Culture Vice - Why These Millennials Are Choosing to Be Sterilized in Their 20s

Katelin, from Philadelphia, is absolutely certain she doesn't want children. No way. Not a chance in hell. "I honestly don't like kids—they're germ-y and annoying and gross," the 19-year-old explains. Which is a fair point: Humans under five are messy, unpredictable things. But, then again, most adults never quite grow out of that stage either.

What's different for Katelin is she's so sure kids are off the table she's considering sterilization. The procedure isn't something to be taken lightly: it involves blocking the fallopian tubes, which then prevents the woman's eggs from reaching sperm, and, yeah, you know the rest. In the UK it can be carried out on the NHS under local anesthetic, but, most importantly, it's permanent (or difficult to reverse, at the very least).

Some might argue this is a particularly extreme option for someone so young, but Katelin is unwavering in her opinion. "I'm old enough to vote, play the lottery, drive, and go to jail—why can't I decide I don't want kids?" she asks. It's a good argument, and she's not alone in feeling like this. There is a growing number of men and women, in the UK and US, who are permanently altering their fertility. This phenomenon, known as the "child free movement," is the subject of a new BBC Three documentary, Young and Sterile: My Choice, exploring why teenagers and 20-somethings are advocating childlessness by choice, despite not already having children of their own.

Today, one in five British women will never have kids, up from one in ten in the 1970s. And despite the number of vasectomies falling nearly two-thirds in the last decade, men are also vocal about their child-free choice. Like 29-year-old Paul Pritchard, for example, whose vasectomy was actually filmed live during the making of the documentary. "I've never thought of myself as a father," he explains. "Children have never factored into any of my long-term life plans."

How's he feeling after the procedure? Any side effects?

"This might sound a bit graphic… but the only unusual thing is now that my sperm ducts are in two sections; I have four sensitive areas [rather than two]. I've had no other long-term issues, though, and I've been able to have sex afterwards. It all works perfectly normally, you know?"

People who choose to be sterilized are doing so for a whole bunch of reasons, not just out of fear of becoming accidentally pregnant or a father. Genetics is a key factor. Katelin has mental health problems and a serious heart defect she doesn't want to pass on (though she also enjoys her "vagina exactly the way it is"). Equally, Pritchard has suffered from depression throughout his life and lives with Type 1 insulin-dependent diabetes. "It would be cruel of me to enforce a child to suffer the same," he says.

For 28-year-old Andie, who chooses not to identify as a specific gender (and uses the pronoun they), the choice stems from something stronger. "My mother was a really violent person and I was excommunicated from her at a young age," says Andie. "I'm scared of having kids and turning into her, because motherhood was quite a cruel thing for me. I wouldn't want my kids to go through the same experience."

Andie was sterilized last year and says it's the best decision they've ever made. "It's massively improved my mental health and [body] dysphoria. No one ever stops people from having children so why would you stop someone who doesn't want children?"

But finding a doctor who will actually agree to the procedure is where the difficulty starts. It took Pritchard 11 years before the NHS gave in to his requests. As a man in his 20s, he's considered old enough to be the father of unlimited children without checking with anyone first. But tell the NHS you genuinely don't want that, ever? It becomes a rejected, defeated world of long-term contraception—an assortment of tablets, injections, and devices—to achieve the same ends.

"My first doctor, who has now retired, definitely fed me some bullshit, made-up statistics about how 90 percent of people who have a vasectomy regret their decision," explains Pritchard. "It's like, you're just telling me that because I'm 18 and you don't believe a word I'm saying."

The stigma around simply not wanting children is huge but it seems to be worse for women. There's societal pressures, sure, but a woman lacking any maternal instinct? That's a step too far for some—it's weird, heartless, and, well, outright selfish. For Andie, who was born a woman, other people felt as strongly about their decision to be sterilized as they did. "People judge you," they explain. "I've been back to hospital, unrelated to my procedure, and female doctors have lectured me on something I've already had done."

Andie believes this resistance is a symptom of defined gender roles. "This idea that women have to settle down, get married, have children—it's quite a moral thing, isn't it? Life isn't just about reproduction. For me it goes back to this patriarchal idea that gender is binary and, within that, you have to comply with set or 'normal' roles. I'm very much against that."

Becoming a parent isn't totally ruled out for Andie because, as they succinctly point out, "there are other ways to have children that don't involve pushing them out through your uterus." Andie mentions adopting or co-parenting, where two or more people join forces for the sole reason of having a kid. For Pritchard there's no turning back. "At the end of the day I'd rather come to the end of my life and regret not having children than have children and regret my decision," he says. Although Katelin doesn't have to worry about contraception until her IUD needs replacing in four years, she's 100 percent sure she'll get the procedure done. "I just don't have a motherly bone in my body," she says.

