Anonymous wrote:Pp here I meant to add - get friends who will talk about the costs with you and how this country’s lack of social safety net and lack of support for moms sucks!!!
Anonymous wrote:Hey this issue is really hard! Good for you for trying to think ahead. Kids can be insanely expensive but are worth it. We have just one and it sure makes things easier - travel, smaller house need, smaller car ok, etc but obviously people much less well off than us have tons of kids. I’d say the biggest gauntlet to having kids is childcare until free prek. If you can get through that you’ll figure out the rest. Get on the daycare waitlists early - potentially even before have a kid (the worst!). Or do a nanny share.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe I’m poor with my 100k salary…but that’s how it feels.
My fiancé and I make 170k combined. Surely. That’s enough! But we live in a two bedroom apartment and don’t know when we will be able to buy a house. And thinking about the expenses of kids is absolutely overwhelming. I’ve wanted to set a timeline since we got engaged a few months ago, but we just have not been able to figure out how to get the money for a family and our future . Did you all get a ton of money from your parents ? I truly do not know how you all do it. I want kids, a house, and a wedding but any one of those things works drain my savings immensely. I’m 30 and my partner is also mid thirties, so it’s disheartening that we are this stressed, with good jobs and advanced degrees.
Anonymous wrote:I had kids in my 20s in grad school while we were living in a one-bedroom rental and had no car. When DC1 was born 18 years ago we were making a joint total of 60K. I am so glad I've had this time with my kids and I don't regret it for one single second. We still live a frugal life in a small house and old cars, but we can afford any college for all our kids, and our retirement is taken care of. We don't need more.
This question comes up regularly on here. Right now, there's a thread written by someone in her late 30s who was persuaded by her husband to wait to have kids until they had a house, more income, etc, and who then had infertility issues, and now her father's dead and she's depressed, her husband just told her he didn't think they should have kids.
There will never be a perfect time. You don't need what you think you need. Most people in the world will never be as rich as you, and have kids anyway. DCUM is its own weird "money first, kids later" bubble. And the money they talk about has nothing to do with the working class, or even sometimes the middle class.
In the end, people's innermost desires speak for themselves in the actions they take. Those who really want kids have the kids as early as humanely possible. Those who are on the fence rationalize it by thinking about money and waiting for more.
There is no right answer, only what feels right to you. Hopefully it's also what feels right to your spouse. But I'm here to tell you that infertility may dog you when you're older, IVF doesn't always work, and it's best to be a young and fit parent if you can. You don't need a house right away, and you don't need a big fancy wedding either.
Anonymous wrote:The key is that there is never a "perfect" time. So just go for it, and you will figure it out. I remember when our kids were young, we were spending more on daycare than my BIL was spending on college (in state) for his kid. Even though it felt like there was never enough money, we always squeaked by.