Well, aren't you selfish. |
A million percent yes you can be fulfilled without kids. And if you don't really want them, you'll be much happier with out them. Being a parent is amazing but by far the most difficult and stressful job in the world.
You've got to really want it or you'll be resentful, which is no way to raise a kid. If you do kind of want one, you may regret not doing it. If you aren't 100% sure, just give yourself some time. Late in life is OK too. |
OP here. We are not dog people. We have two cats and have no desire to get a dog. |
Your statement about the intense part being short is true only if you have children without special needs ![]() |
How is that selfish? |
It’s not selfish. They are speaking like a true breeder. Selfish is bringing children into the world just because society told you to do so. |
I am a mom of three with many fulfilled, self-realized child free kids. What a silly question. Parenthood isn’t for everyone, and I think the social pressure to have children is ridiculous. |
https://wearechildfree.com/
I follow this group on IG. Might be worth digging into their interviews and resources and seeing if any of it speaks to you, OP. Fwiw, I used to be very on the fence too, and one day it totally switched on for me. I was only 33. Then years of infertility. Ended up with one DD who has been a challenge but who I love dearly and have zero regrets about. |
We decided to remain childless and not adopt after infertility. We aren't child free so much as childless.
Everything is so expensive that we had a choice of mortgaging the rest of our life for the chance of possibly adopting a child, foster care for the possibility of adopting a child, or just staying childless. So, we are living a fulfilled life without kids because we just didn't financially have another choice. More people with infertility will probably be making the same choice in the future. Not everyone ends up with a "rainbow baby," even if they have treatment, but no one wants to hear about that. It's just easier to call people "selfish." |
Just like a great marriage or awesome career, no one knows what they're missing out on if they've never had in in their life so I think the answer to OP's question is just a plain yes. Child free people simply find other things in life that they find fulfilling. |
My DH and I don't have kids-we're in our late 40's. I agonized for years and years about whether or not to have kids-my DH didn't have an opinion so the decision fell to me. Financially and for mental health reasons (I have lifelong depression and anxiety) I decided not to. If we had had a child I would have wanted to be a SAHM for a few years but we would not have been able to afford it. I couldn't see myself managing a career and parenting a baby or small child effectively. I would have been stressed and miserable. Plus I was very, very concerned about going off my antidepressant while pregnant or staying on it and having it negatively impact my child in some way (I know it's rare but it happens). We looked into adopting an older child from foster care but ultimately neither of us wanted to do it badly enough to pursue it.
Not having children was the right decision for us and I don't regret it but if the circumstances were different I would have. Sometimes I feel sad that I don't have a child but to be honest it's less about having the child/being a parent and more about feeling like I have missed out on a big aspect of life. But I don't regret the decision not to have a child/children. I do regret the fact that it took years and years to come to that conclusion-I wasted a lot of time obsessing, agonizing and trying to talk myself into having a child when I knew given the circumstances it wouldn't have been the right decision. |
Nope. Not in the slightest. |
You sound like you're talking about an item of furniture. |
Selfish is having a child when you don't even want one. OP has explicitly said more than once that they have no desire to have children. They're worried about regret or maybe boredom or loneliness in the future. She is literally contemplating bringing a life into the world to save herself potential discomfort later. Doing that would be extremely selfish. |
I wanted to have a child so badly that I didn't even wait for a partner. I was prepared to be a single mother. I spent about eight years trying. I didn't run out of money, but I just couldn't do it anymore. Does it hurt? Yes. But I can and will have a good life anyway. |