Anonymous wrote:The real question is: why do you feel compelled to ask this question? What is it about being pregnant with your 3rd in your late 30s and/or what is going on in your life that you think this question is an important one? This is about you, OP. It is not about your friends.
Anonymous wrote:Child-free here. I don't if it's rude so much as it's a dead-end conversation in my experience. If you ask me why I'm not having kids, pretty much any response I give is going to potentially sound judge-y of the choice to have kids ("I wasn't interested in being mom," "It's not for me") or put you in the awkward spot of asking potentially judge-y sounding questions or making judge-y sounding comments in response to my response ("It's worth it though" "I felt the same till I had kids") This is more or less true depending on the level of friendship of course but in general it's just uncomfortable all around.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it's rude.
In my experience people will share with you their family plans if they want you to know.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on the friendship and situation, I think. If it's someone you're really close with and are having a one-on-one fairly deep conversation over coffee about your lives, then I think it could be normal, if you ask it in a way that makes it clear you're just curious about the other person's life. Like, you asked your friend, "So, are you happy in your job right now? I remember you were thinking about looking for something new a few months ago," and then she talks for a while about how she doesn't feel fulfilled there, she hates her boss, etc. Then you talk about your job a bit and move on to something about your husband. Then you say in the same way as you asked about her job, "Do you guys want to have kids someday?" Then let her answer however she wants, and if it's fairly short or evasive, let it go. If not, then listen with genuine interest and don't try to talk her out of it or act judgmental if she says no. And leave your kids and how fulfilled you are by them out of it. It's not about you -- it's about her.
BUT, I would only ask if it's someone who you would feel comfortable discussing a medical situation or infertility or marital problem you were having and feel she would feel comfortable sharing with you. If not, then it's none of your business.