Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should post this in the Fifty and Over forum.
But my answer is no. I am 62 with no kids, and although I am a preschool teacher, I have always known that children were not the right choice for me.
I would love grandchildren, however!
I find it interesting you're a preschool teacher who doesn't want kids. I would rather die before being a teacher. I dislike being around others' children. However, I adore my own!! I would think if you don't want your own you wouldn't want to be around children in general.
That is a stupid assumption to make. I am 32 and childless but am a nanny. I enjoy working with children but have no desire to be a mom. You can't compare working with kids to having your own. It isn't rare either, I know a lot of childless women who work with children. We aren't all children haters as we don't want our own either.
Anonymous wrote:My kids need grandarents. Our own are passed or unavailable. Anyone want some?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should post this in the Fifty and Over forum.
But my answer is no. I am 62 with no kids, and although I am a preschool teacher, I have always known that children were not the right choice for me.
I would love grandchildren, however!
I find it interesting you're a preschool teacher who doesn't want kids. I would rather die before being a teacher. I dislike being around others' children. However, I adore my own!! I would think if you don't want your own you wouldn't want to be around children in general.
Anonymous wrote:My aunt now has regrets. She was one of those people who had a very full life of work and travel all through her forties and fifties. Now she wishes she had adult children like my mother does. I don't think you can predict.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting the two bosses mentioned are males.
I work with at least 4 childless by choice women and have had the conversation with them (ages 48 - 65), and none of them have any regrets.
I wonder if men just see the outcome their peers have (adult children, grandkids, fun) and don't think about all the work that would have gone into having kids. Or they have a wife who would have realistically ended up doing a disproportionate amount of the work. But for women, while they may think "Oh, it's be nice to have adult kids," they also think about all the years they wouldn't have been able to pursue their career/interests, how much work and strain it would have been for them, etc and it heads off regrets.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting the two bosses mentioned are males.
I work with at least 4 childless by choice women and have had the conversation with them (ages 48 - 65), and none of them have any regrets.
I wonder if men just see the outcome their peers have (adult children, grandkids, fun) and don't think about all the work that would have gone into having kids. Or they have a wife who would have realistically ended up doing a disproportionate amount of the work. But for women, while they may think "Oh, it's be nice to have adult kids," they also think about all the years they wouldn't have been able to pursue their career/interests, how much work and strain it would have been for them, etc and it heads off regrets.