Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother had me at 43 in the early 80s; she still says I kept her young.
I read something recently if it helps you decide - you will never regret the kids you have, but you will always regret the kids you don't have. Follow your gut, but something tells me if you are posting here then your gut says you want another.
Off topic a little but this trope is like the “people sometimes regret sending their summer birthday kid to K on time, but no one ever regrets holding them back!” Like, of course they do. Lots do. But what are they going to say- “yeah I shouldn’t have held him back a grade”? No, they just won’t admit it out loud.
Plenty of people regret having more kids. Believe me. Plenty.
Anonymous wrote:My mother, who had the 3 of us in her late 20s, told me during one of those "you're an adult now" conversations that she had terminated a pregnancy when she was nearly 40. She and my dad did not want another child; their family was perfect as it was, and mom was not going to start with diapers all over again.
So, no, you do not regret the kids you did not have, even in a happily married middle class family.
Anonymous wrote:My mother had me at 43 in the early 80s; she still says I kept her young.
I read something recently if it helps you decide - you will never regret the kids you have, but you will always regret the kids you don't have. Follow your gut, but something tells me if you are posting here then your gut says you want another.
Anonymous wrote:My mother had me at 43 in the early 80s; she still says I kept her young.
I read something recently if it helps you decide - you will never regret the kids you have, but you will always regret the kids you don't have. Follow your gut, but something tells me if you are posting here then your gut says you want another.
Anonymous wrote:can you get help? family? nanny?...etc
you would need that help for a good 4 years.. it gets easier after.
Anonymous wrote:You feel young at 43 but you aren’t. The baby years are tough but the teen and college years are much worse. You are paying for college and retirement at the same time. So so tired. And broke. We are in the top 3% and it was still a strain. I would say don’t do it. Baby fever passes. Child responsibility’s do not.
Anonymous wrote:You feel young at 43 but you aren’t. The baby years are tough but the teen and college years are much worse. You are paying for college and retirement at the same time. So so tired. And broke. We are in the top 3% and it was still a strain. I would say don’t do it. Baby fever passes. Child responsibility’s do not.