Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, my mental health. I had virtually no anxiety pre-kids. Now I have 2 daughters and I have to worry about predators, mass shootings, rape….I never thought I’d be an anxious parent but my kids are very rarely out of my sight and they are required to take martial arts classes so they can defend themselves.
Also I have always been very feminist and believe no one deserves to be assaulted no matter what they wear or how they behave. But I am making damn sure my girls keep covered to not attract attention, that they behave in ways that keep predators at bay, and that they do not touch alcohol, drugs, or go to parties.
Which also means I lead by example, so I’ve given up all alcohol and late nights with friends, and I always dress extremely modestly.
Now with the latest school shooting, I am considering home schooling, which also means my career will take a huge hit. I own my own business and work from home, but I would have to scale back by 50% and work on weekends when dad is home.
You sound like you’re ruining your children.
We’ll, that’s too harsh, but I hope you’re seeing someone? Zoloft is a gift from God.
Anonymous wrote:Feeling trapped in a marriage that’s not going well. I’m jealous of people who have amicable co-parenting relationships. Mine would not be like that. We are barely still amicable when we are having regular sex. I can’t imagine what it would be like if we divorced.
i could not have sex with a spouse i dont like and get along with. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having kids in late 30s, I never expected how hard it would be around 60 and how it impacts retirement plans.
Can you elaborate? If you had your first kid at 38 and second at 42, they would be 27 and 23 when you’re 65. What’s hard about that? I’m not being sarcastic.
Anonymous wrote:The loneliness of having a kid with serious mental health issues. As one of my friends has said, it’s not a casserole condition. You don’t get meal trains. People start to avoid you because your life is always in crisis. You learn that people who say “call me if you need anything” don’t mean it and it hurts because you were there for them. Not that I was looking for anything g but I would have liked not to have been dropped.
Everything else was expected. The loss of sleep. The career hit. The body changes - which get worse with menopause.
Not every 23 year old is fully launched.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having kids in late 30s, I never expected how hard it would be around 60 and how it impacts retirement plans.
Can you elaborate? If you had your first kid at 38 and second at 42, they would be 27 and 23 when you’re 65. What’s hard about that? I’m not being sarcastic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, my mental health. I had virtually no anxiety pre-kids. Now I have 2 daughters and I have to worry about predators, mass shootings, rape….I never thought I’d be an anxious parent but my kids are very rarely out of my sight and they are required to take martial arts classes so they can defend themselves.
Also I have always been very feminist and believe no one deserves to be assaulted no matter what they wear or how they behave. But I am making damn sure my girls keep covered to not attract attention, that they behave in ways that keep predators at bay, and that they do not touch alcohol, drugs, or go to parties.
Which also means I lead by example, so I’ve given up all alcohol and late nights with friends, and I always dress extremely modestly.
Now with the latest school shooting, I am considering home schooling, which also means my career will take a huge hit. I own my own business and work from home, but I would have to scale back by 50% and work on weekends when dad is home.
You sound like you’re ruining your children.