Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an only child, and I preferred it that way. I feel like no one ever regrets having a child. Once the kid is here, you are unlikely to look at him or her and wish you hadn't done that
This isn't true. I knew a woman who was married for 20 years and they couldn't conceive. They finally found a doctor who told them that he could get her pregnant, but he didn't think it was a good idea. They were too accustomed to living without kids. Sure enough, she got pregnant with twins and all she did was complain - and they had 2 nannies. She didn't work, but the husband was very successful and all of a sudden, they couldn't live the same lifestyle.
I used to feel sorry for her kids.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I made a decision not to have kids, but both been having a change of heart recently. We look at family/friends who are happy parenting, and wonder if we will regret not being parents. We still are not fully on board, and support the reasons we chose to remain childless - better off financially, putting focus on our relationship, being solely responsible for another human life, etc. We have a solid marriage, financially secure, and great family. The biggest drawback that has us unsure is I’m turning 38 soon and he’s 40. We would need to try right away. We have had lengthy conversations about this, and feel if we don’t conceive naturally, we will take it for what it is. We don’t want any medical interventions. The other downside is this will likely be an only child, and feel bad we won’t be able to give that child a sibiling. We don’t have any reasons besides potential regret to have a child, and wonder if that is enough to warrant trying. I know ofher can’t make this decision for us, but we would love to hear positive/negative stories from people in similar situations.
Anonymous wrote:I got married at 38, and had kids at 41 and 44, both conceived on our own. It's not too late for you guys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You both sound so insufferable and self-centered, I think you should stick with your initial plans.
Lol, I can't quite figure out what prompted this reaction, but in any case, this is a skewed "parenting" board so of course everyone is going to talk about how wonderful it is to have kids and why you should do it.
There are downsides of course: not enough time for your relationship, less disposable income, possibly having to leave a neighborhood and house you love for schools, career taking a backburner, and worst of all, having a SN kid.
OP here. I think we focused on the downsides more than the upsides when we initially made the decision not to have kids. We make a good living ( $150k HHI) but no where near rich. We would want to provide a comfortable lifestyle, have disposable income for any activities child wants to participate in, and fully fund college. Having massive amount of SL debt is not something we want a child to deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an only child, and I preferred it that way. I feel like no one ever regrets having a child. Once the kid is here, you are unlikely to look at him or her and wish you hadn't done that
Anonymous wrote:I’m also generally indecisive and inpantent, both qualities that will make for a not so good parent. The biggest driving factor was being unsure if I would be a good mother, and not wanting to bring a child that will be messed up ( mental health and drug issues run in my family) into this world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You both sound so insufferable and self-centered, I think you should stick with your initial plans.
Lol, I can't quite figure out what prompted this reaction, but in any case, this is a skewed "parenting" board so of course everyone is going to talk about how wonderful it is to have kids and why you should do it.
There are downsides of course: not enough time for your relationship, less disposable income, possibly having to leave a neighborhood and house you love for schools, career taking a backburner, and worst of all, having a SN kid.