Ive had three proper long-term relationships in my life. In all three, I genuinely believed Id end up being a father. And in all three, I legged it the moment things got serious on the baby front.
The first woman I was with already had a small child. I was twenty-seven at the time. Didnt bother me a bit at first. I got used to her routine, the kids schedule, all the extra responsibilities. But then we started chatting about having a child of our own. Months went by and nothing happened. She was the first to see the doctor. All was perfectly in order on her end. Then she started asking if Id had myself checked. I kept saying there was no need, it would just happen. But gradually, I started to feel uneasy irritable tense. We began bickering constantly. And then, one day, I simply packed my things and left.
The second relationship was a whole different kettle of fish. She didnt have children, and we agreed from the get-go we wanted a family. Years passed, we tried over and over. Every negative pregnancy test made me shut down a little more. She started crying more often. I started avoiding the subject. When she suggested we see a fertility specialist together, I told her she was making a mountain out of a molehill. I started coming home later, lost interest, felt completely trapped. After four years, we called it quits.
My third partner was a woman with two teenage sons. Right from the start, she made it clear she was perfectly happy not having any more kids. But, lo and behold, the topic came up againactually, I was the one who brought it up. I wanted to prove to myself I could do it. And once more nothing. I started to feel like a spare part, as if I was taking up space that wasnt really mine to occupy.
Its roughly the same old story, every time. Not just disappointment. There was fear. Fear of sitting down in front of a doctor and having them say I was the problem.
Ive never had any tests done. Never confirmed anything, one way or another. I always preferred to walk away than face an answer I wasnt sure I could handle.
Now, Im over forty. I see my ex-partners, settled with their families, with children that arent mine. Sometimes I cant help but wonder if I really left because I was bored or if it was just that I never had the courage to stick around and face what might have been going on with me.












