Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I once was part of a convo where friend A told friend B that she was envious of friend B for being a mother to one bc that’s what she wanted but wasn’t confident enough to not fold to the pressure of two.
The mother of one said she loved being a mother of one but felt ppl thought she was selfish for having a nice set up where they traveled a lot and had a small family.
Lesson is: life is complicated and all choices have upsides and downsides!
I'm a mom of one and I get what your friend B is feeling. DH and I have had long conversations and are confident in our choice. It allows us to both keep working--which is important to us--and gives us a ton more financial flexibility. It means our house has ample room (DD has a bedroom and playroom to herself; we have a separate office and a separate guest room). We already feel like our lives are full balancing working FT and having a toddler, and we both recognize that adding another kid into the mix would just add more stress.
But I also know there's this notion out there that you're not *really* parenting unless you're running around constantly with your hair on fire all the time. I try to just ignore that, but there's a small feeling of guilt that, when DD goes to bed or is napping, I can just relax. We can afford a cleaning person, so we don't have to spend our weekends cleaning the house. When she gets older and is involved in activities, we can both go see her, rather than having to split up and take one kid one place and the other kid somewhere else.
Anyway, there's another woman on my block--who has a kid almost exactly DD's age--who is also one and done by choice. She's a few years older than me, but I believe could have another child if she wanted to. In any case, there's two families for you, OP!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What people’s real reasons are for having only one child and what they say in polite company are two different things. Two women in my family have only one child. Both had traumatic births and neither wanted to repeat the experience. One had to get a hysterectomy in her 30s to attempt to fix the damage. I think traumatic births and and birth injuries are a lot more common than people realize.
I read one study that found that about a third of women who had given birth by forceps or emergency C section said they did not want to have more children because they did not think they could go through that experience again.
What stuns me and continues to stun me, is that anyone ever feels entitled to say “you need to give Larla a sibling!” Or “when are you having another?” It’s so insensitive.
Insensitive is an understatement, people who ask about this are offensive.
Anonymous wrote:What people’s real reasons are for having only one child and what they say in polite company are two different things. Two women in my family have only one child. Both had traumatic births and neither wanted to repeat the experience. One had to get a hysterectomy in her 30s to attempt to fix the damage. I think traumatic births and and birth injuries are a lot more common than people realize.
I read one study that found that about a third of women who had given birth by forceps or emergency C section said they did not want to have more children because they did not think they could go through that experience again.
What stuns me and continues to stun me, is that anyone ever feels entitled to say “you need to give Larla a sibling!” Or “when are you having another?” It’s so insensitive.
Anonymous wrote:This is PP above who is struggling with this decision now -
For those of you who reached your decision to just have one with such confidence, how did you go about getting to that point?
Anonymous wrote:This is PP above who is struggling with this decision now -
For those of you who reached your decision to just have one with such confidence, how did you go about getting to that point?
Anonymous wrote:I know one family with an intentional only. They seem very happy... Multiple vacations a year, lots of social events, involved in their own hobbies. If you have more than one I think it becomes mostly about the kids.