Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a 4th! I'm almost due with #5. Grew up one of four. Not much difference between 3 and 4.
The difference is each kid will get less time, attention and money the more u have.
Anonymous wrote:Have a 4th! I'm almost due with #5. Grew up one of four. Not much difference between 3 and 4.
Anonymous wrote:Have a 4th! I'm almost due with #5. Grew up one of four. Not much difference between 3 and 4.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re overthinking this. Have another kid if you want but having 3 does not mean that one is the odd man out. (Parent of 3, and one of 3 kids myself).
I don’t think there’s anything wrong with having 3 kids but it’s delusional to claim it doesn’t create the odd man out dynamic. It’s like people who have only children insisting their child is NEVER lonely. These things are not insurmountable but they are a very obvious downside to your chosen family structure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think 4 is an insane number of kids and there’s no way the kids can get the individual attention they need from their parents but that’s only my opinion.
As one of 4 who has 4 kids, I disagree.
It’s best to avoid an odd man out, and good parents focus on quality time with the family—individually, in pairs, and as a group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re overthinking this. Have another kid if you want but having 3 does not mean that one is the odd man out. (Parent of 3, and one of 3 kids myself).
I don’t think there’s anything wrong with having 3 kids but it’s delusional to claim it doesn’t create the odd man out dynamic. It’s like people who have only children insisting their child is NEVER lonely. These things are not insurmountable but they are a very obvious downside to your chosen family structure.
Anonymous wrote:You’re overthinking this. Have another kid if you want but having 3 does not mean that one is the odd man out. (Parent of 3, and one of 3 kids myself).