This is exactly how I feel. I also have a very nice life, but nothing is as important as much children. |
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Less than a generation ago adults could still be adults
Reject the parenting arms race and take your life back |
I agree that nothing in my life is as important as my kids, but I also think having a full, enriching life outside of them can be done by meaningful work, adult friendships, and a hobby or two about which you’re passionate but don’t require a ton of time (e.g., not Ironman triathlons). That I care deeply about my career focus is likely a big part of feeling that sense of fulfillment - and I’m fortunate that I can do what I think is meaningful work in ~40 hours/week. My kids are absolutely on the front burner right now, and I also have things I love and can do mostly in the time they’re sleeping or in school. Ultimately, I want to cherish this season of life while still not being so immersed in child-rearing that I’m crushed when they don’t attend HYPS, or whatever. I want to be able to be a supportive parent to my adult kids and loving grandparent, when that time hopefully comes, not be so drained from intensive parenting that I do a 180 and focus solely on myself. It’s a marathon, not a sprint, right? |
Tsk, tsk. Comparison is the thief of joy. I am sure that you are able to do the same things for your kids, while also having a full time job. You are handling everything because you are a high energy individual. Alas, I am not like you. I need my support staff. Congratulations. |
Yes!!! So much has been lost with our generation... reading this tells me that some woen have no sense of identity outside being a mom.... then they go on to define that as care giver, maid, tutor, driver, blah, blah, blah.... Basically slave labor and women are supposed to be happy with that? Crazy! I'm more of an advisor, leader, role model, guide, and sometimes traffic controller. The labor is divided or outsourced in my house, so I definitely don't define myself this way or have my kids (or husband) as my every thing. |
That’s just nonsense. You don’t need to be jetting off to Tahiti kid free to have a full and enriching life. For example a woman who plays an instrument for pleasure, volunteers every other Sunday at a food kitchen and goes to a monthly book club with her girlfriends to chat about books and drink some wine could easily see her life as full and enriching, and that in no way takes away from her as a mom. It may require a supportive spouse but it doesn’t require wealth. |
Not PP but I started up paddle tennis. Pickle ball is also super popular. Highly recommend - athletics is apparently really good for warding off dementia too and it doesn’t need to be super physically intensive. It’s just mentally stimulating to, for example, track a ball with your eyes and coordinate with a teammate in your response to an opponent etc. |
Do you know how many single parents are out there? I'd love to be able to do things outside of my kids but I don't have the money. I work 2-3 jobs just to be able to afford to live. |
On that boundaries thread so many women called the OP a terrible mother for taking a few hours off from her kid on a Saturday to exercise. |
I agree with all of this. I am also glad I have a meaningful (to me) 40/hr a week job. Do I wish I had more leisure time? Sure. But if I turned into that SAHM upthread whose entire existence turned into snowplowing for her kids, I would shoot myself. |
| Almost all of it. 15 and 11. I work FT and commute most days. My time is mostly consumed by my kids, relaxing and hanging with DH. Happy. |
I agree with you and I think this was one of the PP’s mistakes. If she’d said “I think it’s valuable to have a life outside your kids, whether that’s a hobby, friendships, alone time or all of the above,” I don’t think there would have been push back. But phrasing it as “you must have a full life outside your kids” and then focusing on stuff like kid-free travel, lots of date nights, etc., just made it sound like an out of touch rich person. Any parent can carve out space for themselves, even if it’s just treating yourself to a good book after the kids go to bed or taking an online class or trading playdates with another parent so you can exercise or see a movie. But the vast majority of parents can’t do kid-free travel or hire a sitter multiple nights a week. Some can’t even get their spouse to take the kids for the night (long hours or they are a single parent or their spouse is just a selfish jerk). But anyone can read a book or adopt a hobby. |
Yeah, original PP here, I already posted that I regret my phrasing. I meant more along the lines of what the bolded, more eloquent PP said. |
Pickleball |
Controversial PP here. I couldn't have said it better lol. You've got a way with concise words |