It's a story that will make you feel bad about yourself. But it's an important one all the same. A teenage girl told her entire school, her siblings, even her boyfriend's parents that she was pregnant. Then, six months later Gaby Rodriguez pulled off the fake belly she'd been wearing around her high school.
The 17-year-old Washington high school student made the whole thing up, a pregnancy hoax she'd cleared with her mom, her boyfriend, and school administrators as a social experiment. To find out whether pregnant teenagers really are treated differently than their peers. The worst thing the straight-A student heard? That people had "expected" her to end up knocked up as a teenager anyway. Despite all evidence to the contrary, once Rodriguez sported a padded tummy, she was labeled a "bad" girl.
And so it goes. Snap judgments are made, and teenagers suffer the consequences of rumor and innuendo rather than fact. As Rodriguez's story makes the rounds of major media, it's called to mind another pregnant teenager, this one very real and very pregnant. I'll call her Ella. She was a lot like Gaby Rodriguez. Smart. Talented. Young.
And she got pregnant her senior year in high school, thereby changing everything I'd known about pregnant teenagers. She wasn't "that girl" at all. She was a friend, a girl from a good family, with a good head on her shoulders. She had no "reputation" to speak of, or if she did, it was as a smart girl, a talented actress. When she got pregnant, I'll admit it, it blew my mind. Because it reminded me, a teenager myself at the time, that it could happen to anyone. It's a story that I've been forced to call to mind many times over as an adult mother looking into the faces of pregnant teenagers.
MTV has done a stellar job of showing the realities of teenage pregnancy with its 16 and Pregnant and Teen Mom shows, but if there's one failure, it's how easily the kids with messed up lives have overshadowed those who are doing it "right." Jenelle Evans getting hauled off to jail on drug charges, Amber Portwood beating up on her boyfriend, they're real, and they make for great TV.
But alongside these train wrecks are the teenagers who did everything right ... and still got pregnant. They were smart. They had good parents, involved parents. They had ambition, and often they used some form of birth control that failed. Don't believe that happens? Ask your adult friends how many of their kids were "planned." Chances are you'll be surprised by how many admit their second or third child was an "accident" (albeit a happy one). Because it happens. Condoms break. The pill is counteracted by antibiotics. Life gets in the way.
What kids like Gaby Rodriguez and Ella teach us is that there is no way to classify pregnant teenagers. Sure, there may be statistics that point to more girls in low income areas ending up pregnant. But the very nature of humanity is that we all have a libido, we all want to have sex at some point. And birth control is not 100 percent effective.
It's easy to write off a pregnant teenager as dumb, promiscuous, irresponsible. It's harder to face the truth: that we're all human, and nothing in life ever goes quite as we planned. Even when we do everything right.
Does this story make you gulp and think about the snap judgments you've made about young moms?
Image via Polina Sergeeva/Flickr


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Comments 91
My only snap judgement about teen pregnancies is, how can they fail to use a condom? Oh. I forgot, this society is teaching to abstain instead. My mother told me "I don't want no bastard grandchildren." Harsh, yes, but, I always used birth control.
So why exactly do our minds need to be changed? There IS something wrong with children having children! We as a country do not need to change our opinions- young people need to figure out the obvious – SEX causes babies! Nothing is 100% effective, and never, NEVER listen when one partner tell you they can’t have kids! Because even if they somehow can’t make a kid, they sure can spread disease, so wear a rubber and take the pill. If your going to have sex, then you need to be smart enough NOT to get yourself pregnant in the first place. If as a young person you are not smart enough to figure those simple truths out for yourself, then you DO NOT need to be having SEX! It’s really that simple, and before you idiots start yelling, because you fall into the category, just keep in mind I was young and stupid once myself. And EVERY word I speak in truth!
I'd like to hear what was said to the boyfriend. Why is it always the girl getting the brunt of the blame and nasty comments? Boys make poor choices, too. I have four sons and the idea of them getting someone pg is just as scary if I had a daughter who was pg. It's all about responsible choices.
When i was 15 i met a guy and fell head over heels in love with him.He was my first,the first time we had sex i was 17 and got pregnant.This was back in the early 70's a time when you got pregnant you were considered the town slut no matter what if it was your first time or your 100th time.What pissed me off was many of the girls who were sexually active with every Tom, Dick and Harry were on the birth control pill so because they d'int get pregnant and i did i was the gossip of the town.I had a beautiful son and i have no regrets.
I can't judge, because No I wasn't a teenage mom in High School, but I was married and graduated from High School at 17 , got pregnant at 18 and turned 19 right before my first child was born. There is NO room for me or anyone to judge when we are all human, no one is perfect and all of us make mistakes.
I deifnitely dont judge. I had straight A's and was a very good kid but ended up pregnant when I was 17. I still graduated and ended up getting married to a wonderful man when I was 19. I am now 20 and we are expecting our second child. It wasn't easy st first, because I was kicked out of my house. We are doing very well now and I am in college and my hubby has a full tie job in the hospital. I cant wait to have MORE kids.
Sad to say... Teen moms are not the only ones who deal with rude remarks and snotty comments. I was 23 when I had my son but I was a single mom. And yeah...young skin runs in my family so alot of people probably thought I was still in high school. But I still had to deal with plenty of nonsense from friends and family (who knew perfectly well how old I was...AND knew the situation).
I was told by my doctor that I couldn't get pregnant so I was thrilled! Just didn't work out the way everyone thought it should have with "dad".
The bottom line is...Some People just SUCK!
And FYI: I am now almost 32 and very happy with my life. And yeah... I still get some nasty looks and comments.
i was one of those teen moms. i got pregnant was 15 and had my son the day after i turned 16.. i understand what the judgements are like and it's not fun. what Gaby did to prove that teen moms are judged due to the fact that they are pregnant. i now have 4 beautiful kids that i would not trade anything in the world for. my oldest son is the product of a birth control pill that was high enough.. things like the 16 and pregnant shows that the teens did not come from a bad family and the parents support these kids....
I had my oldest a month after I turned 20, so I technically wasn't a teen mom, but I was pregnant as a teen and I still get that I don't look old enough to have three kids and I am 23. My kids are 3, 2 and 1. BUT I also get credit from MANY older moms that know me that tell me what a good job I am doing and how they wish they had the patience that I have. I always knew that I wanted to be a mom and all three of my kids are with my husband. I wouldn't change a thing for the world!