Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 56 and got ice cream with my 11 year old daughter yesterday and she is still in the love Daddy phase.
I always feel sorry for folks who had kids young. They had no fun times in 20s and 30s and in 50s live in an empty house
Meanwhile, you brace for impact every time you step out with her in hopes that no one will mistake you for her grandmother...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I raised myself. And I did a good job!
I was the child of older parents.
I raised myself. And I did a damn good job.
At my birth, I was the child of nineteen and twenty-one year old, mother and father.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 41, my kids are 17 and 15.
I have friends just starting to have kids. That would suck.
We are young and healthy, I'm a few years we can travel WHILE STILL HEALTHY.
No medications or canes needed.
Hopefully we can do this for 20 years or more. Yeah, we are lucky and smart.
Oh, please. Stop patting yourself on the back. Your good fortune to meet your partner and have kids when you were young has nothing to do with being smart. Is it so hard to imagine that others didn't have the option to have kids in their 20s and early 30s? the OP's question was about parenting in your 50s, not a request for those who had kids younger to gloat and speculate about being an older parent.
+1
I front-loaded my adventures. I lived abroad in my 20s and had fantastic life experiences. Would not trade those memories for anything.
Met my husband when I was 33, married at 35. I am 55 now and my kids are 18 and 16.
None of us has complete control over when we meet our spouses and marry anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. When we're about 53, the plan is that DH and I are retiring and cruising the islands.
Good luck to all of you older parents on here! It takes a special kind. I couldn't imagine.
Anonymous wrote:To those who had kids later in life: would you advise your daughter to do it too? I just recently had a discussion with my 17 y.o. girl, and I wasn't even sure what is a good advise this days. It seems like in old time everyone wanted to have kids early, then it shifted back, and now I see a new tendency to have children when you are young.
Anonymous wrote:My buddy who I lost touch with years ago got married for first time at 50. He is is currently 55, has an infant, a two year old and a four year old. My other buddy age of 55 has a 1 year old, 3 year old and a 9 year old.
You guys are not older parents. I had my last child when I was 45 and at Kindergarten orientation there were many parents in their 50s.
My youngest graduates HS when I am 63 and my buddy who just had a kid at 55 will be 73 at HS Graduation.
Parents will be retired on Medicare and SS while kids are in college. This is becoming more and more common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I know a couple who adopted a newborn when the wife was 50, and the husband a little older.
I hope their energy doesn't flag...
I know a similar couple. things are going fine right now - baby is two.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you people live????
Everyone I know in NWDC and Arlington had kids between 33-40.
Most started at 35, second before 40.
My sister is the only person I know out of a shitliad of neighbors, sports families and school parent friends that had kids in her 20s.
She’s 52 and her third and last just graduated college this weekend.
I’m 48 with a 12.5 and 10 year old. My husband and I are athletes and look young for our age though. Some people are age do look a good 10-15 years older.
Anonymous wrote:It's a bit of an entitled and immature attitude, to feel you should chime in on a thread that has nothing to do with you and to which you have nothing to contribute. Normally, I'm sure most of us just ignore this kind of person, much as you do the toddler who runs in between talking adults and shouts, "I'm a big boy!"
So, OP, late fifties here, with my youngest kids in middle school and high school. Get your rest and take care of your health. I used to get by without sleep, but now it's just necessary.
You're already over the hardest physical part, the young child/baby years. Mentally, the teen years are taxing, because, well, teens like to test you and their problems are serious, with higher stakes.
There's a ton of driving them around to sports and activities.
They tend to want to stay up later than you, so you lose the late-night privacy you used to have in the years when they were younger. And you need that sleep more as older parents.
Do keep up with technology, as others have posted. We have monitoring and blocking programs on all computers and phones. They can find their ways around everything, of course, but they have a sense we're not oblivious, and that we may check up on them at any point. The sense that you might get checked up on can be helpful to make teens think twice before doing dumb things.
The upside to being an older parent is that you'll probably be past the worst of any perimenopausal mood swings by the time you need your patience and calmness about you for the teen years.