+1 I had my first at 21 and finished college and graduate school while I had babies/ toddlers. Being a young parent is great. Both kids in independent schools in HS. Other parents are generationally like my parents. I understand the trend toward later marriage, but there are many benefits of being young parents. Pregnancies were easy. We have lots of energy and are less set in our ways. My DH and I are growing up together and hope we get to be young grandparents. Those who insist young parents can't be successful or send their kids to top privates do live in a bubble. |
You did it your way, and others are entitled to their way. Some people just don't want children while they're in college. |
I had my first at 22 right after I graduated from college. My DH and I were both in graduate school when our children were younger. He did his coursework in the evenings. I SAH so it was fairly easy for me to do mine during the day. Our children are grown. We only have one left at home and he already has one foot out the door. Our oldest will very soon make us grandparents. My DH and I are both 47. We are loving the freedom! We are looking forward to many, many years of play and travel. And most of all - lots of grandchildren. I can see that there would be benefits to waiting until you are older to have children. But there are certainly many benefits to having them young as well. |
How do you know you get to be young grandparents? Your children may not want to have babies when they're 21 years old. Your way may not be their way. Or they might not want children. |
Good to hear! That's me (early 40's) and my DH (early 50's). |
Not to worry. You and DH are far, far from alone. |
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We're older parents and we've been in private schools the last few years and have noticed that we are surrounded by older parents as well.
Our theory has been that most people who can send their kids to private school are older parents because they have made their $ already. Even people who are on the way to becoming very successful aren't usually there by their mid-20s. I know that I wouldn't have been able to send our child to private school had we had her in our 20s. Of course, there are exceptions to every trend. But older parents do seem to be the rule. |
I never said where I lived, but I guess you just wanted to argue. |
I assume the same and I'm on the younger end. I was worried about this initially as I was the youngest mom in our class and I wondered if my DC would be treated differently (not invited to bday parties or play dates), but my worries were totally unfounded. At the new parents reception, everyone was warm and welcoming so we made the right choice. |
| I'm on the younger end- had a child while I was in college but didn't take any time off, and continued on to professional school. Thanks to professional school and only having one child, I am able to do private education. I'm in my early 30's. No one has ever asked me my age. |
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i had my first at 28, that is considered young around here! not where i grew up though. i had our second at age 31, and i find i'm still younger than many parents at her school. i am by far the youngest in the room at our first child's school. by far. does it bother me? why should it? i'll still be young enough to have fun and do things when my kids go off to college and some others will be in their late 60's...that said some are more secure in their careers... to each their own. i have also found that some "older" moms, for lack of a better term, make the best "mom friends" more level headed and grounded, more life experience and less competitive than some people in their 30's...
just be friendly, that's my motto. |
| How can you tell that I'm 40++?! I look good. |
That's fine, but can you share with the class any or all of the independent schools that you can think of that are NOT in upper NW but instead are in your hipster enclaves of DC? No. Because there aren't any, save for some struggling parish parochial schools and random AME God of Light types of religious schools, and Gonazga. So this raises the question of why, since you have no goal of attending these schools in upper NW, you are lecturing people on a thread concerning schools in upper NW? |
I think the point of the younger moms proving their points is because of the rude comments in the first few pages. To say things like it could never happen, not around here, couldn't afford private, must be from Virginia is offending. The only rude commenter a young mom made was about not living to see their grand kids. But I think if you are having kids around 40 and your kids will too. Well, math doesn't lie. That is a very sad reality of having kids at an older age. I am the youngest of 4 and my mom died when my oldest was 6 and wasn't around for 2 at all. It is heartbreaking. |
People who had babies underfoot when they were 21 years old do not send their children to 'top privates" in DC. The setting for this forum (look up at the blue bar at the top of your screen). I feel confident that there are 26 year olds sending their 5 year olds to a "top private" in some other town, someplace. They are no 26 year old K moms at Beauvoir, Sidwell, GDS or Maret. |