Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one that finds this utterly obnoxious? I know several women who are child free by choice and spend the other 364 days of the year railing against children and families and going on about how it’s better to be child free. Then Mother’s Day comes around and they’re all over social media wishing themselves a happy Mother’s Day because they are “dog moms.” Just stoppppp.
Anonymous wrote:I think the rant can be generalized... there are people who just want to make everything about themselves.
I have a couple old friends like this and I just hide their social media posts. And I try to have sympathy, too. People who are truly happy don't need constant external approval and attention.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly I am just sad for them.
Be happy with what you have, OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, just to clarify, I am NOT talking about women who wanted to have children and could not for various reasons. I believe we should be sensitive to those women on mother's day especially. I am specifically talking about women who are childfree and spend the rest of the time talking about how they are so glad they aren't moms and complaining about children and families. It's just so hypocritical. The rest of the year you're proud not to be a mom but all of a sudden it's mothers day so moms are being celebrated and you want in?? Sorry, but no.
Sometimes this is the way women cope with having "wanted to have children and could not for various reasons:" a bit of sour grapes, a bit of unresolved longing, and a lot of "you don't discuss infertility."
Anonymous wrote:For some reason this reminds me of a friend of mine who was in vet school at the same time I was in a pediatrics residency. I was talking to her and asking how she managed to keep everything straight between so many different animals with different surgeries and different illnesses.
"It's not that bad. There just isn't as much on the line. People might think that their dogs are their kids, but they are not, actually, their kids."
Being a dog mom is great, but it isn't the same and everyone knows it. Don't worry about it, OP.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, just to clarify, I am NOT talking about women who wanted to have children and could not for various reasons. I believe we should be sensitive to those women on mother's day especially. I am specifically talking about women who are childfree and spend the rest of the time talking about how they are so glad they aren't moms and complaining about children and families. It's just so hypocritical. The rest of the year you're proud not to be a mom but all of a sudden it's mothers day so moms are being celebrated and you want in?? Sorry, but no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the rant can be generalized... there are people who just want to make everything about themselves.
I have a couple old friends like this and I just hide their social media posts. And I try to have sympathy, too. People who are truly happy don't need constant external approval and attention.
Exactly. It's sad when I see a friend who is so empty that they resent a day that isn't for them.
Anonymous wrote:I think the rant can be generalized... there are people who just want to make everything about themselves.
I have a couple old friends like this and I just hide their social media posts. And I try to have sympathy, too. People who are truly happy don't need constant external approval and attention.