Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 58 youngest is 13. Wife is 56.
Also have a 17 and 19 year old
So bizarre. I'm 58 and my spouse is 59. Our "kids" are 37, 33, 31 and 29 and our grandkids are 7 and 5! That's the way it's supposed to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 40 with a 2 and 4 year old, and I'm around the average age of moms at my son's preschool. One of the other moms is 47 and she just had her second baby. I wish her well, but I would never want to trade places with her! The 10 year jump from 37 to 47 seems more significant than the jump from 27 to 37.
How do you know? You’re not even there yet. I’d say 17 to 27 is significant but it’s all kind of the same after that. I’m 50s with two in elementary, fwiw.
Anonymous wrote:I am 58 youngest is 13. Wife is 56.
Also have a 17 and 19 year old
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is my longest-running thread ever. Here's a further thought for discussion. I'm old but I also take very good care of myself (work out regularly don't eat junk etc). When I see younger families with obese parents I often think that that extra 100 pounds will take their toll before the decade I spent on my Phd does.
Don't be so smug, OP. My husband's thin and otherwise healthy grandma got early onset dementia. She spent decades in facilities, didn't know what time of day it was or who was who. It was horrible to watch. When she died of heart failure in her 90s it was a blessing. You are not immune to geriatric diseases (or death) just because you're not obese.
Anonymous wrote:I am 40 with a 2 and 4 year old, and I'm around the average age of moms at my son's preschool. One of the other moms is 47 and she just had her second baby. I wish her well, but I would never want to trade places with her! The 10 year jump from 37 to 47 seems more significant than the jump from 27 to 37.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is my longest-running thread ever. Here's a further thought for discussion. I'm old but I also take very good care of myself (work out regularly don't eat junk etc). When I see younger families with obese parents I often think that that extra 100 pounds will take their toll before the decade I spent on my Phd does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 43 with a 3- and a 6-year old. I love my kids and being a mom and am contemplating one more baby. I come from a line of women with strong and long fertility. Oh, and I live in New York City where almost all of my friends had at least one child in their late 30s or early 40s, some in their mid 40s. There is a single mom at my older child's school with 3 kids: one she gave birth to herself at age 52, and the other two were twins via a surrogate when she was 55. She is 70 now and has 3 high school kids, and she looks amazing (although I should point out that she is well off and probably has a lot of help).
That’s sad. My parents were very healthy 70+ year olds in my late 40s (not when I was in HS!!). Age 70 to 80 is very different. These kids are going to be in college and struggling with elder care issues that people usually don’t deal with until their 40s and beyond. Not to mention never having their grandparents around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50 with kids 19, 17, and 9. We are on the older end for 4th grade parents in our youngest's school, but there are a significant number who are older than us.
I know this is an old thread but am curious (if you don't mind sharing of course), was your youngest from a different marriage, unplanned, or did you decide to go for #3 when the other two were older?
Anonymous wrote:I am 43 with a 3- and a 6-year old. I love my kids and being a mom and am contemplating one more baby. I come from a line of women with strong and long fertility. Oh, and I live in New York City where almost all of my friends had at least one child in their late 30s or early 40s, some in their mid 40s. There is a single mom at my older child's school with 3 kids: one she gave birth to herself at age 52, and the other two were twins via a surrogate when she was 55. She is 70 now and has 3 high school kids, and she looks amazing (although I should point out that she is well off and probably has a lot of help).
Anonymous wrote:50 with kids 19, 17, and 9. We are on the older end for 4th grade parents in our youngest's school, but there are a significant number who are older than us.