Anonymous wrote:In addition to why waste your fertility, why wait to buy a house together. Blowing your 20s renting two apartments is such a waste of money. Get your degree, get married and buy a place together as soon as possible. Babies are not a career setback, especially with telework and online courses for advanced degrees.
Anonymous wrote:Another flurry of engagements this week. Affluent 22 and 23 year olds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had few classmates who were into sampling, in recent years we all connected in alumni group, most ended up settling in late 30's and most divorced within 5-7 years. Sampling makes it difficult to become monogamous, marrying late makes it difficult to be flexible to make space for spouse and children.
+1. There is zero benefit to waiting and dating around, especially a smart woman with only X of years to reproduce naturally. It’s quite literally a waste of life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had few classmates who were into sampling, in recent years we all connected in alumni group, most ended up settling in late 30's and most divorced within 5-7 years. Sampling makes it difficult to become monogamous, marrying late makes it difficult to be flexible to make space for spouse and children.
+1. There is zero benefit to waiting and dating around, especially a smart woman with only X of years to reproduce naturally. It’s quite literally a waste of life.
Anonymous wrote:I had few classmates who were into sampling, in recent years we all connected in alumni group, most ended up settling in late 30's and most divorced within 5-7 years. Sampling makes it difficult to become monogamous, marrying late makes it difficult to be flexible to make space for spouse and children.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is in medical school and her social circle is pretty much all K-MD (so early-mid 20s). She always seems to be at a wedding or celebrating an engagement.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's cyclical. Many don't want to start families as older parents like their own.
When I got married in my late 20s, many of my friends were in their 30s. Most of us had kids in mid-late 30s. There is now a trend (which I'm seeing with my nephews) of kids settling down younger. My oldest nephew married 1-2 years out of college and his wife was just starting med school. A lot of their friends were getting married at the same time (this was 2 years ago).
Also, the workplace has become much different. There is WAH and much more flexibility. I worked in the Office 10 years before my agency went to WAH. My firstborn was a baby when they added full-time telework. This enabled me to continue full-time work and have someone come in the home to watch him so I was around when he was a baby. I could see him during the day. Many of my co-workers that both WAH staggered schedules so they needed little if no childcare.
It was very much a 9-5pm world (and longer hours) 20 years ago with little flexibility for parents, zero paternity leave and limited maternity leave. It's still not great, but much better than it was.
Anonymous wrote:getting engaged in the couple years after college to your college sweetheart, getting married, and then enjoying life as a DINK couple for almost a decade and traveling and maybe getting a mba or something before having kids in your 30s seems to be pretty common in my circle. There is a big gap between wedding and kids.
Anonymous wrote:Both Tiffany Trump and Naomi Biden's husbands are 25 and probably met and engaged much earlier. Brides are 29ish?