The Wonder Clock App Tells Women When Their Biological Clocks Will Run Out

Biological Clock Ticking? There's An App For That
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Is your biological clock about to run out? Not sure? A new app promises to tell you. It’s called “The Wonder Clock” and it uses your date of birth to calculate -- down to the minute -- when you’re going to become infertile, the Daily Mail reported.

The Wonder Clock is the brainchild of Oregon-native Mira Kaddoura, an advertising creative director who says that she created the app to confront her own fertility insecurities. She explained her motivations on The Wonder Clock’s website:

I created this clock to face my own fears. To beckon the elephant in the room so to speak. To release my own power, my own choices. To open a dialogue with other women about fertility, empowerment, and loving ourselves. We are women, and we are ticking. But we are so much more.

Although the app provides a ticking clock, Kaddoura has made clear that The Wonder Clock is more of a tool for dialogue than a medical diagnosis. “It is an interactive, conceptual piece that seeks to start a necessary and empowering conversation about childbearing,” reads the app’s description on iTunes. Kaddoura told the Daily Mail that she first came up with the idea when her doctor told her that if she wanted to have kids, she needed to start thinking about it. “That caught me off-guard ‘cause I was barely out of my 20s … I never felt that time was an issue ‘til then,” she said.

Kaddoura created her app at a moment when more U.S. women are delaying marriage and childbearing than ever before, Bloomberg Businessweek reported in March. Their reasons for postponing kids vary, but as a result, many of those women are older when they try to get pregnant and have trouble conceiving (although many women in their 20s also have difficulty). Women intent on bearing children later in life frequently undergo expensive and often invasive fertility treatments to make it happen, including egg freezing, IVF and ovary freezing.

Infertility can be a stressful subject for women, both those currently trying to have a child and those who have yet to try. It’s also a topic some women feel doesn't get discussed sensitively or productively. In a Huffington Post blog post titled, “16 Things You Should Never Say To A Woman Who Is Childless But Not By Choice,” Tracey Cleantis writes: “Really, people need to learn what is okay and not okay to [say to] women who have extremely high levels of stress and estrogen.”

What do you think? By realizing female fertility as an actual ticking clock, can Kaddouras' app encourage a productive dialogue about female fertility? Or will it just increase women's stress about whether they will be able to conceive?

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Before You Go

Awesome iPhone Apps For Women
Awesome Note(01 of21)
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"It's the best to-do list app I've used so far" says Jessica Rudis, Editor, Evanston, Patch.com. "You can set alarms in advance to remind you of certain things you need to do, and you can synch it with Google. You can also break your list up into sub-lists, such as things you need to do today, your shopping list, etc."Price:$3.99
ClockIn(02 of21)
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If you're a freelancer paid by the hour or do work that requires you to track how much time you spend with individual clients, ClockIn can help. Part of this app's charm is its simplicity: It keeps track of your time for you in much the way a timesheet would but allows you to export that time sheet to send to clients and download it for your own records. Price: Free
Dinner Spinner(03 of21)
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As antiquated as it sounds, cooking emergencies do happen. Maybe your in-laws are coming over on short-notice and you need to impress. Maybe your boyfriend forgot to tell you that his best friend is throwing an around-the-world potluck dinner, and you're representing France. Dinner Spinner Pro can make these situations a little easier. If you're standing in front of the fridge, you can search for recipes based on the ingredients you already have on hand; it also comes in handy at the grocery store when you suddenly discover that halibut is on special. The app also lets you save and share recipes and shopping lists, and cooking instructions can be displayed in a mercifully phone-friendly way.Price: http://allrecipes.com/features/more/iphone.aspxFree (Pro Version $2.99)
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Grocery Gadget(05 of21)
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With the Grocery Gadget, handwritten lists are no longer necessary. Separate what you need to buy with categories like groceries, home improvement, recipes, or errands. Other major pluses? You can scan the barcodes of items you need to replace instead of typing them out, match coupons to shopping items and sync your list with a roommate's or significant other's. Presto: no more duplicate half gallons of milk coming home to your fridge. Price: $3.99
iBody(06 of21)
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iBody turns your iPhone into your own personal health and fitness advisor. You can use it to keep a fitness journal for your workouts, jogs and bike rides. It keeps track of your target weight and how many calories you're burning, in addition to your cholesterol and blood pressure. The option to register up to three additional users and passwords means you can partner with a friend and motivate one another. Price: $9.99
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iWedding Deluxe(08 of21)
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Loopt(09 of21)
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Mint(10 of21)
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Intuition: Mom's Personal Assistant(11 of21)
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The Pill(18 of21)
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