Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be time to reframe at age 30. I have noticed that often childfree adults continue to see themselves in the role of "child" in the world and when they talk about their family, they mean their family of origin. It kind of comes off as arrested development. When you don't go through the shift that occurs when you start your own family, you don't experience the changes it brings to your relationship with your parents and siblings. I think this is a huge consequence of people choosing to not get married/have children.
People should live how they want and no one needs to get married or have kids, but it is interesting to observe as demographics keep changing. It seems to me that it perpetuates an infantilized outlook on life, where the aging parents are still the caretakers and sources of emotional strength for their adult children. Once you get married, your partner becomes that emotional strength source (best case scenario) and when you have your own kids, you sort of shift into a place where you parent the kids while you gradually transition into a role of taking care of your parents (I don't mean changing diapers, more like when you go to their house, you act more like a peer or like you are the one in charge (when it comes to your own kids) and then it goes from there).
The way my single 30something colleagues relate to their parents is baffling to me. Maybe it's just me and I am a stodgy GenXer.
I’m not childfree. I have a boyfriend I would like to marry and we want kids.
Anonymous wrote:My sister got married a couple weeks ago and I've been kind of sad ever since. It's just the two of us and our parents, and for 30 years we were just the four of us. I love my new BIL but everything just seems like it's changing so quickly and nothing will ever be the same again.
That's it. There's literally no drama, if anything I have a very happy sister and a wonderful new brother. I just don't like change.
Any advice? I would never ever talk to my sister or parents about this bc I don't want them to feel like it's a problem rather than my own internal fear of change.
Anonymous wrote:It may be time to reframe at age 30. I have noticed that often childfree adults continue to see themselves in the role of "child" in the world and when they talk about their family, they mean their family of origin. It kind of comes off as arrested development. When you don't go through the shift that occurs when you start your own family, you don't experience the changes it brings to your relationship with your parents and siblings. I think this is a huge consequence of people choosing to not get married/have children.
People should live how they want and no one needs to get married or have kids, but it is interesting to observe as demographics keep changing. It seems to me that it perpetuates an infantilized outlook on life, where the aging parents are still the caretakers and sources of emotional strength for their adult children. Once you get married, your partner becomes that emotional strength source (best case scenario) and when you have your own kids, you sort of shift into a place where you parent the kids while you gradually transition into a role of taking care of your parents (I don't mean changing diapers, more like when you go to their house, you act more like a peer or like you are the one in charge (when it comes to your own kids) and then it goes from there).
The way my single 30something colleagues relate to their parents is baffling to me. Maybe it's just me and I am a stodgy GenXer.
Anonymous wrote:This seems weirdly enmeshed.
Anonymous wrote:It is a transition but be happy for her. My sister married someone and cut us all off so she doesn't talk to us anymore; I believe if she didn't marry him we would still be a unit.
Be glad he is a decent person and you all get along.
Anonymous wrote:Totally fair to acknowledge the loss that comes w/ change OP. Even when it's happy change, there's still loss.
And there will be richness that comes with family expansion, especially when it's building on strong loving relationships. That will come.
Anonymous wrote:It may be time to reframe at age 30. I have noticed that often childfree adults continue to see themselves in the role of "child" in the world and when they talk about their family, they mean their family of origin. It kind of comes off as arrested development. When you don't go through the shift that occurs when you start your own family, you don't experience the changes it brings to your relationship with your parents and siblings. I think this is a huge consequence of people choosing to not get married/have children.
People should live how they want and no one needs to get married or have kids, but it is interesting to observe as demographics keep changing. It seems to me that it perpetuates an infantilized outlook on life, where the aging parents are still the caretakers and sources of emotional strength for their adult children. Once you get married, your partner becomes that emotional strength source (best case scenario) and when you have your own kids, you sort of shift into a place where you parent the kids while you gradually transition into a role of taking care of your parents (I don't mean changing diapers, more like when you go to their house, you act more like a peer or like you are the one in charge (when it comes to your own kids) and then it goes from there).
The way my single 30something colleagues relate to their parents is baffling to me. Maybe it's just me and I am a stodgy GenXer.