Agree. Your son has a looooong time to have kids. Your 34 year old WANTS kids. Can you afford to help her financially to freeze eggs? Lastly, either of your younger two could change their minds, more likely the unmarried one. |
I was about to suggest this. It's not cheap to do and if the OP or pp (whichever it was that replied since there's some confusion) wants grandchildren, I think it makes a lot of sense for them to pay for it. The fact that they aren't already doing so probably means they can't afford to cover it either which is really unfortunate. It's been said a million times, if we all waited to till we were ready to have kids, none of us would have any. |
Same here - my kids love my aunt and uncle - they live closer to us than my parents so we see them a lot. |
| Be glad of it. Your children are insuring that you have no chance of outliving a grandchild. You will hear many people say that there's nothing worse than a parent outliving their child, but those people are wrong. There is someone worse; a grandparent outliving their grandchild. But if you never have grandchildren, you won't have to worry about that at all. Heck, I don't even have children of my own, nor do I plan to, and that's just because I don't want to open up the possibility of outliving one. |
Agree, I think it's too early to tell OP. 35yo could easily have kids 34yo still might (and even if she can't freeze her eggs and her biological clock runs out, she could adopt) 33 and 31 could change their minds, especially 31 |
| How old are you, OP? |
OP here - I said this - "ages 33 (she's married) and 31 - have said no kids" |
OP here - I hope so. |
They don't want the hassle of it. They are comfortable and they know, with kids, comes getting up at night, worrying, changing diapers, having plans waylayed. They don't want that life for themselves. |
If you can afford to pay for freezing eggs, do it. My friend did this for her 22-year old daughter. That may sound crazy, but we were raised LDS and she raised her daughter LDS, and one big complaint among our generation of women raised LDS is that many rushed to get married and have babies out of fear, so she gave her daughters the gift of time so she could enjoy her twenties and thirties and date and find the right person without the pressure of ticking biological clock. I am inspired to do the same for my daughters! |
56. We don't live in DC, we live in the midwest. we could help our daughter freeze her eggs, I suppose. She didn't want any help for her house and likely wouldn't take help for this either. |
this is an interesting perspective. |
I thought it was the whole "purity culture" thing. 20 year olds want to have sex. When they've been shamed to think they are ruined if they do that outside of marriage, well, they get married. |
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Life may surprise you yet. My SIL and my husband’s best friend both married into being bonus parents of tweens and teens when they were in their mid-40s. They took the role gladly and my husband’s parents have embraced and included their step-grandchildren so smoothly and gracefully it’s hard to remember a time when they weren’t part of the family.
My husband’s parents went from having no grandchildren when their kids were 37, 33, and 29 - me going through IVF and 2 daughters who had no interest in being married. 7 years later they have 6 grandkids age 1-17, 2 married kids and an engaged 36yr old. |
New poster here, 34, childfree. So many reasons. The general state of the world, climate change, finances. I am happily married but we cannot afford to buy a house. Daycare is absurdly expensive and we wouldn’t afford that either. I feel like having a child would be simultaneous with giving up retirement and working until I couldn’t walk anymore. I don’t want all the grunt work that comes with being a parent. I am glad my parents already have grandchildren through my sibling, but sibling is very difficult and that relationship is tenuous. I feel bad that they don’t have a close relationship with their grandkids. I have some worsening health problems that would make pregnancy a difficult or simply dangerous state for me. Basically I think people who have kids should 101% want to be parents. You should be all in, or nothing. And I am not. |