Anonymous wrote:First and only at 41.
It was an easy transition because I'd had decades to prepare for it and do all of the things I could potentially miss out on after kids. I had 20 years in a "big" career, traveled to dozens of countries, moved a lot, dated a lot, did a lot of soul seeking, therapy, and spiritual work. All the hobbies. There was basically nothing left on my list but becoming a parent. Then a long fertility journey. I just felt so damn lucky to get to the parenting part.
And because I have an only, now that she's five, I don't feel like I've given up much? We once again travel a lot, I'm doing work I really love, I have pleny of childcare and I (most of the time) really enjoy my kid.
I think if I'd become a parent in my 20s or 30s at least for me personally I would have always been a bit jealous of what I was missing out on.
Anonymous wrote:I had kids with a big age-spread. Much easier when I was older. So much more confident in my decisions, more calm in dealing with things that came up with babies/toddlers/kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think all the older moms congratulating themselves on their emotional maturity are looking for justification.
I know older moms who are less mature than my 19 year old (and I am really depressed for their poor kids). People are remarkably consistent, nice people tend to stay nice, snarky young people become snarky old people, teens with financial problems become adults with financial problems. People rarely become empathetic with age. Actually, there are plenty of examples of people aging into bitter mean elderlies.
So you older moms who say you are emotionally mature, either you were already emotionally mature or you are just kidding yourself that you are at this late age.
So I see we have the graceless perspective of the snarky young person who stayed snarky.
Anonymous wrote:I think all the older moms congratulating themselves on their emotional maturity are looking for justification.
I know older moms who are less mature than my 19 year old (and I am really depressed for their poor kids). People are remarkably consistent, nice people tend to stay nice, snarky young people become snarky old people, teens with financial problems become adults with financial problems. People rarely become empathetic with age. Actually, there are plenty of examples of people aging into bitter mean elderlies.
So you older moms who say you are emotionally mature, either you were already emotionally mature or you are just kidding yourself that you are at this late age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had kids with a big age-spread. Much easier when I was older. So much more confident in my decisions, more calm in dealing with things that came up with babies/toddlers/kids.
I have the opposite. Fifteen years between 2nd and 3rd and I’m tired this time and have more worried and responsibilities I never worked full time. For the first two in my early 20s we would go all day and then I would work three nights a week. I was so much more tired as an older mother. We had more money but I’d take the energy and less stress over money.
Anonymous wrote:I had mine at around age 40. Now they are grown and I’m adjusting to the possibility that we won’t see any grand children.
Our kids’ youth went by way too fast and in our demographic grand children are rare at any age. But I feel that if we had started 10 or 15 years younger we would have a better chance of enjoying that stage of life with them.