Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unusual and not welcome by dcum solution: adopt a 5 yo child at 50yo. A girl, preferably, who has a good attention span and is kind. Ignore her cuteness and race. Girls are great companions in aye 50s -60s for their moms while growing up and even through college. Then you’ll have grand children to visit. A real family.
I’m dating but have myself a deadline : if not partnered by 50 I’ll adopt
Wow this is a terrible reason to adopt.
Why? Plenty of women take on foster kids or adopt. They have the time, money, and availability.
It’s one thing to adopt because you want to be a mother, but for female companionship? And to have grandchildren in your 80s? Nutty!
Anonymous wrote:Meant to say ability as the 3rd reason. I think an older women who is still healthy is a very good person to take on a foster child or adopt and older child. Most of these kids just stay in a foster care system if no one will take on their care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Co-housing.
My friends live in a co-housing building in Canada and it is amazing. They have their own condo, but the building has amazing shared living spaces including a massive kitchen and there are always people around if you want company. They have communal dinners 3x a week, trade dog walking or babysitting, share their cars if needed, etc. It was really lovely. It reminded me of living in a college dorm (with less drunk people.)
They have the same thing in Europe (I think Belgium or Switzerland, can’t remember but it was a French-speaking area-saw a documentary on it). Each person has their own small condo but meals are communal where everyone sits at big tables to eat dinner together (the cooking is done on a rotating basis). Everyone looks out for each other and they all seem very happy.
Yes. This was my version of the 50 and older community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any five year old available for adoption is not going to be an easy adoptee. Especially to someone with no parenting experience
Sadly, this is true. There’s going to be significant trauma.
Anonymous wrote:Any five year old available for adoption is not going to be an easy adoptee. Especially to someone with no parenting experience
Anonymous wrote:I had to put up with an abusive addictive deceptive cheating husband and all the OLD discussions just give me a headache thinking about them and the effort just to find a man who isn't interested in someone younger or using me. Are there other options for living together with someone else that are formal like with OLD? I do better living with someone or near someone with lots of people to keep me engaged during the day and night but maybe my future is more like the Golden Girls rather than with a man. Do people do this type of thing as they age or are older women also too set in their ways to cohabitate? Am I just looking for a 55 and up retirement community?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Co-housing.
My friends live in a co-housing building in Canada and it is amazing. They have their own condo, but the building has amazing shared living spaces including a massive kitchen and there are always people around if you want company. They have communal dinners 3x a week, trade dog walking or babysitting, share their cars if needed, etc. It was really lovely. It reminded me of living in a college dorm (with less drunk people.)
They have the same thing in Europe (I think Belgium or Switzerland, can’t remember but it was a French-speaking area-saw a documentary on it). Each person has their own small condo but meals are communal where everyone sits at big tables to eat dinner together (the cooking is done on a rotating basis). Everyone looks out for each other and they all seem very happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unusual and not welcome by dcum solution: adopt a 5 yo child at 50yo. A girl, preferably, who has a good attention span and is kind. Ignore her cuteness and race. Girls are great companions in aye 50s -60s for their moms while growing up and even through college. Then you’ll have grand children to visit. A real family.
I’m dating but have myself a deadline : if not partnered by 50 I’ll adopt
Wow this is a terrible reason to adopt.
Why? Plenty of women take on foster kids or adopt. They have the time, money, and availability.
It’s one thing to adopt because you want to be a mother, but for female companionship? And to have grandchildren in your 80s? Nutty!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unusual and not welcome by dcum solution: adopt a 5 yo child at 50yo. A girl, preferably, who has a good attention span and is kind. Ignore her cuteness and race. Girls are great companions in aye 50s -60s for their moms while growing up and even through college. Then you’ll have grand children to visit. A real family.
I’m dating but have myself a deadline : if not partnered by 50 I’ll adopt
What a selfish motive but anyway they don’t let 50 yo single women adopt
Disagree. I’ve known 3 different single women in their 50s adopt baby girls. This was overseas and these girls were taken from poverty and given wonderful lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unusual and not welcome by dcum solution: adopt a 5 yo child at 50yo. A girl, preferably, who has a good attention span and is kind. Ignore her cuteness and race. Girls are great companions in aye 50s -60s for their moms while growing up and even through college. Then you’ll have grand children to visit. A real family.
I’m dating but have myself a deadline : if not partnered by 50 I’ll adopt
What a selfish motive but anyway they don’t let 50 yo single women adopt
My grandmother adopted some kids when she was older. I think she thought she was helping these orphaned girls. Guess the motive matters.
I don’t think fostering or adopting to have a family or companionship is necessarily wrong. I’m still busy with my own 3 kids but I have mentioned adoption to DH and he said no. If I was a widow one day, I absolutely would foster or adopt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unusual and not welcome by dcum solution: adopt a 5 yo child at 50yo. A girl, preferably, who has a good attention span and is kind. Ignore her cuteness and race. Girls are great companions in aye 50s -60s for their moms while growing up and even through college. Then you’ll have grand children to visit. A real family.
I’m dating but have myself a deadline : if not partnered by 50 I’ll adopt
Wow this is a terrible reason to adopt.
Why? Plenty of women take on foster kids or adopt. They have the time, money, and availability.
Anonymous wrote:My friends and I talking about having micro houses on the same property.