
When musician, writer and disability activist Eliza Hull excitedly told her doctor she was considering motherhood, she was shocked when he tried to advise her against it.
"My neurologist was someone I had trusted for so long, I classed him as a friend," Eliza told hosts Leigh Campbell and Tegan Natoli on a recent episode of Mamamia's This Glorious Mess podcast.
"He recommended that I don't become a parent because, as someone with a disability, he didn't think I could manage, and he questioned how I could even carry my child.
"Instead of helping me to become a mum by saying, 'This is how you could do it or adapt', he made me feel a lot of shame. I questioned whether I could cope - and I almost believed him."
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Thankfully, Eliza's supportive partner helped her to see that he was wrong, and that she needed to push back on his negative opinion.
"He said, 'Yes, you have a disability, but look at what you have already achieved in life!' He helped me to see that I'm adaptable, I can problem solve, and I could do it."
As a happy and well-supported mum of two kids aged seven and two, Eliza says that it is not her neurological condition, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, that has been the hardest part of becoming a mum. Rather, it is dealing with the attitudes of people like her neurologist.
"The hardest part of becoming a parent for me was not what happens at home, but out in society.
"When I had my first baby, I really noticed that people stared at me a lot more and people looked more concerned. One aspect of my disability is that I have trouble walking and I can fall over.