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Two Men, Baby on the Way and Me (NY Times values alert)
The New York Times ^ | March 20, 2005 | Rebecca Eckler

Posted on 03/20/2005 10:28:34 AM PST by No Dhimmi

I was three months pregnant and engaged to be married when I met him.

(Read the rest for all the nauseating details...)

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: blamecanada; bluestateslut; ho; homosexualagenda; itsababynotabump; nihilism; promiscuity; selfabsorbed; shameless; skank; values
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I think you can guess where this article is going. Once again, the New York Times "Modern Love" column serves as a billboard for the shameless, self-absorbed-yet-self-loathing, Modern Left.

Baby? Whoops, almost forgot. Not tonight, I have a date...

1 posted on 03/20/2005 10:28:39 AM PST by No Dhimmi
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To: No Dhimmi

Well if you dont want little sprogs, dont have them. Be responsible.


2 posted on 03/20/2005 10:30:25 AM PST by Windsong (FighterPilot)
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To: No Dhimmi

is there a way to read this articlw without have to register to read it?


3 posted on 03/20/2005 10:31:46 AM PST by armyman (By Wednesday my new screen name will be either Cool Multiservice Dude or Cool Multiservice Man.)
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To: armyman

We're allowed to post entire NYT articles, so here's the whole mess:

Two Men, Baby on the Way and Me
By REBECCA ECKLER

Published: March 20, 2005


WAS three months pregnant and engaged to be married when I met him. He and I were out for dinner with mutual friends. He made me laugh. He was very cute. And very single. He saw my ring and heard my announcement about the growing bump in my stomach. Nevertheless, he paid for my dinner and walked me home, and a couple of weeks later we made plans to go see an early movie.


After the movie, I invited him into my apartment and made him a vodka and orange juice. I drank water but felt first-date tipsy anyway.

Of course, it wasn't a date. How could it be, when I had a bump in my stomach and was engaged to the father of the bump? No, the word "date" was never uttered. I was in bed, alone, by 10. But before he left, this cute single man surveyed my apartment and told me I should have more secure locks on my sliding-glass doors. The next day, he dropped off a broomstick handle with my doorman, which I was to use to secure the sliding door in the back.

Where was my fiancé? He lived in a different city, thousands of miles away. We'd been together this way for years—apart, yes, but together. We saw each other once a month. Our arrangement was fine until I got pregnant, which forced us to make decisions. We chose to get married (eventually) and live in his Western city but for me to remain for the pregnancy in my better-for-my-career Eastern city, because it was, well, better for my career.

This confused many people. "Yes, I'm pregnant," I had to explain endlessly. "No, the fiancé is not here. Yes, I go to the obstetrician appointments by myself. Yes, he visits. Yes, I visit. Really, it's fine."

But now, inconveniently, I had met this new man who had brought me a broomstick for security. To friends, I started to refer to him as Broomstick. His other name was Cute Single Man.

Cute Single Man and I began to e-mail regularly. We played Scrabble. Soon we had a standing date on Thursday nights watching reality television. He would come to my apartment and bring me ice cream, sliced watermelon and Big Macs, my craving foods.

When C.S.M. and I went to Mr. Sub (another craving) late one Saturday night and the employee behind the counter asked us when we were due, it was easier to pretend he was the father than to explain that he was just a friend. After all, what kind of woman goes out with a cute single man at 11 on a Saturday night when she's pregnant with another man's child?

ALSO I didn't have a car, so C.S.M. took me grocery shopping on Sunday afternoons. He carried the cases of bottled water. When we once shared an elevator with another pregnant couple, it was more natural for me to say: "We also can't wait for this thing to come out," than, "Well, I'm excited. I'm not sure he is. He's not the father."

When we went to the movies, people gazed at us with the warm approval generally bestowed upon pregnant couples. I suppose we looked wholesome and happy. And I couldn't help but think that he and I would have a very good-looking baby.

At first, I thought C.S.M. pitied me. Actually, I thought he was attracted to my big pregnant breasts. I was right in both instances.

