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Slowing down our lives sped up our baby dreams: They spent years failing to conceive. Then lockdown hit and look what happened! Here, four blissfully happy new mothers share their thought-provoking stories
- 173,000 women booked antenatal appointments in the final quarter of 2020
- UK-based mothers reveal why they credit the pandemic for their little miracle
- Jen Curnow, from Cornwall, started trying for a baby on honeymoon in 2018
- The 35-year-old says spontaneous intimacy and downtime boosted fertility
By Sadie Nicholas for the Daily Mail
Published: 17:02 EDT, 5 May 2021 | Updated: 17:02 EDT, 5 May 2021
Overworked, overtired and undersexed, it is no wonder many couples felt hard-pressed to start a family while dashing from pillar to post in their hectic lives before the pandemic.
With hardly any down time, thanks to busy social lives, too, the chance for quality time to conceive was scarce.
But last March, all of that changed. When Covid-19 forced the population into lockdown, couples were suddenly confronted with a slower, less stressful pace of life and, consequently, had more time for each other.
Experts predicted an explosive baby boom fuelled by bored couples making full use of the ‘Stay at Home’ rules and, despite doom-mongers’ claims that pandemic stress had lead to a ‘sex drought’ among frazzled partners, early forecasts are now coming to fruition.
Four women who live in the UK, reveal why they credit the pandemic for their newborn. Pictured: Jen Curnow, 35 and husband Josh, 31, with their son Romi
Last month, NHS data revealed more than 173,000 women booked antenatal appointments in the final quarter of 2020 — the highest in five years.
And for some of those women, pregnancy has been a joyful surprise, the culmination of years spent trying for a child.
Could it be that lockdown proved to be the unlikely boost to their fertility they had longed for?
Here, FEMAIL speaks to four new mums who credit the unprecedented events of 2020 with the arrival of their own little miracles . . .
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