Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

"The Two-Minus-One Pregnancy"

The New York Times Magazine explores the "stigma" (undeserved? archaic? regrettable?) surrounding the emerging trend of eliminating one fetus when IVF results in twins.  This is a very sad paragraph, among many:

Jenny’s decision to reduce twins to a single fetus was never really in doubt. The idea of managing two infants at this point in her life terrified her. She and her husband already had grade-school-age children, and she took pride in being a good mother. She felt that twins would soak up everything she had to give, leaving nothing for her older children. Even the twins would be robbed, because, at best, she could give each one only half of her attention and, she feared, only half of her love. Jenny desperately wanted another child, but not at the risk of becoming a second-rate parent. “This is bad, but it’s not anywhere as bad as neglecting your child or not giving everything you can to the children you have,” she told me, referring to the reduction.

I don't mean to minimize the hardship that can accompany multiple births, but this excerpt reflects an unfortunate (though increasingly common) view of parental love: a limited commodity that, when extended to one child, necessarily reduces its availability to another child.  Not to mention the underlying premise that non-existence is preferable to existence in a household with "too many" kids.

https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2011/08/the-two-minus-one-pregnancy.html

Vischer, Rob | Permalink

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I am not sure this attitude stems from a view of parental love as an end sum game. I think it arises when the view of parenthood goes from a vocation to which we give ourselves to an avocation of which we avail ourselves. The reproductive technology industry has turned children into commodities. We shop for them, trying to choose just the right one to accessorize our lives. Through contraception and abortion we have dehumanized children and diminished the vocation of parenthood.