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Lord, I’ve upset the Catholics.  Okay, just one Catholic, writing for AltCatholicah.com, in a post that was picked up by pop culture website Acculturated.  Go read it, I’ll wait.

Funny Nun

Here’s the author’s beef with me – when Leigh Fitzpatrick Snead reads a mom blog, she expects a portrayal of “healthy family life.”  Discovering that there is a mom blogger out there who purposely put the carriage before marriage and had a child outside of wedlock (that’s me) exploded all of her “preconceived notions about mommy blogs.”

“I always assumed the writers were married to their children’s father,” she writes. 

Surprise!

Leigh, you characterize yourself as a would-be mom blogger. Your stuff’s pretty good and you should totally do it.  But first, go to a blogging conference.  You’ll meet moms who are married, unmarried, gay, straight, single by choice, single not by choice and more.  (You’ll even meet some dads.) 

Some parent bloggers portray what you might consider healthy family life (hey, look how perfect I am!), and others share openly and honestly about isolation, divorce, depression, addiction and self-doubt.  Hot tip: those warts-and-all blogs tend to be the most interesting reads–and the most popular.     

But I didn’t create Carriage Before Marriage to start controversy.  I’ve never had an agenda or set out to convert others to my radical way of life.  I’m documenting a special time—the whirlwind my partner and I set in motion when we fell in love, decided to have a baby, got engaged, started planning our wedding, and then tried like hell to have another baby before I ran out of time.

Leigh is not a fan of this order of events.

She tells us that before she had her kids, she was married in the capital-C Church, which is a sacrament.

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Sure, a religious wedding can be beautiful and sacred, but I bristle at the implication that other marriages are not.  I also don’t think God minds if you get hitched at the beach. 

There’s more.

Carriage before Marriage is not just a blog about becoming pregnant before getting married and then rushing to the altar. It is about deliberate (as in fertility-treatment deliberate) pregnancy.”

I’m not sure why the author deems accidental pregnancy better than planned pregnancy.  Personally, I’m a fan of family planning and carrying out one’s intentions deliberately. 

It seems to be my IVF journey that hit a nerve.  Leigh suffered infertility, ultimately adopting, and credits her strong marriage to making it through.  I get it and I sympathize.  Infertility is awful and a supportive partner is good to have.  The author believes this partner must be a husband.   I’m in no way anti-marriage (we set a date!) but I think it’s possible to have a loving, committed, supportive partner outside of marriage, and I speak from experience.

Reading Leigh’s article, I kept wondering, why should a woman in a strong marriage feel threatened by me putting the carriage before the marriage?  I still don’t know.

“The blog’s title flaunts unwed motherhood, almost in a celebratory way,” Leigh writes.

It’s true, I am celebrating.  I’m celebrating that I finally met my life partner.  I’m celebrating that we were able to have a wonderful child together.  I’m celebrating that blogging was invented and I have a place besides my diary to work it all out. 

To the writer and would-be mom blogger whom I offended, I highly recommend it.

   

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