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- Like Adele, I Felt Like Having a Baby Was Considered “Career Suicide”
Like Adele, I Felt Like Having a Baby Was Considered “Career Suicide”
We are fortunate to live in a time when women can have it all, right? A good career and a loving family is attainable. Yet one of the biggest female stars in the world has admitted that, when she fell pregnant during the height of her fame, she feared she had committed “career suicide.”
Despite laws in the UK protecting women’s jobs during their maternity leave and heightened conversations around the importance of working mum’s careers being at the forefront of political policy, it seems that highly successful women still fear the impact starting a family will have on their future in the workplace.
“I could only call it pandemonium ’cause that’s how it felt to me. To many that would be – and it was – considered career suicide.”
Talking about her career during The Hollywood Reporter’s annual Women in Entertainment Gala, singer Adele said: “Sometimes I wonder […] if like, people think that I’m calculated, you know, when I disappear for years on end. That I’m elusive, and I believe less is more. You know, something like that. But the real reason I’ve only had four albums, and I don’t think that many people know this – they might know that I have a child and that I’m a mum – but my son is 11 years old.”
Adele explained she fell pregnant with son Angelo, who she shares with her ex-husband Simon Konecki at the “height of 21”, her second album. “I could only call it pandemonium ’cause that’s how it felt to me. To many that would be – and it was – considered career suicide.” Adele’s accolades since 2012 speak for themselves (hello Las Vegas residency, awards galore, and record-breaking album sales), but her feeling is not unique.
I am a mum-of-one. My daughter is now 13 months old and, as I read Adele’s words, I feel a strange sense of familiarity.
The day I found out I was pregnant, I was at work. I was producing a photoshoot in London, managing a big, celebrity-led project that I had been working flat out for weeks on end to make sure everything went perfectly. I was in my element, working in a fast-paced role that I had spent my entire life working towards.
Honestly, I was thrilled. And for the next 12 weeks I was in that little bubble of secrecy where no one knew I was expecting and work continued as normal.
Eventually, I started to tell people and that’s when my mindset began to shift. After revealing our news, initial responses of “oh how lovely” would often be followed by: “What did your work say when you told them? How did work take it? How are you feeling about leaving work for a year?”
What were my work going to say? What was a year off for maternity leave going to do to my career? How was I going to stay relevant in a competitive industry with so many others willing to jump into my shoes and take over?
Suddenly my little baby bubble burst and things became real. Instead of thinking about the fact an era of motherhood was about to begin, I started thinking about how my career would end. What were my work going to say? What was a year off for maternity leave going to do to my career? How was I going to stay relevant in a competitive industry with so many others willing to jump into my shoes and take over? I quickly began to panic.
I started full-time employment back in my 20s, I’d never for a moment taken time away from focusing on my career. I’d given everything to it and now I was in a job I loved, yet here I was about to leave it for an entire year and risk it not being there in the same way when I returned. I would lie in bed at night worrying that people would forget me; that a younger, more excitable, not-about-to-get-pregnant-any-time-soon replacement would sweep in and take over and that I’d become uncool and irrelevant very quickly.
I hated myself for thinking this. I was so excited to be a mum, so why didn’t I feel more confident in myself?
I remember telling my work and they were thrilled for me and, if anything, seem unsurprised and unphased by my news. But despite their support, I still felt like I couldn’t take the year off I was entitled to. Less for financial reasons, but for the sole reason that I needed to keep my foot in the door.
I told them I’d probably return after nine months. And even pushed that, that I would manage a large project for them while on maternity leave, hoping that by taking on work from home I would stay relevant. And I did. Despite the fact that when my beautiful baby arrived I fully embraced that chaos that is motherhood, I couldn’t shake the feeling that I needed to dip into work.
“I hated myself for thinking this. I was so excited to be a mum, so why didn’t I feel more confident in myself?”
I planned the huge event during nap times and hosted it for three nights – the first three nights I had away from my baby – while breastfeeding, which meant a lot of pumping breastmilk in the toilet while simultaneously posting instagram footage with my spare hand.
It was that event however, that made me stop and realise that having a baby didn’t need to mean career suicide. The event itself was full of highly successful women and nearly 50 percent had children themselves. Every one of them stopped to tell me how amazed they were that I had pulled this off while on maternity leave. My female bosses, who were also at the event, were the most championing of them all.
It was these other women who made think, of course! Of course starting a family doesn’t have to mean the end of my career. It might mean the juggle is real, and things might be tougher, but it certainly doesn’t mean it’s over.
And Adele had a similar realisation. “I chose to reject the scarcity of success and the idea that you have to be constantly relevant to be successful,” she said. “And that perhaps, just maybe, I could be a hit both on and off the stage.” She said her success balancing work and mum life was down to other women in the industry setting a precedent that you don’t have to make a choice between being a professional and a parent. “It’s because of them that I have every right to be the boss at work and the boss at home,” she added.
Expert psychotherapist and author of bestselling book “Raising a Happier Mother“, Anna Mathur, says this career vs. motherhood panic is all too common. “It’s often because, these days, women put their all into their careers, then they become mothers and they want to put their all into that, too,” she tells POPSUGAR. “And that is a confusing and anxiety-inducing thing because they feel like that isn’t possible – so they can’t imagine how it’s going to work.”
The notion of years gone by that it takes a village to raise a child doesn’t exist like it used to, either. “Mothers living close by to parents and wider family is less assumed and grandparents are having to work later into life, or are older so mums can’t see that support network that is going to help them return to work successfully,” Mathur says. “Society and workplaces need to change the narrative to make women feel like it is possible to do both.”
The charity, Pregnant Then Screwed, has worked tirelessly to campaign for change and support discrimination against pregnant people in the workplace. “Parents often hide the challenges of home at work in order to be seen more present in the workplace, often out of fear of being dismissed or displaced,” Mathur adds. “But those who are understood and given a sense of trust, autonomy and, flexibility are far more likely to thrive in both the home and the workplace. When parents feel unsupported and untrusted, resentment and burnout can occur.”
“Be kind to yourself and don’t expect your brain to click straight back into gear after maternity leave.”
But what about the mindset of women, how can they help prepare themselves to feel like they can achieve this balance? Mathur says: “The main thing is to speak to your employer to find out what they have in place to allow you to give your best to both your work and your home life. If they don’t have anything, speak to other women in the workplace and friends and family because often, they can empower you with tips and encouragement.”
Mathur also explains that new mums should lean into the juggle. “Talk about it at work, don’t try and hide it, because it can be that you get more support and understanding than you think. Plus, it is way less exhausting mentally than trying to pretend it doesn’t exist,” Mathur says. “Be unashamed in speaking about the logistical curveballs so that you can be clear about what you need from your employer. Also be kind to yourself and don’t expect your brain to click straight back into gear after maternity leave. Take rest when you can and communicate to your partner about splitting childcare so you both get some time for yourselves.”
Adele, who has spoke openly about her desire to have another baby with partner, Rich Paul, said of her maintaining her record-breaking career while bringing up her son: “You’ll never guess what? I f***ing got away with it.” Here’s to the rest of us following suit!