After all, there I was, two cups larger than my pre-pregnant self and not yet with a belly, alone in a big city, pregnant, while the father was a four-hour plane ride away. But C.S.M. shouldn't have pitied me. It was my choice.

C.S.M. was becoming a version of the fill-in boyfriend, which many women in long-distance relationships have. The fill-in boyfriend takes you to the movies, or to dinner, or sets up your DVD player. The only difference for us—besides the fact that I was pregnant and engaged—was that he was quickly becoming more than simply a version of the fill-in boyfriend.

"He's in love with you," my friend kept telling me. "Why is he attracted to an engaged pregnant woman? What's wrong with him? It's like you're the ultimate challenge."

Sometimes I did find his attraction odd, but like most women, I like to believe my personality is what attracts men. I didn't want to believe I was just a challenge or that he had commitment problems (though often I did think that). I also did not, or could not, believe that C.S.M. was physically attracted to the pregnant me-in sweat pants, with cellulite on my arms and pimples on my chin.

Don't get me wrong. I wanted C.S.M. to be attracted to me. I was pregnant, not dead. And I liked him too. Very much, then too much, and then, yes, way too much. I would have said we were falling in love, but as it wasn't an appropriate time for me to be falling in love I didn't say it. We certainly acted as if we were falling in love. I spoke to him first thing in the morning and at the end of every day. I missed him five minutes after he dropped me off. A night without seeing him felt like a month. He told me he had never cared for anyone like he cared for me.

And we fought like we were in a passionate relationship. One night I asked him to bring me chocolate ice cream. He brought me toffee-flavored instead. It was, I felt, the end of the world.

"Try it," he said. "You'll like it."

"I will not like it," I screamed. "I wanted chocolate ice cream. You never listen to me. It's always all about you!" I kicked him out of my house, like a mad woman. It was the pregnant hormones.

I thought I had lost him forever that night and I waited for hours by my perfectly functioning phone, wondering if it had been disconnected, hoping for him to call and knowing it would be better if he didn't.

He did. I apologized. We made up.

Another time we went to a large party. I shouldn't have gone. I was six months pregnant by then, felt ugly and out of place, and needed a bathroom every five minutes. He refused to accompany me to the bathroom, asking why don't I just find him afterward. He flirted with other women, or at least that's the way I saw it. And why shouldn't he? We were at a party. It's not as if he was the father of my child.

I left the party without telling him, angry, jealous. He called me at 3 a.m., drunk and apologetic. I had to keep reminding myself he was not my fiancé, not the person I was going to marry and grow old with.

But when I had an obstetrician appointment, he would say, "Call me right after."

And I would. (Immediately after I called the fiancé.) I couldn't stop myself. My head was screaming, Stop! But my heart. ...

"It's a girl!" I told him. "I wanted a girl!"

"Fantastic!" he said.

Like the model expectant father, he loved placing his hand on my stomach when the baby kicked. "Wow," he'd say. "That's amazing."

He worried about me and about this baby that wasn't his. I worried what people would say about me if they knew about our relationship. He worried what people would say about him. I worried about my fiancé, whom I loved and didn't want to hurt and didn't want to lose. I worried about what the right thing was for my baby.

To the extent that we could, we kept "us" a secret. C.S.M. did not tell his friends about me, and I told mine - those who knew - simply that I liked him and that he made me laugh.

But I knew we were crossing some line. If my fiancé were hanging out in his city with a cute single woman, I would have killed him. C.S.M. never spoke of the fiancé, and I never spoke of C.S.M. to the fiancé. If the fiancé suspected, he turned a blind eye. The denial! We were all swept up in it.

When I was very pregnant and it was time to leave C.S.M. to be with the fiancé, my heart cracked. I cried on the plane. I no longer had any idea what I wanted. But I was having a baby in a few weeks. My life was about to change completely, and I was mostly wrapped up with the facts: I had gained 47 pounds, I could barely walk, and I was going to have an actual human thing to look after.

