I can't really speak to the idea of manliness, but I can speak to the idea of womanhood and wanting kids. I had always tOld myself that when I got married, I wanted to wait at least five years before having a kid. I never really examined whether or not I wanted this, I just assumed it would happen. So four years after I got married, I started the "let's talk about kids" discussion with my husband. I was on some medications and wanted to be off them for a while to make sure I would be ok getting pregnant. So I went off my Remicade and when a year went by we sat down to talk about it again. That was when my husband told me he wasn't sure he ever wanted kids.
After I stopped being irked that he waited so long to mention this fact, I told him I needed to do a little soul searching. I had to figure out if I wanted a kid or not. I consider the relationship between my husband and I to be pretty strong, and I was sure then, and am still sure now, that had I come back from that reflection and told him that having a kid was important to me, he would have gone along with it. But he wouldn't have wanted it. I even think that had we gone that route, he would've been a great father. But th more I thought about what it meant to have first a baby, then a toddler, then a teenager, and the fact that during at least the first 18 years of its life we would not be truly alone and able to do whatever we wanted whenever we wanted, I balked. I wanted to travel. I wanted to be free to walk out to dinner or a movie spontaneously and not have to scramble to find childcare or be forced to eat at a restaurant where I thought kids wouldn't disturb people and watch only G movies.
I like my freedom. I don't want to change dirty diapers, potty train a kid, and clean up after it for years an years. I know there is a great reward when your kid turns out awesome and all that, but I didn't think that was enough.
To this day, I still occasionally struggle with my decision. Not because I'm having doubts, but because I sometimes feel like I have somehow failed as a woman in a very fundamental way. What kind of woman doesn't want to hold her own baby and watch it grow into an adult? And it's not my friends who have kids that make me feel that way. Well, not directly. It's just something that I thought I always understood as a kid. Something that you see so often in our culture. The happy ending for a woman is almost always a kid. That's the goal. That's what they've really been searching for. Or, at the very least, the marriage that can bring them that goal. But for me, the goal is to be happy and secure. To do the things that make me happy. To take off to Europe or Japan or Australia. Or Hawaii. I don't want to be responsible for a kid. And I feel like, in our culture, that's strange and unwomanly.