Anonymous wrote:I should’ve made this clear earlier, everyone is making the assumption that there are two of us parents. It is just me.
Anonymous wrote:I deeply regret not giving my child a sibling. They are introverted and we don’t have much extended family, and they’ve repeatedly said they feel lonely and wish they had a sibling. I also wanted a second child, so the only one who didn’t was my spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am middle eastern and believe in big families! I grew up surrounded by aunts and uncles and siblings and trust me a strong family unit does wonders for your mental health and well being (though there’s always the negative of everyone up in your business). There is always someone there for you no matter what. I think with increasing instability in the world, increasing suicide rates and loneliness etc, building a strong family unit is a good thing. But do it the middle eastern way! Actually spend time together instead of shuttling kids to different activities. Have dinner together every day, play board games, have a family movie nightI have three kids and although each one has their own interests and we try to encourage that, we always prioritize family time and emphasize how they always have to stick together.
I often see a lot of drama and jealousy in these big families.
Anonymous wrote:I deeply regret not giving my child a sibling. They are introverted and we don’t have much extended family, and they’ve repeatedly said they feel lonely and wish they had a sibling. I also wanted a second child, so the only one who didn’t was my spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone hating on the term "my everything" when it comes to our child(ren)?
Would it be better if a spouse was her everything? Or perhaps her mastery of yoga???
Some absurd comments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can I just say I came in here to answer but seeing all the responses I want to let you know I had a second and he’s a freaking adorable smush and I didn’t know I could love both my kids so much because I adore my first kid. So I’m just gushing that you should have a second only if YOU want one and they can both be your everything
Of course you love your babies. That doesn’t mean you have the bandwidth or resources to be the best parent to all of those kids. I have religious family members that talk like you while continuing to have more kids. The families are **so in love ** and stressed and overextended. Wanting a baby is necessary, but not sufficient.
+1. Every time my sister has another baby (#4 now) she promptly shifts most of her attention over and largely ignores the other three. She also has no plan to pay for 4 college educations but doesn’t let that bother her one bit.
Anonymous wrote:And don't make a child your everything. Very unhealthy for the child too
Anonymous wrote:I am middle eastern and believe in big families! I grew up surrounded by aunts and uncles and siblings and trust me a strong family unit does wonders for your mental health and well being (though there’s always the negative of everyone up in your business). There is always someone there for you no matter what. I think with increasing instability in the world, increasing suicide rates and loneliness etc, building a strong family unit is a good thing. But do it the middle eastern way! Actually spend time together instead of shuttling kids to different activities. Have dinner together every day, play board games, have a family movie nightI have three kids and although each one has their own interests and we try to encourage that, we always prioritize family time and emphasize how they always have to stick together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I am a better mom mothering two kids than I would be just one. I would likely be too all over just one.
I wanted to add to this - my second taught me patience and how to be more calm and understanding I am a better mother to my first because of it
But you can’t prove the negative. I bet you, like most parents of one, would have learned patience and balance with more time and experience. If you had a second when your first was a toddler or preschooler, you just don’t know how you would have grown as a more experienced parent. But if you learned those skills with two, I’m confident you would have learned them with one as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I am a better mom mothering two kids than I would be just one. I would likely be too all over just one.
I wanted to add to this - my second taught me patience and how to be more calm and understanding I am a better mother to my first because of it
Anonymous wrote:I think I am a better mom mothering two kids than I would be just one. I would likely be too all over just one.