Anonymous wrote:If you regret having children, then you are a miserable, self-centered excuse for a human being, and very obviously a crappy parent.
Anonymous wrote:If you regret having children, then you are a miserable, self-centered excuse for a human being, and very obviously a crappy parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think if there was full disclosure many people would not have chosen to have children. If I had known how hard it was going to be and how much of my life would have been affected, I may have made a different choice. Once they are here, there is no going back. Both my children had special needs that needed to be addressed and made the hard core parenting years much more intensive and much longer. They are currently in college and the time spent ameliorating their issues has proven to be worth it, but during the long slow slog it was really really hard. My career was one of the casualties and DH's took a hit too.
I completly agree with you. I think a lot of folks are being flat out dishonest because the truth would be looked down on.
I have 4 and if I could do it all over again, I would likely only have 1-2. I feel immense guilt saying this because I love my children dearly. It's a lot of work and I think in fairness to the children, parents should not have a lot. Trying to equally distribute my time and attention amongst 4 kids is damn near impossible. Another factor for me is that my husband is deceased, so I am now unexpectedly doing this on my own. Raising 4 kids alone was not supposed to be a part of the plan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think if there was full disclosure many people would not have chosen to have children. If I had known how hard it was going to be and how much of my life would have been affected, I may have made a different choice. Once they are here, there is no going back. Both my children had special needs that needed to be addressed and made the hard core parenting years much more intensive and much longer. They are currently in college and the time spent ameliorating their issues has proven to be worth it, but during the long slow slog it was really really hard. My career was one of the casualties and DH's took a hit too.
I completly agree with you. I think a lot of folks are being flat out dishonest because the truth would be looked down on.
I have 4 and if I could do it all over again, I would likely only have 1-2. I feel immense guilt saying this because I love my children dearly. It's a lot of work and I think in fairness to the children, parents should not have a lot. Trying to equally distribute my time and attention amongst 4 kids is damn near impossible. Another factor for me is that my husband is deceased, so I am now unexpectedly doing this on my own. Raising 4 kids alone was not supposed to be a part of the plan.
Anonymous wrote:I think if there was full disclosure many people would not have chosen to have children. If I had known how hard it was going to be and how much of my life would have been affected, I may have made a different choice. Once they are here, there is no going back. Both my children had special needs that needed to be addressed and made the hard core parenting years much more intensive and much longer. They are currently in college and the time spent ameliorating their issues has proven to be worth it, but during the long slow slog it was really really hard. My career was one of the casualties and DH's took a hit too.
Anonymous wrote:Sad how many people here feel the need to lie on even an anonymous forum.
If you say "I love/don't regret my kids, but..." you regret it.
Moo on.
Anonymous wrote:Like I said, it really depends on how your children turn out. Some people are really unlucky like my sister. Her son is non-verbal, autistic and can't function without her and he's 17. She has to shuttle him everywhere, pay for therapies and her doctor husband dumped her without any support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious as to why so many childess adults are on the DC Urban Moms and Dads forums. Also wondering why there are so many parents in their early 40s and younger posting in the "Midlife Concerns and Eldercare" subforum. It would be nice to have a conversation with parents who are 50 and over, as advertised in the forum heading...
I'm a parent in her 40s. I participate in this forum b/c I have elder care concerns.
This thread did not specify that only parents 50 and over could participate. If that's your goal, create your own thread with the explicit criteria.
DP. This *forum* used to be titled 50 and over for that very reason. It was a safe haven from some of the young foolishness. The name changed and apparently now some of the posters have too.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I will raise my hand, and hang my head in shame.
I suspect most people here either have kids who have launched, and thus have some more distance, or, as some previous poster, have very young kids.
I have a tween and a teen, and if you had asked me even two years ago, I would have said that my kids are amazing, that I love them more than my own life, and that I couldn't imagine my life without them. The first two of those statements still hold true, but over the past year I have been longingly daydreaming about the day when they are finally out of the house.
They both have some mild special needs, and the hormones are not helping, but they are both difficult, rude, argumentative, stubborn and dare I say lazy. We have spent countless hours and $ on various therapies for both, we put every support imaginable in place to help them, we spent a lot of time exposing them to every possible beneficial EC but let them chose their own path and interests in which we have been unfailingly supportive. Yet, they barely get by academically, are selfish and inconsiderate of the effort that it takes to keep our household running and meeting their every need, and take little to no responsibility for their own failings - everything is always someone else's fault.
I am sure that we as parents are partially to blame for this, but I am not sure what else we could have done. I have read many parenting books, taken classes, I am in therapy myself for the anxiety that keeps mounting because I worry so much about my children. We support them academically, help with homework, remind about projects, instrument practice, take them to playdates, drive them to and from their chosen sports, make sure they have enough downtime, spend enough time outdoors, provide healthy meals, travel to both fun and educational places, and yet, none of it seems to make any difference.
I fervently hope that this is just a stage, and that my smart, funny, sunny kids will eventually return to us, but right now I am dejected and almost dreading walking through the door each afternoon, only to be faced with a new drama, or some other way that I have allegedly failed them. I am not sure how much more of this I can take. So maybe you just caught me at a bad time, but if you are asking me today whether I regret having children, the answer is "yes, absolutely".
There, flame away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious as to why so many childess adults are on the DC Urban Moms and Dads forums. Also wondering why there are so many parents in their early 40s and younger posting in the "Midlife Concerns and Eldercare" subforum. It would be nice to have a conversation with parents who are 50 and over, as advertised in the forum heading...
I'm a parent in her 40s. I participate in this forum b/c I have elder care concerns.
This thread did not specify that only parents 50 and over could participate. If that's your goal, create your own thread with the explicit criteria.
DP. This *forum* used to be titled 50 and over for that very reason. It was a safe haven from some of the young foolishness. The name changed and apparently now some of the posters have too.
