Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine are almost two years apart. It was incredibly hard for the first year but so easy ever since. Once your past infancy, I think it is easier to have two. At least if they get along ….
Ha, says someone who has no first hand experience parenting one elementary aged kid. Trust me, it's not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How could anyone doubt this? It's common sense.
Beware friends who tell you to have more kids because they had more and "it's really not a big deal." They are lying and they want you to have more kids so that they won't be the only ones. If you are considering having more kids and ask friends with more what it's like, they better start with "Well of course more kids means more expenses and more time pressure. But also..." They probably are happy with their choice but if they aren't willing to start by acknowledging that OF COURSE more kids is more work, they are sugarcoating and can't be trusted.
Also, people with multiple kids forget what it was like to only have one, or only had one for a short period (during which they were first time parents and may have felt overwhelmed anyway), so they often can't really compare. They think they've had both experiences but unless there was a big age gap, they probably haven't really. They only know more kids, not fewer.
Why would they lie? misery loves company?
Anonymous wrote:I have two kids 3.5 years apart. It was hard when the second came, absolutely! But I am happy with this age gap. My older one can sit down at a table and facetime with Grandma while I put the baby to bed. He can play independently for a while too. Can't say the same if he was only 2 or under.
Anonymous wrote:I think a 4 year age gap is really hard. A 2 year age gap is easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a 4 year age gap is really hard. A 2 year age gap is easier.
Having experienced both, I disagree.
How can you have two kids and experience both? Puzzled.
- dp
I have three
Anonymous wrote:Mine are almost two years apart. It was incredibly hard for the first year but so easy ever since. Once your past infancy, I think it is easier to have two. At least if they get along ….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a 4 year age gap is really hard. A 2 year age gap is easier.
+1
what is OP suppose to do with this information?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a 4 year age gap is really hard. A 2 year age gap is easier.
+1
what is OP suppose to do with this information?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a 4 year age gap is really hard. A 2 year age gap is easier.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How could anyone doubt this? It's common sense.
Beware friends who tell you to have more kids because they had more and "it's really not a big deal." They are lying and they want you to have more kids so that they won't be the only ones. If you are considering having more kids and ask friends with more what it's like, they better start with "Well of course more kids means more expenses and more time pressure. But also..." They probably are happy with their choice but if they aren't willing to start by acknowledging that OF COURSE more kids is more work, they are sugarcoating and can't be trusted.
Also, people with multiple kids forget what it was like to only have one, or only had one for a short period (during which they were first time parents and may have felt overwhelmed anyway), so they often can't really compare. They think they've had both experiences but unless there was a big age gap, they probably haven't really. They only know more kids, not fewer.
Why would they lie? misery loves company?
NP and I think so yes! I feel like no one was very honest with me about having one child - everyone talked about how great it was - no one talked about how hard it was. Now I am wise to the scheme and am sticking to my one child.
Totally have choice-justification bias. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How could anyone doubt this? It's common sense.
Beware friends who tell you to have more kids because they had more and "it's really not a big deal." They are lying and they want you to have more kids so that they won't be the only ones. If you are considering having more kids and ask friends with more what it's like, they better start with "Well of course more kids means more expenses and more time pressure. But also..." They probably are happy with their choice but if they aren't willing to start by acknowledging that OF COURSE more kids is more work, they are sugarcoating and can't be trusted.
Also, people with multiple kids forget what it was like to only have one, or only had one for a short period (during which they were first time parents and may have felt overwhelmed anyway), so they often can't really compare. They think they've had both experiences but unless there was a big age gap, they probably haven't really. They only know more kids, not fewer.
Why would they lie? misery loves company?