You literally said your friend’s mom was “a waste of a life.” If you wanted to make your point about quality vs. quantity, you could have done so without resorting to ugly comments like that. |
You REALLY missed the point. |
She hardly ever saw them, so her stress wasn’t related to the number of children she had. She was a bad parent because she was a bad parent. |
Not really. |
| 2 full time jobs is pretty much the same as 2 demanding jobs. Most people I know with demanding jobs (including myself — big law partner) do the extra work at night and early in morning when kids are sleeping. |
Yes, really. |
You’re confused. |
You’re a slave driver. |
We’re not talking about me idiot, but sure, continue to feel defensive and retort in pathetic cliches when you’re called out for your ugly remarks. Again, it’s clear that your parents have failed in raising a well adjusted human. |
Calling this slavery is deeply offensive. My ancestors were slaves. Expecting my children to do chores is not even close to that. Watch yourself! |
If the kid is being forced to do YOUR job for no pay(specially when the other kids aren’t), what should I call it? Serious question, I’ll gladly use a politically correct word, but it’s not “chore”. I apologize for the bad word, but yours is too light. |
Your name calling is really classy. |
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I think they only people who CHOOSE to have a 3rd child are SAHMs to fill their void.
I don’t think working moms choose to have a child, it’s mostly an accident. Speaking of that, I’m definitely seeing a lot of quarantine babies. I guess many people didn’t just bake bread for fun during lockdown. |
The bolded is pretty funny. So are all their children accidents or only the 3rd one? What's so special about the number 3 that triggers this much rigidity in you? |
According to your logic, children shouldn’t do any chores. If my spouse and I buy a house, they shouldn’t have to do chores because they didn’t buy the house. If we buy a car, they don’t have to clean it because they didn’t buy it. If we buy their clothes, they don’t have to do laundry. Are we forcing these tasks on them too because we aren’t paying them? How do they differ from babysitting? You can call babysitting whatever you like, but there’s nothing wrong with asking older siblings to help with taking care of the younger ones as long as they’re not substituting for the parents. It’s a life skill. It teaches empathy, child rearing, and responsibility. So many new parents struggle to take of children because they have no previous experience. |