Go for it! It is fantastic. |
Me too, also adopted my kid at 44, SMC. |
We’re everywhere! |
| For some reason I would not be happy if a man did this |
| If I had a kid as a single woman I would prefer my kid have a dad than no dad. I also think you are imagining a “future dad” for the kid but that will never happen. You *might* find a good step dad but that is not the same thing. And anyway the path to do is f someone is long and tough and risky |
No It isn't. Why are you bothering to have a child that you are outsourcing pregnancy and birth to a surrogate and then all care to a full time and nanny. All you want is an accessory child. Get a stuffed animal! 99% of DCUM will tell you it's fine but as a child who had a parent like you. It is not ok. Do not do this! |
True, we need to hear from the children of such arrangements. Not a happy childhood. |
| I’d be with you if you were willing to reduce your work hours. Because you want to keep up a heavy schedule, it’s a hard no. Nannie’s aren’t family. They can give notice. You can’t leave your child without a primary attachment figure, which is what you’d be doing. Hard pass. |
A busy career is one thing, constant long hours and global travel is another. My father is a retired law partner. He had to work very long hours and travel a ton while I was growing up. He was very present with us when he was home, but if he’d been the default parent, my siblings and I wouldn’t have been nearly as well cared for. I don’t think a live in nanny is enough. Are there very involved grandparents or aunts/uncles? The child needs family around if a parent isn’t going to be able to prioritize spending time at home. |
| It is the best. Do it! |
You can outsource childcare but you cannot outsource child raising. |
|
No - not fair to the child. Why do you want a child at all if you want to outsource raising it?
Totally selfish. |
Why do you want a baby if you’re too busy to do any of the parenting work, you know, beyond paying strangers to do it? Is it fair to create a child who you know will have no stability of a primary caregiver? No. Nannies come and go. Children deserve better than a string of severed relationships when they require continuity of care during the early foundational years of life. Please reconsider. |