What would they say to people who think 19, or even 29, is too young to make a decision so final? That this is a narcissistic lifestyle choice designed to hold onto their not-quite adult status?

Katelin assuredly disagrees. "I want time alone, time with my partner, and time to travel and spend money on luxury. And I don't think there's anything wrong with that," she says. "My generation live in a broken world. We come from broken homes and have broken minds and bodies. Many of us just don't want to reproduce. It's my life and I'm not hurting anyone."

You don't have to look twice to know they're doing the right thing.

_______

Source: Vice

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Última edición:
While this is a good start, I don't see how it's going to be nearly enough to reverse the Idiocracy-style dumbing down that's coming our way. But a few less soyboys is certainly not a bad thing.
 
I agree with some of these folks. Between my family’s and my SO’s medical history a kid from us would be a genetic disaster. The amount of ailments that are actually genetic is ridiculous. Meanwhile my uncle decided to never have kids because he knew he was incredibly selfish and couldn’t tolerate people not always paying attention to him.

From the headline though I thought this would be about trans surgeries and hormones.
 
God bless the NHS, now they're simultaneously ensuring braindead babies won't be born, as well as sterilising the ones that somehow slipped through the net.

Does it really make a difference when the Vicky Pollards have 10 babies with 10 guys?
 
While this is a good start, I don't see how it's going to be nearly enough to reverse the Idiocracy-style dumbing down that's coming our way. But a few less soyboys is certainly not a bad thing.

Get rid of the Welfare State and then we will make the Idiocracy future less likely to happen.
 
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What? You mean I'm gonna have to get a JOB?
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"The purpose of Life is not just about reproduction"

Yeah, that's about all life is. The entire reason why advanced species exist is to pass on their genetic code and propagate themselves. All we are is walking DNA. Though sentience obviously allows us to choose and overwrite this imperative. Humans are the only species that can prevent their extinction or actively encourage it.
 
I kind of feel bad for them tbqh. They've clearly been brainwashed by either their teachers or shitty parents to assume that the only meaning you can get out of life is hedonistic pleasures and that they deserve to have everything handed to them because they are stronk wamyn and special, with a healthy dose of far left shit about people (especially white people) being a disease on the planet. I mean ffs, look at them. No effort expended to improve themselves physically. If anything, deliberate efforts made to make themselves look like hags. It takes a demented female brain that would be convinced its a good idea to hack off their hair and dye what survived an unnatural shade of purple. These girls are victims alright. Victims of feminism.

When they turn 40 and the hairdye has faded leaving their hair grey, scorched and hideous, they will look back with deep regret at the horrible decisions they made when as young impressionable children a bunch of vengeful lesbian harpies taught them that dick is oppressive and children are a burden.
 
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I am reasonably certain that these people chewed up, spat out, and then smoked the word "respectable" through a meth-laced crack pipe quite a few years ago.

It's got a Sailor Moon locket tattoo.

Also that lipstick. Oh honey, no. Just no. It doesn't go with anything outside of a Halloween costume. I bet grandma is constantly asking her why she intentionally makes herself so ugly. Her family must be ashamed to be seen with her. She's already built like a horse and could easily pass as a man if she transitioned. She literally looks like a male troon.

I'm wondering though. If the sterilization helped with her dysphoria then why does she still insist on lugging those cow tits around? Wouldn't they make her even more dysphoric since they are huge and constantly there reminding her that she isn't a nonbinary snowflake with neo-pronouns? Plus she has a female partner anyway. Unless she's banging dudes on the side why does she need to have her tubes tied? It seems unnecessary to go through a surgery like that then.

I had to read the article a few times because I was having trouble figuring out if Andie was a guy or not. I think she's just a very homely woman. But when you refuse to list a person's gender and call them "they" in an article about reproductive choices it confuses the reader. It's not good journalism. Then again this is Vice. I should call it "journalism".

By this passage I think it's a she:
Becoming a parent isn't totally ruled out for Andie because, as they succinctly point out, "there are other ways to have children that don't involve pushing them out through your uterus." Andie mentions adopting or co-parenting, where two or more people join forces for the sole reason of having a kid.

Genderspecials make bad subjects for reproductive related articles because it confuses the hell out of readers. Andie's just there for the diversity quota. She looks like Greg Dulli crossdressing for Halloween.:lol:
 
If people want to get sterilized, they should go for it. If they end up regretting it it's no one's fault but their own. Plus, Earth is already overpopulated; we need people to have fewer children, not more. If people who probably wouldn't be good parents anyway decide to opt out of childrearing, that's beneficial.
 
It's got a Sailor Moon locket tattoo.

Also that lipstick. Oh honey, no. Just no. It doesn't go with anything outside of a Halloween costume. I bet grandma is constantly asking her why she intentionally makes herself so ugly. Her family must be ashamed to be seen with her. She's already built like a horse and could easily pass as a man if she transitioned. She literally looks like a male troon.

