'Like a trap you can't escape': The women who regret being mothers
'Like a trap you can't escape': The women who regret being mothers 3 hours ago Kirstie BrewerBBC News Carmen loves her 10 year-old son, but if she could turn back the clock she says she would never have become a mum.
"Motherhood has taken my health, my time, my money, my strength, and my body," she says.
"The price is too high, and the cost is forever. "
The teacher, in her 40s, is part of a hidden community of women who regret becoming mothers.
This regret is rarely voiced out loud.
Carmen can identify with the themes of the film.
"It feels like a trap you can't escape. "
She is unflinchingly frank about how "devastating" she finds being a mother.
"I'd give my life for him without a doubt.
He's kind, easy-going, and a brilliant student. "
Carmen promised herself Teo would never feel like she did growing-up.
At first, being a mother was "a joy", she says.
"I felt so guilty," she says, "and I worried that his life would become a fight. "
"I regret having had children and becoming a mother, but I love the children that I've got.
What little data there is suggests that's not an uncommon feeling.
Parents may not speak openly about regret, but they are finding community online.
"I am now worrying about looking after future grandkids - the caregiving never ends. "
"There is much more realisation that it's a choice," O'Connor says.
"It's not an automatic thing you have to do.
"I have people coming to me in their 20s and 30s who know they want to have children, but are still kind of worried about the challenges, and would like some support to navigate it. "
"You need to be as sure as you can be about this big decision and be doing it for your own reasons.
rather than external pressure from your partner, or your parents," she says.
She also cautions against buying too readily into the "village" idea that everyone will pitch in.
Maternal regret isn't always reversible "in a neat or total sense," says Mathur.
"All the women I talked to try to do their best alongside their regret," she says.
"I'm finally able to say, 'No, sorry, I'm tired and I'm going to have an early night.
Have whatever you want for supper; Daddy is here. '"
She has learned when she does this, the world doesn't implode.
"Teo sees that I'm a human being, that I'm not perfect, and he's okay with that. "
Teo wriggles down into the warmth of the duvet and snuggles into his mother.
"It's when I truly connect with Teo and see the person I love most in the world," she says.
"I don't feel like a monster anymore. "
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