Writer/director Henriette Mantel was at a reading for fellow comics when a familiar theme took root.
"They were all reading these essays about their kids," said Mantel, who has no children. "Everyone was laughing, 'Ha, ha! I know!' and I turned to my friend and said, 'What about me?'
"He said, 'Go write your own.' "
So she did.
"Yes, there is a little sadness around" not having kids, she writes in that essay, "The Morning Dance." "But there's also a little sadness around the fact I may never get to go to the moon. Jeez, you can't do everything in this lifetime."
Her essay opens "No Kidding: Women Writers on Bypassing Parenthood" (Seal Press), a new anthology she edited that includes pieces by comic heavyweights Margaret Cho, Nora Dunn and Merrill Markoe, among others.
"The traditional rules for having children are long gone," Mantel writes. "Some days I feel like the harder choice is to not have a kid."
At a time when women are running Lockheed Martin (Marillyn Hewson), Yahoo (Marissa Mayer) and Germany (Angela Merkel), one would think that having children would represent just that: a choice — one choice among thousands that we trust women to make for themselves, without our prying or judgment.