Cordelia wrote:
As someone who has always known that motherhood isn't what I want, I can attest to the possibility of knowing this definitively at 17.
Look at the reverse of this: there are many, many people who know definitively at 17 that they
want to become parents someday. We don't go around telling them, "Now, don't be making decisions based on that! You could change your mind!!"
It's true, of course; they may change their minds just as 17 yr old naysayers-to-progeny may also change their minds. Even then, they don't know what they're in for. Parenthood is one of those experiences you can't possibly understand until you're doing it. The ironic thing is that in order to understand it, you have to go through it, and once you start going through it, you don't get to change your mind. Parenthood is one of the most permanent things we bring upon ourselves, we can never undo it. Once you've had a child, you will always have "had a child." Whether you raise it, lose it, drown it, or abandon it, you will ever after be someone who has "had a child."
There is a lot of criticism about Bella not fully weighing the permanence, the irrevocability, of becoming a vampire, yet it could be a simile for parenthood in that it's another of those experiences one cannot begin to comprehend without going through it. Vampirehood stands to bring her great pain, sorrow, conflict, and difficulty, and presumably joy...and the same is true of parenthood. Some of us would want to be vampires and some of us wouldn't; some of us want to be parents and some of us don't. Not one of us knows what either state of being (vampire or parent) is truly like until we go through it.
I think Bella will continue to examine and prepare herself for vampirehood as much as it's possible to do, because she believes she wants it. I think if she believed she wanted parenthood she would be examining that, too (and she still may) but as of the end of EC it's simply not something that calls to her.
Rosalie doesn't understand this because Rosalie interprets the world only in terms of what she wants or wanted from it; Rosalie lacks empathy. That's not her fault because she never had many opportunities to develop it, but I think she could if she made up her mind to. A good start would be to tell Bella,
no, I don't agree with your decision but it's yours to make and so I'll support you; I won't even say 'I told you so' should you ever regret it, I'll just try to help you through any disappointments that come up.... I think that's the most helpful thing Rosalie can do for Bella, and possibly for herself, as well; it would be a step toward emotional maturity and even a glimpse at parenthood because oddly enough, it's also what parents have to say to children sometimes....