| COMMENTARYMoms Nurture Fake BabiesCourtesy of BreakPoint Online 
                with Charles Colson
 CBN.com  Nowadays,  calling yourself a “born again Christian” might elicit disapproving looks and  maybe even some snide comments. But  there is an area where being “reborn” is a good thing. I’m not talking about  Eastern religions—I’m talking about dolls. The  dolls in question are “incredibly life-like baby dolls” known as “reborns” that  can cost as much as $4,000. As you have probably guessed, at these prices, the  buyers aren’t young girls, but adult women.
 For that much money you are not getting a simple piece of plastic. “Their  bodies are stuffed and weighted to have the same heft and a similar feel to a  live baby.” Mohair strands are individually attached to their heads, and they  can even come with a “heartbeat and a device that makes the chest rise and fall  to simulate breathing.”
 Given  the attention to detail, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that many owners do  not treat “reborns” like other collectibles such as the Precious Moments  figurines or dashboard hula dancers. A  recent BBC America documentary called My  Fake Baby showed grown women doing more than playing with the  dolls—they were, well, mothering them. They walked them in strollers, they  secured them in car seats, and they even had “birthday” parties for them. Sound  familiar? It should. In her novel The  Children of Men, P.D. James depicted a world in which no children  had been born in two decades. The inability to have children had driven many  women to treat dolls in exactly the same fashion as these women are treating  “reborns.” Of  course, there are differences. While childlessness had driven the women in  James’s novel mad, the “reborn” mommies can—and some do—have real children. The  words most commonly used to describe this phenomenon are “creepy” and  “delusional.” One liberal blogger wondered whether she was “supposed to play  along with your weird delusion?” After all, “you can drop her down a flight of  stairs . . . and no one will call children’s services on you.” Writer  Rod Dreher is even less sympathetic. He calls these women “drag mommies” and  says that something is “very wrong with them.” Well,  I have no idea what is going on in the hearts and minds of women who purchase  reborns. But I will say this: There is indeed something “very wrong” with the  culture that produces these dolls. Four years ago, I told you about dolls  marketed to lonely Japanese elderly. The Yumel are “healing partners” designed to fill a void created by children that rarely  visit and grandchildren they will never have, thanks to Japan’s disappearing  birth rate. Likewise,  “reborns” are filling a void created by changes in the family structure. The  so-called “freedom” we gained by postponing and even forgoing marriage and  child-rearing has come at a price—loneliness and the sense that our lives are  incomplete.This isn’t something that can be overcome by conditioning. We are “wired  for connection” as one study put it. If the God-ordained means for this  connection is tampered with or blocked, that is, by having no children or fewer  children as Americans are doing, we will find ways to act on our “wiring,” no  matter how creepy they seem to others. 
 From BreakPoint, Copyright  2009 Prison Fellowship 
                Ministries. "BreakPoint 
                  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of 
                    Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison 
                    Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500." 
                    Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. For more information 
                    on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit their 
                    web site at http://www.breakpoint.org.  This commentary was delivered by PFM President Mark   Earley.
 
 
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