A few days ago, Karina called me at work and said she needed to speak with me. She was very upset and said that she had just found out that one of her friends is pregnant. She's 13.
Karina approached her when she noticed her crying and asked if she was ok. That's when her friend told her the news. Her friend asked for advice on what she should do. Karina told me that all she could think of was to say, over and over, "Talk to your mother." Karina said, "I don't understand how she hasn't gone to her mother with this!" I told Karina that we would continue the conversation when I got home from work. But my mind began to race the moment I hung up the phone. What was I going to say?
About a month ago, I took my daughter and niece to the movies to watch JUNO. In case you haven't heard, Juno is a movie about teenage pregnancy:
Juno (Ellen Page) is a Mid-Western highschooler, who decides one day, out of boredom or curiosity, to have sex with her friend Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera), a member of her school's track team. She likes him well enough, but isn't hung up on him. This one time encounter results in Juno's pregnancy. She and her best friend Leah (Olivia Thirlby) decide to take control of the situation by browsing for prospective adoptive parents in the local Pennysaver newspaper, and Juno settles on seemingly the perfect, affluent couple Mark (Jason Bateman) and Vanessa Loring (Jennifer Garner) who is desperate to have a child. Junos sensitive father (J.K. Simmons) and stepmother (Allison Janney) are very supportive of her and help Juno with her decision to give the baby up for adoption. Juno and her father check out Mark and Vanessa Loring to see if they are the right couple. As time moves closer to having the baby, Juno grows more into a woman, yet she is still a teenager with all the same problems and a few more.
I LOVED the movie, and so did the girls. But part of me wondered if Juno's parents' reaction was a realistic one? How would I react if Karina came to me and said she was pregnant, AND had done the research, AND had made the decision to give the baby up for adoption? I honestly don't know.
When I got home, karina and I had a LONG talk. I told her that she should never feel afraid to tell me anything that was going on with her. I told her that I hoped she really thought things through before it actually got to the point of deciding to have sex with someone. She looked at me with unwavering eye contact and said, "Mommy, don't worry...I'm not that type of girl". Those words echoed in my head..."that type of girl". What did that mean? So I told Karina, "Your friend made a mistake, she's scared and she doesn't know what she's going to do or how her family is going to react. Is THAT the type of girl you mean?" Then I went on to explain that this type of thing can happen to ANY "type of girl". You could be the shy, straight "A" student who decides to have sex for the first time and ends up pregnant, or you could be the school slut. But really, does it matter? I told her that I wanted her to have the best in life, and having a child when you're still a child isn't my idea of having the best life. I said, "Why would you want to have the life that you're going to have when you're 40, now? Wait until you're 40! You shouldn't have to worry about kids, money, bills, insurance and the uncertainty of your future! You have the rest of your life for that!"
Then I started thinking about her poor friend and I wondered...is teenage pregnancy contagious?
According to the Planned Parenthood website, approximately 97 per 1,000 women aged 15-19 become pregnant each year. Moreover, because the average age of menarche has reached an all-time low and because four out of five young people have sex as teenagers, a greater proportion of teenage girls are at risk of becoming pregnant.
So I wondered what the school is going to do once they find out about the girls pregnancy? Are they going to make her leave the school once she starts showing? Is that fair? Does she have rights, or has she given them up because she got pregnant? Should the school use her as an example, a "if you get pregnant like her, you won't be allowed to attend school like a normal 13-year-old"?
So I pose the question to you, my fellow MT's...what's fair? What's right? What do you think?