I was watching a trailer for the movie "The Back-up Plan" when I got to thinking. I always had a vague back-up plan in high school: If by the time I was 30 I wasn't married, I decided, I'd have a baby with a gay friend. I think a lot of us girls have had that plan, but how many have actually carried it through? I decided to ask a few friends.Maybe life doesn't work out exactly the way we want, and yet we still want children, a career, a partner or something else that hasn't quite come on the scene yet. So what are you gonna do? Sit around and lament over what you don't have? No! Life is short. You set a time frame and you say, "If this doesn't happen by this date, then I'm gonna do this, take action, make it happen for myself." I talked to some ladies who know what they want -- and have back-up plans to make those dreams happen.
Cricket Lee is pushing 40, and her back-up plan was career-oriented. It was more about making her dreams come true. If she wasn't going to get married and have children, she decided, she wanted to be a successful writer:
"I'm an actor, editor-in-chief / writer / on-air talent for Girl Gamer and writer for Dread Central and GeekWeek's video game departments," she says. "I meet loads of people (including loads of men, who I date occasionally), have made friends that I love dearly, have the respect of my peers (the ones I give a sh** about, at any rate) and am, for the most part, happy."
Julia, on the other hand, always had a kinky fantasy Plan B: "My back-up plan was always to become a high-priced call girl," she says. "Men would pay $10,000 to spend one night with me." But it hasn't quite come to that. "Instead I live with my hubby and two kids in Studio City," she laughs. But it's always good to know you have something to fall back on.

Renata, a successful writer/producer who splits her time now between L.A. and Portland, Ore., has truly put her back-up plan to the test: "I am 38 ... and have a 3-month-old son who is the product of me having a baby with my gay best friend of many years.
"We jokingly talked about it for a long time," she says, "and honestly, I think there are a lot of women who have these conversations with their gay best friends, but very few who actually jump off the ledge and end up getting sperminated the way I did. I think almost every single woman over 30 has had the thought of having a kid with a gay best friend or just a friend or just going to a sperm bank. It's that creeping 'What if?' voice that fills our brain. What if I don't find the one? What will I do?
"So then I blinked and I was 35, then 36, and then 37. No man in sight, and, by that time, my desire to be a mom was so powerful it superseded my desire to get married. That is not to say I don't want to get married one day or find the right man, but I didn't want to miss the boat biologically in terms of having a baby. I knew I could probably have a baby till I was 45 or so, but the longer I waited, the harder it would be. I also didn't know IF I would be able to get pregnant or, more importantly, how long it would take. It could take two years and I would be almost 40. I decided I didn't mind doing it backwards and that ultimately the right guy would come my way even with a kid."
For me, I don't know. My back-up plan isn't as simple as it once was. I don't know if I want to have children at all at this point. I guess the back-up plan has become the main plan. I think that whatever is meant to be will happen. If it doesn't work out I can always have a gay baby-daddy.
How about you? Living Plan A, or about to enact Plan B? Tell me, I want to know.












Comments:
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Thursday 20 May
By Jack
Women finally, after so many years, started to believe the crap men had been handing them for so long. Liberated? Really? Burnt out is more like it.
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Thursday 20 May
By Flash
Nothing but selfish women that just want what THEY want, with total disregard for the child by denying the child a father. You are a sad bunch!
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Thursday 20 May
By Laine
To the man who doesn't feel sorry, I am 36 and still single. My problem is that I always gave the benefit of the doubt, always dated the "different" guys were what my friends called them. Even tho they may have had issues, I always kept pushing through, helping them through different situations and eventually getting hurt in the end. Dont' make it out to be all women who reject all men because that's not the case.
As far as the article, I'm definitely living plan B. I do have a son from a prior relationship and that "man" has not seen him since he's 2. I love my child dearly, I wouldn't have it any other way.
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Thursday 20 May
By sagaceous
Interesting....all these "back-up plans" by women are rather self-centered....really? All revolve around money and having bastard children (same as money). These are plan B's? Exactly what qualifies for plan A I wonder? Quite revealing....
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Thursday 20 May
By J Casserly
I'm living plan A. Which is to say I never had a back up plan. I just wanted to pursue my dream and hopefully meet the right guy.
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Friday 28 May
By Jaz
I personally won't judge CJ for the choice that was made. Everyone has their own view on what is morally right and wrong. I know that being a 36 year old, independent, single divorced, educated woman; I personally have NO desire to pro-create and you should see/hear the judgement that is passed onto me by men and other women because I have no desire to contribute to the already over populated earth. Once upon a time I was married, and it was to a man who was great at keeping his dirt swept under the rug. Sure, he wanted kids and we got married. After I moved in I found out he was cheating on me the entire 5 years of our relationship. I was hurt, but I packed my things and left. I'm glad we didn't have kids because I don't want them being shipped between Florida, Colorado & the Caribbean. BUT I know he would be an excellent father.
4 years later, I am working on my MBA, back on my feet, dating a wonderful man who treats me with complete love and respect. I'm pushing 40 and my time clock has been silenced. I don't need a child to feel like I'm more of a woman or incomplete. I am happy being who I am, in my skin, accomplishing my goals and dreams I set out to do. Life is what you make it and yes, as women, we should have back up plans just in case. BUT, I don't think treating men like sperm banks or just for a good time is respectful unless both parties are in agreement. I am by no means a feminist at all, just a woman who has been down the road of "no back up plan" and had to start over from scratch with no alimony and not a dime coming from a man who I could have taken to the cleaners but I didn't.
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