple tart. It was an offering of thanks for these two magical souls who have become my accidental dream come true.
The author and her son in 2023.
Natasha Dworkin is an agency founder, strategic storyteller, and midlife mama. For more than 20 years, she has helped her purpose-driven clients tell their stories, amplify their impact, and change the world. She now leverages her professional expertise with her personal experience becoming a first-time mom at the age of 46, to help other midlife women make transformative change in their own lives and communities. Connect with her through her website, natasha-dworkin.com , on Substack at natashadworkin.substack.com , and on Instagram at @midlife.mama .
Do you have a compelling personal story you’d like to see published on HuffPost? Find out what we’re looking for here and send us a pitch .