
What Can I Do if My Partner Is Pregnant, but I Don’t Want to Be a Parent?
Learning that your partner is pregnant when you do not feel ready to be a parent can bring a rush of emotions. Fear, panic, confusion, and even guilt are all common responses. You did not plan for this, and now you are trying to figure out what your role is, what you owe, and what you are even allowed to feel.
First Care offers free, confidential appointments, with same-day appointments available. We are here to help both of you get accurate information and think through your options clearly. Make an appointment today.
Your Feelings Are Worth Acknowledging
Not wanting to be a parent right now does not make you a bad person. It makes you someone facing a situation you were not prepared for. Many men in this position feel pressure to immediately have an answer or to suppress their feelings to support their partner. Neither of those approaches tends to lead to healthy outcomes.
Before anything else, give yourself room to process. What you are feeling matters, and the decisions ahead will be better made from a place of clarity than from panic or avoidance.
Understanding Your Role in the Decision
Legally, the decision about the pregnancy belongs to the woman. That can feel deeply unfair when you are the other half of the situation. And while you cannot make the decision for your partner, how you show up in this conversation matters more than you might think.
Being honest about where you stand, without pressure or ultimatums, is the most respectful thing you can do for both of you. That honesty may be hard to deliver, but your partner deserves to know your genuine perspective, and you deserve the space to express it.
What the Options Actually Mean for You
There are three options for every pregnancy: parenting, adoption, and abortion. Each one carries different implications for your life, your relationship, and your future. It is worth understanding what each actually looks like before assuming you know.
For example, if your partner chooses to parent and you are the biological father, there may be legal and financial responsibilities involved regardless of your wishes. If adoption is something either of you is open to, an Expectant Parent Social Worker at First Care can walk through what that process looks like. Understanding the full picture of each option helps you engage in the conversation more honestly and more helpfully.
Getting Support Before the Conversation Gets Harder
One of the most valuable things you can do right now is talk to someone outside the relationship before the pressure builds. First Care offers free, confidential appointments where you and your partner can come together or separately to get accurate information, ask questions, and learn about all available options without judgment.
No pressure. No agenda. Just honest answers to help you both move forward with clarity.
Make a free, confidential appointment at any of First Care’s locations, including Minneapolis, Richfield, Rochester, Saint Paul, and University. Same-day appointments are available.
First Care does not perform or refer for abortion.
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