It makes me sad. We can only have one. Is my kid going to be the weird one with all these over 3+ families? |
How old are you? I own several Catholic marriage manuals from the era before the Pill and none of the mention that. My parents also married right as the Pill was released and my mom remembers a nursing sister (nun) telling the young wives in the natural family plan course to avoid the pill because the hormones would blunt their desire for their husbands. Until recently, people thought that was hooey from the Church, but now that non-religious women are complaining, people are listening. |
Well I grew up an only child and we have 6 because I wanted to. And we are putting them through college, and we go to church, and we don’t live on a farm, and they’re all really bright and have jobs and all that, and I sometimes used birth control, and none of them “raised themselves” or each other, and we never had nannies, and we are comfortably middle class but not wealthy, and I have a college degree and have been in and out of the workforce and am not stupid or ignorant or any of the other nasty insulting things that some of you keep posting. Any other questions or do you just want to keep insulting me? |
I know several 4-kid families who essentially had two sets of kids. Two close together, then a very long space of 10+ years and then two more. I don't think they're low on time, since they basically had two families with 2 kids. |
OMG! ![]() |
NP her statement is gross but the breeding by mormons and hasidics is to be celebrated? |
Just stop. You don’t get to decide who has kids and who doesn’t. That’s not how it works here. |
I’m the poster above whose DH grew up in a family of 7.. Why would women go for it these days? I am guessing because some women LOVE being PG, having babies and little ones around. I know several women like this- who just love love love kids. Most do not have a large family due to finances but if $ we’re not an object they’d have more kids. Definitely does not apply to me- at all- but surely you’ve met women like this? None of DH’s siblings have more than 3 kids- which speaks for itself in a way. But I think people on here have the “negatives” of a large family wrong- at least from what my DH says. Things he hated: 1- Lack of attention from his parents- he is one of the youngest and became an uncle at age 8! Then it was on to the grandkids.. 2- Insular and always “family over individual” type parenting approach- DH is resentful about not being able to do a lot of things as a kid due to lack of time/resources (organized sports and such)- with that large of a family they couldn’t devote time to carting kids all over the place. 3- big age gap between siblings- was always weird for him and even in his 40s he is not close with his siblings who are a decade+ older. Also weird to have nephews nearly as old as he is 4- lots of drama, with so many people in the family. Lots of strange groups, pairings, and alliances among the siblings. Unequal treatment. 5- less interest in his life and our kids- his parents and older siblings have BTDT and are worn out. His siblings are grandparents now- in many cases- and don’t have much interest in playing aunt and uncle to our young kids Things that were not an issue 1- $. It was tight and they did not pay in full for college and such but he is not resentful. These things are not unusual regardless of family size 2- being “raised by his siblings”- this just wasn’t the case at all. His older sisters would babysit occasionally but nothing unusual. They agree with this btw. |
Anyone? Is it really offensive to ask if your religion plays a role in your family planning? Obviously it does for Catholics...not sure why PP overreacted to the question. |
+1 So offensive. |
I believe she answered your question. She said “we are capable of controlling ourselves” but you just keep pushing. That indicates her children were not born because she didn’t/couldn’t/wouldn’t use birth control. |
You could apply that statement to first and second children, too. Unless you have none and have adopted foster children, you can stop. |
Honest question- parents of big families do you worry about treating your kids and grandkids equally in their adulthoods. I notice that this may be difficult to navigate watching my inlaws deal with this. |
Are they Quiverfull families? |
This has not been much concern for me. I am one of two. I have a big family and my brother is gay and no kids. We’re treated differently just based on this. Maybe this issue is somewhat magnified but even with two we say “you’re the favorite”. |