Anonymous wrote:Just move near a workplace
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aldo I would try to simplify your life so someone could be home most of the day. Work from home maybe or get a job close by. Less hours too.
I would love for this to be me (the wife in the relationship), but I am more than halfway through vesting in some substantial retirement benefits that will benefit our family in the long term. I would be leaving significant money (probably more than a million dollars, plus health care costs) towards retirement security on the table if I made a change.
DH likes going to the office.
Anonymous wrote:Aldo I would try to simplify your life so someone could be home most of the day. Work from home maybe or get a job close by. Less hours too.
Anonymous wrote:Our child was not as high needs as yours but it still was clear we were having trouble holding it together as a family with one and we worried about how we would do with a second.
We ended up trying but not hard (did not pursue any ART which we kind of knew would be necessary). No real regrets (aside from idly wondering what it would be like to have a kid of the other gender) but for me having a kid was the important thing— never felt as strongly about having a second.
Anyway just want to say it’s a perfectly legit reason to stop at one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My first has T1D and was diagnosed with it before we had a second. T1D was waking up every night sometimes multiple times a night to give insulin. Lots of medical appointments, a clinical trial, meetings with school. New technology came out right before I gave birth to #2 that meant for the first time in 2 years I could sleep through the night.
As far as more kids, late 30s fertility for me was awful. Multiple losses and IVF. Tons of medical appointments and emotional pain. So there's that too.
I am so glad that new technology meant good things for your family.
My DS is in medication, but it only helps for about 8 hours a day, max. The rest of the time is a lot of sitting with him to make sure he gets dressed, eats, brushes his teeth, etc. We must be tethered to him for him to get these things done.
Anonymous wrote:My first has T1D and was diagnosed with it before we had a second. T1D was waking up every night sometimes multiple times a night to give insulin. Lots of medical appointments, a clinical trial, meetings with school. New technology came out right before I gave birth to #2 that meant for the first time in 2 years I could sleep through the night.
As far as more kids, late 30s fertility for me was awful. Multiple losses and IVF. Tons of medical appointments and emotional pain. So there's that too.