I'm wondering though. If the sterilization helped with her dysphoria then why does she still insist on lugging those cow tits around? Wouldn't they make her even more dysphoric since they are huge and constantly there reminding her that she isn't a nonbinary snowflake with neo-pronouns? Plus she has a female partner anyway. Unless she's banging dudes on the side why does she need to have her tubes tied? It seems unnecessary to go through a surgery like that then.

I had to read the article a few times because I was having trouble figuring out if Andie was a guy or not. I think she's just a very homely woman. But when you refuse to list a person's gender and call them "they" in an article about reproductive choices it confuses the reader. It's not good journalism. Then again this is Vice. I should call it "journalism".

By this passage I think it's a she:


Genderspecials make bad subjects for reproductive related articles because it confuses the hell out of readers. Andie's just there for the diversity quota. She looks like Greg Dulli crossdressing for Halloween.:lol:
Andie is a woman. Despite saying that she uses they and nonsense, they say she was born female. Vice outted her.
 
If people want to get sterilized, they should go for it. If they end up regretting it it's no one's fault but their own. Plus, Earth is already overpopulated; we need people to have fewer children, not more. If people who probably wouldn't be good parents anyway decide to opt out of childrearing, that's beneficial.

The earth is not over populated. If we just go by net food availability we throw out nearly a third of the calories produced. And we have not come close to running out of available land with which to increase productive capability. Its also becoming even more efficient thanks to things like genetic engineering. As for people unfit to be parents, everyone is unfit to be a parent before they become a parent. Both men and women undergo profound psychological changes after a child comes along. Some psychologists think that the brain does not finish development until after these changes occur, as they are huge. Especially in women, but also in men, having measurable effects not only on what parts of the brain become active but also on hormone production and overall physical health. Childless men for example have a marked lower life expectancy to men with children.
 
"The purpose of Life is not just about reproduction"

Yeah, that's about all life is. The entire reason why advanced species exist is to pass on their genetic code and propagate themselves. All we are is walking DNA. Though sentience obviously allows us to choose and overwrite this imperative. Humans are the only species that can prevent their extinction or actively encourage it.

It's hard not to look at these people with the thought "useless dead end taking up space" not running through the mind.

About the only person I've known to eschew having kids even after her 20s was due to having psychological issues that were passed down from her mom who also had them. So I can understand that reason. These people? They're going to end up as wards of the state eventually.
 
The earth is not over populated. If we just go by net food availability we throw out nearly a third of the calories produced. And we have not come close to running out of available land with which to increase productive capability. Its also becoming even more efficient thanks to things like genetic engineering. As for people unfit to be parents, everyone is unfit to be a parent before they become a parent. Both men and women undergo profound psychological changes after a child comes along. Some psychologists think that the brain does not finish development until after these changes occur, as they are huge. Especially in women, but also in men, having measurable effects not only on what parts of the brain become active but also on hormone production and overall physical health. Childless men for example have a marked lower life expectancy to men with children.

We're not overpopulated in terms of land/food/etc, but we are really getting there in terms of how many resources we use (namely non-renewable resources like fossil fuels). Overpopulation has never really been about “number of people” as a whole but rather the relationship between “how many people” and “how many resources.” We are definitely depleting certain resources faster than they can be replenished. This is especially problematic when you consider developing countries; their goal is to be as advanced as first world countries, but there's no way Earth can sustain that considering how many resources first world countries use. Hopefully advances in renewable energy will fix this problem, but until then we need to be very cautious.

As for people not having kids, I really just don't understand what the big deal is. Plenty of other people are having kids; it's not like we're in danger of depopulation or extinction. If someone regrets not having children, that's on them. Adoption is always an option; there are a lot of kids out there who need a home.
 
We're not overpopulated in terms of land/food/etc, but we are really getting there in terms of how many resources we use (namely non-renewable resources like fossil fuels). Overpopulation has never really been about “number of people” as a whole but rather the relationship between “how many people” and “how many resources.” We are definitely depleting certain resources faster than they can be replenished. This is especially problematic when you consider developing countries; their goal is to be as advanced as first world countries, but there's no way Earth can sustain that considering how many resources first world countries use. Hopefully advances in renewable energy will fix this problem, but until then we need to be very cautious.

As for people not having kids, I really just don't understand what the big deal is. Plenty of other people are having kids; it's not like we're in danger of depopulation or extinction. If someone regrets not having children, that's on them. Adoption is always an option; there are a lot of kids out there who need a home.

meanwhile in africa: ''bingo bongo's wife is giving Birth to her 20th kid''

but cosmos sez: ''stop having children, you dumb White people! you're ruining Za warudo!!1!
 
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