Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also hope my kids don't have kids. It's a losing proposition. I feel bad for bringing them into this mess. And for cursing them with my genes.
And the world has enough people.
That is not a healthy viewpoint.
Why not? It is true. It is healthy to face reality and not stick your head in the sand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also hope my kids don't have kids. It's a losing proposition. I feel bad for bringing them into this mess. And for cursing them with my genes.
And the world has enough people.
That is not a healthy viewpoint.
Anonymous wrote:I also hope my kids don't have kids. It's a losing proposition. I feel bad for bringing them into this mess. And for cursing them with my genes.
And the world has enough people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, I am childfree and so glad that my parents don't feel the way you do. They wanted to have a child to have the experience of raising a child, and that was their decision, not mine, obviously. I do not want this experience, and they understand and accept my decision. Frankly, more and more parents should expect to not have grandchildren, as younger generations come to terms with the devastation that climate change is wreaking on the earth.
I mean of course your parents told you that. That raising you was the greatest joy. They are your parents- that’s what they say because they are good a parents! They aren’t making you feel guilty for ending their line because they are good parents! Child free adults often lack this sort of self awareness IMO because they have not yet experienced one of the major seasons in life, which is to have a child. If you skip that entire season, your life is stunted. I didn’t get it either until I had kids so I’m sure you will respond with a giant eye roll, but, sorry.
I have kids and have no idea what you’re talking about.
That’s unfortunate that you didn’t experience the life changing love this poster describes. Well, unfortunate for your kids anyway.
I have friends and family that do not have kids. It’s never crossed my mind that their lives are “stunted”. I still don’t understand the comment.
Maybe stunted is the wrong word. It’s a life missing a fundamental part of the human experience.
Anonymous wrote:I also hope my kids don't have kids. It's a losing proposition. I feel bad for bringing them into this mess. And for cursing them with my genes.
And the world has enough people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh FFS. I can't scroll through all of this. But WTF.
Same. This is the weirdest thread I’ve ever seen on DCUM.
Actually what’s weird are all the posters claiming they could care less if their kids never have kids.
I’m calling B.S.
Thee urge to procreate and see your family line continue is part of our DNA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a good friend who was adopted from a third world country (not due to infertility), while her younger brother was born to their parents. He is a wildly successful tall blonde white dude who married young to a wife who stays home to raise their three beautiful kids. My friend went to college, works and functions fine, but she's not white and had some problems related to being adopted by a wealthy white family in a predominately white community. Her parents gave her brother a huge sum of money when he married and bought a home. She rents. Her parents will not help her buy an apartment. Her parents plan her a pittance while her brother will receive the bulk of their estate.
They WANTED her. They planned to adopt their first child when they married. They raised her. And it's very likely in part due to the fact that she was adopted that her life has not gone quite as perfectly as her brother's. She's not even estranged from the family! She sees her parents regularly. But they're punishing her for not marrying and having children, things that she certainly wanted but did not have the luck of getting.
Sorry, but I think that's pretty messed up. I hope her parents change their mind before they die.
How do you know they are treating her differently because of her race or the fact that she is adopted? They could just have narrow views about what their kids are “supposed to do with their lives,” the paths they will reward.
That is sad, and they sound like awful parents, but I would not assume what it stems from.
Anonymous wrote:I have a good friend who was adopted from a third world country (not due to infertility), while her younger brother was born to their parents. He is a wildly successful tall blonde white dude who married young to a wife who stays home to raise their three beautiful kids. My friend went to college, works and functions fine, but she's not white and had some problems related to being adopted by a wealthy white family in a predominately white community. Her parents gave her brother a huge sum of money when he married and bought a home. She rents. Her parents will not help her buy an apartment. Her parents plan her a pittance while her brother will receive the bulk of their estate.
They WANTED her. They planned to adopt their first child when they married. They raised her. And it's very likely in part due to the fact that she was adopted that her life has not gone quite as perfectly as her brother's. She's not even estranged from the family! She sees her parents regularly. But they're punishing her for not marrying and having children, things that she certainly wanted but did not have the luck of getting.
Sorry, but I think that's pretty messed up. I hope her parents change their mind before they die.