Tired of being asked about when she was going to have a baby and seeing the same insensitivity online, 33-year-old Emily Bingham vented on Facebook. That post has gone viral.

The Michigan native said in the hot post, "just a friendly P.S.A. that people's reproductive and procreative plans and decisions are none of your business. I'm sorry, I don't think I said that loud enough, NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS!!

The message seems to be resonating, as over 35-thousand Facebook users have shared the post.

Bingham’s well crafted thoughts have caught the attention of local and international media and ABC’s 'Good Morning America' who sent a crew to talk with her last night.

Bingham's Facebook post read, in part:

Hey everyone!!! Now that I got your attention with this RANDOM ULTRASOUND PHOTO I grabbed from a Google image search, this is just a friendly P.S.A. that people's reproductive and procreative plans and decisions are none of your business. NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS. Before you ask the young married couple that has been together for seemingly forever when they are finally gonna start a family ... before you ask the parents of an only-child toddler when a Little Brother or Little Sister will be in the works ... before you ask a single 30-something if/when s/he plans on having children because, you know, clock's ticking ... just stop. Please stop. You don't know who is struggling with infertility or grieving a miscarriage or dealing with health issues. You don't know who is having relationship problems or is under a lot of stress or the timing just isn't right. You don't know who is on the fence about having kids or having more kids. You don't know who has decided it's not for them right now, or not for them ever. You don't know how your seemingly innocent question might cause someone grief, pain, stress or frustration. Sure, for some people those questions may not cause any fraught feelings -- but I can tell you, from my own experiences and hearing about many friends' experiences -- it more than likely does.

The freelance journalist and social media consultant explains why she finally spoke up about the subject that had grated on her for years. "It's a sensitive topic," she said. "People aren't intending to be hurtful, but the questions can be insensitive and cause people grief."

 

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