| 40. |
Not where I work but we're not aholes. |
| Thought about going for a third at 39, but DH and I had so many issues, I was an inch away from divorcing him, so not a good time. Now at 46 things are much better between us, but I wouldn’t be comfortable trying at this age. Plus, I don’t think I could be the mother I want to be with more than 2. |
| This is so personal. For me I wanted to have all my kids 35 or younger since I got married on the earlier side and got started in my 20s. 3rd baby arrived a few months before I turned 35. If I got married later and I was healthy I’d have these 3 into my 40s. |
I’m not the PP you responded to but my guess is that that PP’s thinking is that the likelihood of pregnancy complications and birth defects goes up with maternal age and paternal age (and since paternal age is correlated with maternal age, the latter is also a proxy for the former) and if you already have a child or children the cost/benefit analysis changes. |
| FWIW, we started late. First at 37. 40 when DS, our third was born. Lots of work along the way and he’s in MS now, but can’t imagine life without him. Everyone will have a different story but we’re glad we kept going. We’re in the city and it feels like more of the parents here are around our age vs the outer suburbs. Good luck. |
This. You have to assess whether the risk of having a child with special needs (taking away a lot of resources and attention from your existing children) is fair to them. |
Yep, that's why we have an only. Would have loved two but not worth the risk of blowing up our family to try in my forties. |
Everybody knows what they can handle. Both of us have disabilities so we do not experience disability, generally, as an existential threat to our family. But I was comfortable with taking the risk that I would need an abortion—a very small risk in absolute terms, though higher than it would have been if I’d been pregnant 20 years earlier. |
That’s ridiculous. Doing away with a medical term because feelings are hurt? The eggs are older and more likely to have genetic defects especially after 40. Women with advanced maternal age should be given the information on what tests are recommended for their age group and let them decide. |
| I had my first just shy of 35 after trying for awhile. Despite resolving the problem, a different problem (undiagnosed) occurred when trying for our second. I was 37 when o got pregnant with her after over a year of trying and - although we made an IVF appointment to learn about options - I’m not sure we would have gone that route. (I ended up pregnant before the appointment occurred.) We were starting to come to terms with the idea of one and done. If we didn’t have any maybe we would have tried longer - or taken a break at tried again - but over a year of monitoring and timing sex etc was getting exhausting in addition to us just being older. |
Both of my grandmothers had their first kids in their early twenties and their last children by their mid 20s. This was in the 1950s before widespread use of birth control. They figured out family planning. |
Exactly this. I had my third at 34, but I consider myself lucky in this department. If I had struggled more to get pregnant, I would have gone on through early 40s to have the family of 3 children I wanted to raise. |
| Under 40 |
Not because I can’t have a kid, but because my chromosomes are probably not too great at that point and I don’t want to pass down damaged DNA. Not fair to my kid. |