My baby is now no longer a baby. She is 17 months old. Around the time my daughter was learning to walk, the supermodel Heidi Klum became engaged to Seal, after she met and dated him while pregnant with another man's child. No one, it seems, was bothered by this. Likewise, in the movie "The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou," the very pregnant journalist character ends up in bed with another man, not the father of her baby. Yet we all want her to be happy, and we're happy she hooks up with another man.

BUT I'm not sure anyone is happy about me and C.S.M. It's been more than two years since that fateful dinner and a year-and-a-half since I moved away, yet he and I are still in touch. I take frequent trips to my Eastern city and we see each other. We struggle to figure out what, if anything, we are. We talk, we fight, we don't talk. He misses me. I miss him. He hates me. I hate him. On and on it goes.

The fiancé and I have struggled too. We have not married. We have not regained that clarity. We ask ourselves, "Are we happy together?" "Are we meant to be?" Those are and perhaps forever will be our questions. Maybe they are everyone's questions.

And finally, of course, there are the "if onlys." If only I'd moved west to be with my fiancé at the start. If only I hadn't gone to that dinner. If only C.S.M. and I hadn't met at such an inopportune time. If only we could plan falling in love like a scheduled C-section.


Rebecca Eckler is a Canadian journalist. Her memoir, "Knocked Up: Confessions of a Hip-Mother-to-Be," will be released by Villard on March 29.


4 posted on 03/20/2005 10:34:43 AM PST by EllaMinnow
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To: No Dhimmi

"...I had a bump in my stomach...".

Typical liberal describing a baby as a "bump" in her stomach.


5 posted on 03/20/2005 10:35:35 AM PST by MisterRepublican (I DEMAND THAT FOX NEWS GET JENNIFER ECCLESTON BACK FROM NBC!)
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To: No Dhimmi
I was three months pregnant and engaged to be married when I met him. He and I were out for dinner with mutual friends. He made me laugh. He was very cute. And very single. He saw my ring and heard my announcement about the growing bump in my stomach. Nevertheless, he paid for my dinner and walked me home, and a couple of weeks later we made plans to go see an early movie.

Of course, it wasn't a date. How could it be, when I had a bump in my stomach and was engaged to the father of the bump?

I think I'm about to be violently ill.

6 posted on 03/20/2005 10:36:37 AM PST by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle (I feel more and more like a revolted Charlton Heston, witnessing ape society for the very first time)
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To: No Dhimmi
And we fought like we were in a passionate relationship. One night I asked him to bring me chocolate ice cream. He brought me toffee-flavored instead. It was, I felt, the end of the world.

"Try it," he said. "You'll like it."

"I will not like it," I screamed. "I wanted chocolate ice cream. You never listen to me. It's always all about you!" I kicked him out of my house, like a mad woman. It was the pregnant hormones.

Yeah sure, the hormones. Psycho b!tch alert

7 posted on 03/20/2005 10:37:51 AM PST by whd23
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To: No Dhimmi

Evidently leftists don't believe in free will or accountability. This is a seriously mixed up young woman, but she seems to think that some mysterious force is responsible for her predicament. Meanwhile, she intends to profit by writing a book about it, and the Fashion section of the Times is happy to help her out.

Somebody mentioned Woody Allen on another thread. It's the school of "Things happen to me. It's not my fault" postmodernism.


8 posted on 03/20/2005 10:41:03 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: EllaMinnow

I felt intense loathing to everyone involved in tha article (except the baby of course). Skin-crawling kind of loathing. Whew, glad I got the "hate" out of my system for the day.

They have no morals or values at all. The only thing they care about is pleasure, their own pleasure.


9 posted on 03/20/2005 10:42:44 AM PST by DameAutour
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To: No Dhimmi

Unbelieveable. Well at least this woman didn't kill her child.


10 posted on 03/20/2005 10:44:09 AM PST by jocon307
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To: whd23
"I will not like it," I screamed. "I wanted chocolate ice cream. You never listen to me. It's always all about you!" I kicked him out of my house, like a mad woman. It was the pregnant hormones.

