Anonymous wrote:
I sympathize. I would love to be younger, healthier, richer, and have more babies. I love the baby stage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I miss the attention. Once your past 40 you start to fade into obscurity in society.
Lol! I can’t quite tell if you’re being sarcastic or not but I actually agree (to a point).![]()
Those major life milestones (getting married, getting pregnant, having babies and young kids) are all so exciting and “attention worthy”. When that feeling of being ‘seen’ ends, it feels sad.
Anonymous wrote:I miss the attention. Once your past 40 you start to fade into obscurity in society.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just imagine yourself in your 60's putting several kids through college, that should give you a reality check.
How is that any different from doing it in your 40s with less money?
Anonymous wrote:I know how you feel, OP. For me, it’s not so much that I want another kid (I don’t, at all), but more of a feeling of sadness that one chapter in my life has closed and with it, part of my youth too. Not that there aren’t good things about the next stage in life, of course, but that a pretty major part is over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of people I know having their first kids in their late 30s to mid 40s. Everything is new and wonderful for them.
For the people who had their kids young well...you’re barely even middle-aged now and still could feasibly have more kids if you wanted. It’s that recognition that you’re done with that stage but you kind of wish you weren’t.
OP here. Yes we moved here from the midwest, where most people had/have children younger and I wasn't out of the norm to have a first baby at 27. So I know lots of women expecting now and I am a little jealous.
I don't really want to have a baby but I wish we had had one more when I was like, idk, 35 or so.