Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Elizabeth Bruenig writes for clicks.
As opposed to all of those other journalists out there who, what, are independently wealthy and don't have to worry about job security?
Anonymous wrote:Today I saw a 50 year old pregnant and not going to lie I did judge a bit.
One awesome thing about being old now is that I just don't care what anyone thinks much anymore!!! I would not change a thing of how my life happened. I'm not going to be 50 and pregnant, but more power to those who are
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's unquestionably a thing in the highly educated, UMC, elite professional circles that people like Liz Bruenig run in
This.
And if you were in a different socio-economic bracket in a different part of the country, having your kids in your mid to late 30s would be a thing.
It's not personal. You're just going against the herd a bit in terms of timing and people will endlessly comment on people who are outside the norm because it makes insecure people feel forced to question their own decision making. If everyone does the same thing, it feels safer.
OP here. I get this but it's weird that people still feel the need to comment on it to me at 39 because I have a thirteen year old and they maybe have a toddler or baby. I sometimes feel like saying, look I'm sorry you're stuck in the parenting trenches right now but you'll come out on the other side too, lol. It doesn't stay that hard forever.
That's kind of rude.
Unless the people who have the toddler or baby are rude to you, like saying "oh, well, you must not have gone to college" or something similar, there's no reason to be flippant to them. Being surprised that you have a 13-year old when you're 39 isn't rude in and of itself.
Anonymous wrote:I am so glad I had my kids at 24 and 26. I was an empty nester at 43 ( younger one started college a year early). My friend had a 2 year old at 43. We can travel and do whatever we want. Why would I want to be in my 40s with babies? None of that 20s partying would have been worth it. Why put off kids?
It was so easy. I was energetic. I don't understand mom's who need their mom to come help for months after giving birth. I left the hospital after 24 hrs ( first child) and 8 hrs (second child )after giving birth. Getting up at night was no big deal. I trained them to sleep through the night by 6 weeks. My older one slept 7pm-7am. It was easy.
Anonymous wrote:Young moms seem to adapt to parenting better. Maybe because they're so young they don't realize what they're giving up yet and so it doesn't feel like as much of a sacrifice?
But the ones I meet almost always seem to cheerful and well adjusted. They seem very go with the flow. They're not the harried, stressed out moms I know in their thirties or forties.
I wonder what it is. Less need for sleep?
Anonymous wrote:Today I saw a 50 year old pregnant and not going to lie I did judge a bit.
Anonymous wrote:IME it's regional. Here it's unusual to have kids in your 20s because so many people have advanced degrees and either marry older or both want to be established in their careers before having kids. Plus housing is $$$ and saving up for a down payment/paying off SLs can push the timeline back a few years even if you found your spouse on the younger side. Where I grew up there's a real "get a man to propose to you in college because otherwise all you'll be left with after 25 is the weirdos" attitude and if you don't have your first until your 30s it's seen as very strange/sad. People will assume you're a lesbian if single or experiencing infidelity otherwise. I had someone from my high school tell me that I should just try to get knocked up by a one night stand so that I would "at least have a baby" once - no I was not asking this person for any advice on my life, nor would I have taken any from her. But the mindset of "how sad you have no one to love you" even when I was living in NYC and attending law school in my 20s was not surprising to me. It's a whole vibe back home.
Yet people still have kids outside the accepted regional timeline in both places.
Anonymous wrote:I think Elizabeth Bruenig writes for clicks.