I have been with women like that. Now, in middle age, my counsel to men would be: the FIRST time something like this happens, leave, run, and don't look back. Don't tolerate it. Life is too short.

11 posted on 03/20/2005 10:44:40 AM PST by gg188
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To: whd23

I pity the child.

Both her parents are completely self involved and worthless.


12 posted on 03/20/2005 10:47:14 AM PST by Dad2Angels
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To: whd23

"It was the pregnant hormones."

This is a good example of how much the Times has really deteriorated, aside from politics. They are PREGNANCY hormones, not PREGNANT hormones. The hormones are not pregnant.

Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy.


13 posted on 03/20/2005 10:48:14 AM PST by jocon307
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To: No Dhimmi
You read about people like this, but you can't really believe they actually exist. Nobody could be that rock-hard stupid and self-absorbed, could they?

The fiancé and I have struggled too. We have not married. We have not regained that clarity. We ask ourselves, "Are we happy together?" "Are we meant to be?" Those are and perhaps forever will be our questions. Maybe they are everyone's questions.

Duh! Ya think! Maybe if it is meant to be there is a neon sign splayed across the heavens. Have you checked outside tonight? Maybe it's there right now!

And finally, of course, there are the "if onlys." If only I'd moved west to be with my fiancé at the start. If only I hadn't gone to that dinner. If only C.S.M. and I hadn't met at such an inopportune time. If only we could plan falling in love like a scheduled C-section.

...If only you did not insist on cuckholding your prospective husband in a national publication, you would be getting along better.

Rebecca Eckler is a Canadian journalist. Her memoir, "Knocked Up: Confessions of a Hip-Mother-to-Be," will be released by Villard on March 29.

I can hardly wait. Maybe she'll start a trend.

14 posted on 03/20/2005 10:48:15 AM PST by gridlock (ELIMINATE PERVERSE INCENTIVES)
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To: Dad2Angels

"Both her parents are completely self involved and worthless.'

Yes, rather amazing how the interloper, usurping "boyfriend" comes off best of all.

I do pity that baby, poor little "bump" on the road to her parents.


15 posted on 03/20/2005 10:52:14 AM PST by jocon307
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To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle

I was going to have an actual human thing to look after.

Hmmmmmm. Most of us would have called her a baby.


16 posted on 03/20/2005 10:52:45 AM PST by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: EllaMinnow
BUT I'm not sure anyone is happy about me and C.S.M.

That's because you're a W.H.O.R.E., Becky.

17 posted on 03/20/2005 10:54:56 AM PST by Dont Mention the War (Naps and jerky treats are the opiate of the masses.)
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To: No Dhimmi

The scariest part is that there are literally MILLIONS of young women out there that will identify with this author.

But, on a brighter note, one of my dearest friends was engaged to be married. (We were housemates at the time.) Two months before the wedding, she became pregnant and simultaneously her fiance dumped her for someone else he had been fooling around with who was also (surprise!) pregnant.

Six months later, when she was obviously very pregnant, a mutual friend of ours began to persue her because he'd always liked her, knew her well, and wanted her and her baby to have the good life he could provide for them.

She told him to wait to see if he felt the same after she was through her pregnancy and had the baby. (Guess who went to the hospital with her when she gave birth?)

They've been married for close to ten years now, and they and THEIR little girl have had a very happy life, thanks to that Stand Up Man we all know and love and admire. :)

So, don't give up hope. Even if there are a lot of selfish idiots out there, there are still some self-less people left who put the needs of a child before their own.

(Remember...this article is a Blue State example of how to live.)


18 posted on 03/20/2005 11:00:04 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: EllaMinnow
The fiancé and I have struggled too.

Bet you'll be struggling a whole lot more after he reads this article. ;)

19 posted on 03/20/2005 11:02:49 AM PST by Mr. Jeeves
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To: No Dhimmi

The point of this lousy article is?


20 posted on 03/20/2005 11:03:29 AM PST by skaterboy (She wore a itsy bittsy teeny weeny bikini)
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