Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Life is certainly random and I try not to judge - I have been through enough myself.
But how fair is it when your child is a toddler and you have no energy for them? Do you think it will get easier? Do you think it is fair to them? I am an older parent, so I am grateful for every day. But I also feel I *OWE* my children a childhood - I brought them here!!!!!!
NP here. I know this will get flamed. It just breaks my heart when I see women with disabilities /illnesses (seen or unseen) that have every excuse to be "tired" yet they are front and center with every conceivable interest in their child. I don't understand able bodied women that are lazy.
I get it, we all lose energy as we age, but is it fair to your children, who you brought here and supposedly wanted, to barely apply yourself, if at all? How are you helping them in life by being so detached (and that is what it is)? Not saying this is the majority.
No, I will get flamed. Much more important to have a child when you are financially secure than when you're younger and have "energy." I put energy in quotes because I'm in better shape at 45 than I was at 25, so it's all individual anyhow.
Anonymous wrote:Life is certainly random and I try not to judge - I have been through enough myself.
But how fair is it when your child is a toddler and you have no energy for them? Do you think it will get easier? Do you think it is fair to them? I am an older parent, so I am grateful for every day. But I also feel I *OWE* my children a childhood - I brought them here!!!!!!
NP here. I know this will get flamed. It just breaks my heart when I see women with disabilities /illnesses (seen or unseen) that have every excuse to be "tired" yet they are front and center with every conceivable interest in their child. I don't understand able bodied women that are lazy.
I get it, we all lose energy as we age, but is it fair to your children, who you brought here and supposedly wanted, to barely apply yourself, if at all? How are you helping them in life by being so detached (and that is what it is)? Not saying this is the majority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New to this thread. My DS is 13 and I am 56. There are so many reasons to have kids as early in adulthood as possible. Here's another: having kids gives you time to get your priorities straight, so don't postpone it. I dithered and waited, thinking my career had to be established first. But after spending years trying to have a career, I had the kids and finally had the leisure to understand myself better and entirely changed my professional direction. Point is, if I had had the kids then the career, I would not have wasted time in the wrong profession and I could now have kids in college and pour my full attention into the career. Having kids in the 20s or 30s is so much more sensible.
My experience was very different. I still think it's better to establish yourself in a career before having kids. Worked 9 years before I had my first, at 34. I don't think there's a connection between people who choose the wrong career and when they had kids.
+1 me too!
I had been in my career 10 years and in a senior position when firstborn came at 35. It has allowed me to be very flexible. I WAH full-time and I would not have been able to do this if I had kids first. I liked being established first vs trying too get ahead in the sleep-deprived, activity filled kid years. I just turned 43 with a 7.5 and just turned 5 year old. I would prob have started a few years earlier 31-32