Anonymous wrote:Sort of confused by the OPs interest. Single mothers are people. They are not all the same so it seems like a naïve question. Um, are all married people happy?
Single mother here who is solidly middle class and basically comfortable but still stresses about money. I AM happy about 85 percent of the time because my kid is a delight and all the big components of a good life ... health, job, etc. are in place, even if it is a juggle. Dating would be nice but it seems like one more job at this point.
For me the absolute hardest thing is the simple fact that everything is on me and it is a huge responsibility. Sometimes I feel so busy I feel like I don't enjoy the moments enough. But I'm a normal person with a full life, etc. you never know what anyone is going through and I have no doubt lots of married people have struggles bigger than mine.
Children of single parents do fine. The stats you see fail to factor in that many single parents are single because the other parent is in jail. But if you have a decent home life and support system.
Seems sort of insulting that you'd be surprised to see a single person happy.
Anonymous wrote:22:18 / OP My friend is fine with the marathon. My point was the being the sole adult responsible for a child and running a household and working is a marathon even with funds. Funds help, for sure.
I'm not following your interest in this issue.
I also think your co-worker might be putting on a happy face. Lots of single mothers I know do.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
Of course it's better but it is still hard, really hard. Everything is on you. A close friend is a FT single mom with means (as in significant) and it's a marathon.
Anonymous wrote:If you think you are the kind of person who needs money to be happy, then no amount of money will ever be enough and you cannot be a single motherAnonymous wrote:
Every single mother I knew always made it sound like it was such a struggle. But reading that post (and thinking of the former co-worker I just ran into) got me to thinking: Is single parenting really not as hard as we think it is if you have the financial resources? (Frankly I used to think Co-worker was chipper at work but miserable at home or just hiding her pain at work. Then someone pointed out 'Why wouldn't she be happy being able to take her child abroad just to shop (she did that when we worked together too), drive a luxury car, carry the most expensive handbags, etc?)
If you can be happy without a lot of money then you can be a single mother.
A trip abroad is not so expensive, there are good deals if you know where to look. Expensive handbags are important to some, but ebay sells them too and you do not have to pay retail. Kids can do well in school even if it is not the top school in the county
It can be done, if you want to do it.
If you think you are the kind of person who needs money to be happy, then no amount of money will ever be enough and you cannot be a single motherAnonymous wrote:
Every single mother I knew always made it sound like it was such a struggle. But reading that post (and thinking of the former co-worker I just ran into) got me to thinking: Is single parenting really not as hard as we think it is if you have the financial resources? (Frankly I used to think Co-worker was chipper at work but miserable at home or just hiding her pain at work. Then someone pointed out 'Why wouldn't she be happy being able to take her child abroad just to shop (she did that when we worked together too), drive a luxury car, carry the most expensive handbags, etc?)
Anonymous wrote:I'm a single parent and while it's nice that I never have to convince someone else that my idea really IS the best decision, it's on me to ALWAYS come up with a decision and solve every problem, big and small.
Would money make life a lot easier? Absolutely. It frays my nerves to have no privacy (my bedroom is the living room, my bed is the couch). But money can't create time. And when I'm home sick I can't see how money would help, because DD would still be coming to me to give her dinner.