Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I started trying when I was 30. I’m now just barely 35 and about to have my first later this month (god willing). But I’ve had countless friends older than me conceive right away. Anyways age isn’t a guarantee, in either direction. Life doesn’t always go according to plan and the sooner you make peace with that, the easier things will be. Good luck and I hope your journey is smooth.
This. I'm 32 and it took over 4 years to get pregnant with this baby. My friend's mom got married at 37 and went on to have 8 kids. You never know.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, it sucks when our plans don't work out.
I would have rather had my kids 10 years earlier than at 36 and 38. I would have had more time to devote to career upon returning to work and had more time to help with potential grandchildren later on.
But hey, it beats having kids in your 40s.
A lot of people on here talk about how easy it is to conceive after 40 or how healthy their kids are.
It's a self-selected group here. The ones who are unsuccessful generally don't toot their horns about it. And, similarly, the ones who didn't have healthy kids are unlikely to talk about it.
I had a friend in grad school who never talked about his mom, would kind of embarassingly turn away when the topic of parents came up. Turns out she had him when she was 40. His father was 10 years older. So I think his mom was around 63 when we were first year in grad school, and so his father would have been 73+. My mother still had 22 years until her retirement in 2013 at that point. When my parents retired, I know I felt some responsibility to be there for them - I can't imagine having that kind of burden when one is still just starting out in adulthood.
He was an only child. Never went home after grad school. He married his college sweetheart immediately, settled down quickly and began his family early. I guess he felt his older mother was more of a liability than an asset to his wife and young kids. I thought he was kind of selfish. I guess he felt it too and was embarassed about that as well.
Get some Ovulation predictor sticks and just go have your babies. Stay healthy for them. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I started trying when I was 30. I’m now just barely 35 and about to have my first later this month (god willing). But I’ve had countless friends older than me conceive right away. Anyways age isn’t a guarantee, in either direction. Life doesn’t always go according to plan and the sooner you make peace with that, the easier things will be. Good luck and I hope your journey is smooth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it. Some things don't go according to plan and it sucks. You're automatically considered high risk and the treatment is different. But having a healthy baby in arm is worth it.
This is not true. I wasn’t even considered big risk at 41. I did get some extra monitoring in the 3rd tri, and induced at 39 weeks based on OB recommendations, but that was a very conservative practice concerned about specific age related risks. It was not a high risk pregnancy.
And none of that was done with my first pregnancy at 38.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, it sucks when our plans don't work out.
I would have rather had my kids 10 years earlier than at 36 and 38. I would have had more time to devote to career upon returning to work and had more time to help with potential grandchildren later on.
But hey, it beats having kids in your 40s.
A lot of people on here talk about how easy it is to conceive after 40 or how healthy their kids are.
It's a self-selected group here. The ones who are unsuccessful generally don't toot their horns about it. And, similarly, the ones who didn't have healthy kids are unlikely to talk about it.
I had a friend in grad school who never talked about his mom, would kind of embarassingly turn away when the topic of parents came up. Turns out she had him when she was 40. His father was 10 years older. So I think his mom was around 63 when we were first year in grad school, and so his father would have been 73+. My mother still had 22 years until her retirement in 2013 at that point. When my parents retired, I know I felt some responsibility to be there for them - I can't imagine having that kind of burden when one is still just starting out in adulthood.
He was an only child. Never went home after grad school. He married his college sweetheart immediately, settled down quickly and began his family early. I guess he felt his older mother was more of a liability than an asset to his wife and young kids. I thought he was kind of selfish. I guess he felt it too and was embarassed about that as well.
Get some Ovulation predictor sticks and just go have your babies. Stay healthy for them. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:I get it. Some things don't go according to plan and it sucks. You're automatically considered high risk and the treatment is different. But having a healthy baby in arm is worth it.