I feel like most women would say it was absolutely worth it and most men would say that it wasn’t worth the change to their wife’s looks
although I disagree that it takes the toll you mention. My child free friends look the same as me but I feel younger! Children make you feel and act young! |
| pregnancy definitely took a hit on my looks, but the bigger problem was that pregnancy activated an auto immune disease and I could barely walk. And one of my kids is special needs. I still would do it again because I wanted my children. But yes, definitely bad things can happen and you have to really want it |
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Yes 100% worth it. I got lucky because I am petite and lost all the baby weight within 12 weeks with my first 2. I’m now a couple years out from baby #3 and still a bit softer than before with an extra 2-3 lbs. which means I’m more of a size 2/4 than a size 0/2 like before.
Wrinkles are worse, but that would have happened no matter what and plus there is Botox. I still prioritize getting frequent balayage and cuts to keep my hair fresh and have a very light makeup routine. The biggest change is that I no longer feel motivated to dress up cute. What is the point when I work from home and otherwise spend my free time taking kids to the park or sports practices. I still try to look out together-ish but it’s a lot more athleisure wear, leggings and sweaters, jeans and a basic top, etc. Can’t remember the last time I wore heels or even anything cocktail attire-ish. |
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I have 10 lbs I've never been able to lose after having kids, but it's my fault, not theirs. I was pregnant in the summer and somehow thought ice cream had no calories when you're pregnant.
The biggest stressor on my looks was the loss of beloved family members, not my kids. |
| LOL yes. See, I was going to get old and die eventually anyway. |
+1 |
| Absolutely. It would be incredibly shallow to not have children because it would change your looks. I can’t believe women care about this that much. I truly don’t GAF. It’s freeing to spend your time loving your kids and living life. |
| I can honestly say I never really considered how motherhood would impact my looks/body (with my first one). It takes time, but I do bounce back and look pretty good after kids. In six month postpartum with my third and feeling attractive again. I know it impacts different women differently. |
Yes having children ages you. Each mothers telomeres age up to 4 years older for each kid than peers without children. Sone research says it is up to 13 yrs per child. Google it. |
Yea, agree with this. It’s totally insane to ask this question. (1) these decisions really should be happening separately - and I say this as a vain person who got Botox and filler regularly before getting pregnant. Still colors hair while pregnant and wears make everyday. But like…my god, even I can see that one question is MUCH BIGGER and more life changing than the other. BTW, i plan to return to the botox, filler etc after done w/ breastfeeding (I can afford it). I do plan to continue to care what i look like, but it’s just not that complicated. I can have both and if my looks suffer a little, so be it. But as importantly see #2. (2) you’re going to age and get ugly. Sorry but it’s just true. That’s gonna happen regardless of whether you have kids. You really need to start coming to terms w that and just enjoy the different stages of life. I am having my first kid at 38. I was pretty hot for many decades. I’m 100% ready to accept whatever i look like after this. Even after spending thousands on my looks, there is more to life than just that! Particularly as I get older. |
Alone! Much more peaceful. |
Haha well then no kids is the right choice for you! And that’s totally fine ! |
Can’t imagine it. I love our big family holidays with all the cousins, aunts and uncles. Family is everything to me. |
| It's absolutely worth it, and people are absolutely kidding themselves when they say they've aged the same way as childless women. The sleep factor alone is huge. |
In the little kid years that’s true but it all catches up in your 50s. |