NEW YORK - When friends ask me how I'm feeling 18 months after having a baby, I usually tell them that it has been wonderful.
Sometimes, though, if I'm feeling particularly confessional, I will smile coyly and say: "Well, this is not the life I wanted. But the life I had before was not the life I wanted, either."
I say it in a cheeky, half-joking way, hoping the gravity of the comment will go unnoticed. But it's not a joke.
Since my daughter, Olivia, was born, I have cycled through a huge range of emotions. I expect many of them would be familiar to any parent: joy, exhaustion, deep love, confusion, wonder, exasperation, happiness, sadness.
But there is another, quieter, emotion that comes up every now and then. It's a feeling that's so difficult to talk about, so universally taboo, that I feel nervous expressing it even to the people closest to me: regret.
Since I was a teenager, I knew I did not want to have kids. I did not budge for decades, and I had quite the battery of reasons for feeling this way, from the emotional to the practical.
The biggest one being that there were simply too many things I wanted to accomplish in life, and a baby would surely get in the way.
When I was young, I dreamt of becoming a famous film-maker, travelling the world making documentaries. It hardly seemed like a good way to raise a kid. But I also just never had any interest in babies or kids.
Rather, I felt resolved, ironclad in my conviction that I would never be a father.
But things change. I settled down. And at 47, my life didn't look like the one I had once envisioned for myself. To be clear, I have a lot to be proud of. I do work that I care about as a radio producer and reporter, and I've been fairly successful.
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