I was standing in line at the supermarket today and noticed a young girl behind me looking through a magazine with her baby sitting in the cart. I take that the baby was at least 10-12 months old b/c she was able to say "mama". I was more taken by how cute the baby was than how young the mom looked so I commented on her baby and said, "Your little girl is so cute, she's adorable..." Then I realized wow, she looked awefully young to be a mom, but I didn't say anything in regards to that. A lot of people mistaken me for being a lot younger than I am so I just smiled at her and she smiled back. Then a snarky old lady standing behind her said in disbelief, "She's YOURS???" How old are you, 10???" I looked at the girl who looked like she wanted to cry. She responded, "No, I'm 13." Even I was floored! But hey, none of my business so I just went on with my groceries. But the stupid lady wouldn't give it up and continued, "Kids these days! Nothing better to do then screw around! Ugh!" And the young girl said, "She's a rape baby all right!"
Then the whole line went silent and the young girl stormed off the supermarket with her baby girl. I turned to the lady and said..."Next time you should just mind your own business, ok?" I was mortified and couldn't stop thinking about the 13 yr old girl and her baby on the way home.
Re: Reason why you should never judge a 13 yr old mom
Wow...just wow.
I'll never know why people think it's their right to comment on stranger's lives, anyway. Good for you for putting that old snark in her place.
=(
Its gonna be a tough life for both of them (mom and baby) not because shes a young mom but because her beautiful baby is a constant reminder of what happened
and when that baby grows up (if they tell her) I assume it will be hard knowing the situation that brought you life was one that caused your mother so much pain.
Everything you wrote is exactly what I thought about on the drive home. But just imagine...she kept the baby and gave her life despite of what happened. I honestly would have no clue what to do if that was me. My parents for sure would force me to give the baby up knowing how she was formed.
I even thought about that, too. But she looked genuinely hurt. And why else would she storm off like that. Her face turned bright red and her eyes watery when she grabbed her baby and left.
Well...if that's the case, then she must have practiced that scene a thousand times b/c she was red in the face with tears in her eyes when she stormed off.
pPROM at 27 weeks, Birdy born at 28 weeks at 2lb 7oz.
That's the worst thing I've ever heard.
ETA: My only reason for questioning her story would be that I can't imagine that everyone in her life didn't strongly advise her to place the baby for adoption. It's one thing to give the baby life, but another entirely to let someone else's act of violence ruin the rest of your life. It would be hard enough to raise a baby who was a product of rape as an adult, but at the age of 13? Fact is stranger than fiction, though.
"You're gonna miss this You're gonna want this back You're gonna wish these days hadn't gone by so fast..."
It's funny that you mention that because there were days that my dad and I would go out with DD when DH would be working (I was pregnant with DS) and the looks, stares and whispers we would get were so obvious that I found them almost comical. People would assume that my dad was my husband and DD was ours and I was pregnant again. I had an older lady come up and tell my dad that he should be ashamed of himself. I looked at her and asked why, because he's taking his daughter and granddaughter out to lunch? Some people can not help judging others, even when there is no cause for it.
This. I don't EVER say anything in that kind of situation unless asked.
I thought the same thing.