Also Read | Revenge of the lambs at the GabbatoirAnd yet, about a year into the pandemic, many would-be parents say they’ve grown tired of waiting.
Some paused fertility treatments in the spring only to realize Covid wasn’t going to disappear in a matter of months. For others, Covid was the push: the sign they needed to slow down and focus on life at home.
Or the pandemic brought the silver lining of flexibility—remote work, canceled business travel—that made having a baby possible.“Everything was kind of home-centered, with work and school," says Landon Faulkner, whose wife, Kyra Faulkner, is due in February. “In some ways, it seemed even easier."Mr.