Anonymous wrote:I'm a nurse. In the healthcare field it's not too old. I don't consider too old until around 75. That said, I'm 34 y/o, if a 50 y/o tries to ask me out on a date, that's too old and creepy.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 51 and just got through dropping sophomore daughter off at college and helping her move heavy things up flights of stairs.
It was taxing -- even in my early 50's. That's what I can't figure out -- You guys that are planning on having college student kids when you are mid-60's or 70's, how are you planning on carrying all of the crap up and down the stairs?
Or are you all so wealthy that you have a butler or something to help with all that?[/quote
No - have the college kids do it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had three kids between ages 32 and 36. Married five years before that and we saved a lot of money to give us a kid nest egg. It really helped. Became a GD at 62. My BIL became a Dad at almost 50 via adoption and I can tell its a strain. At 65 he has to listen to Justin Bieber and deal with the angst of a 15 year old girl. Plus he'll be over 70 when he is done paying for college. That stinks. Best age to have kids is around 28-35. Get your career going before hand, be young enough to deal with it and when you hit 55-60 become an empty nester and get on with the next phase of your life.
So, 50 is too old to have kids and too young to be a grandparent.
Says you, the Great Idiot Proclaimer.
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Anonymous wrote:I had three kids between ages 32 and 36. Married five years before that and we saved a lot of money to give us a kid nest egg. It really helped. Became a GD at 62. My BIL became a Dad at almost 50 via adoption and I can tell its a strain. At 65 he has to listen to Justin Bieber and deal with the angst of a 15 year old girl. Plus he'll be over 70 when he is done paying for college. That stinks. Best age to have kids is around 28-35. Get your career going before hand, be young enough to deal with it and when you hit 55-60 become an empty nester and get on with the next phase of your life.
So, 50 is too old to have kids and too young to be a grandparent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me? 50 is too old to have kids at home. I cannot imagine parenting young kids at my age. I adore my grandkids! I also love that they go home. Those of you doing it have my admiration. Just glad it's not me.
LOL
I didn't have my first child until I was 34. I can't imagine having a grandchild at 50. When did you have both time and money to spend on just yourself?
Anonymous wrote:For me? 50 is too old to have kids at home. I cannot imagine parenting young kids at my age. I adore my grandkids! I also love that they go home. Those of you doing it have my admiration. Just glad it's not me.
Anonymous wrote:Endure vanilla and/or infrequent sex
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:raise an infant. Feel free to carry the baby but the sleep deprivation is really hard at 50
My sister is doing it - and doing it well. I'm more worried about the teenage years when my sister is in her mid-late 60s
My teenagers have actually been really easy, I can see an older me handling them quite well. Infant/toddler years kicked my butt though. Sleep deprivation is brutal.
I think my sister is past the sleep deprivation phase - her daughter is 2. But her daughter is very active. Sister is 51. Her husband is 55.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:raise an infant. Feel free to carry the baby but the sleep deprivation is really hard at 50
My sister is doing it - and doing it well. I'm more worried about the teenage years when my sister is in her mid-late 60s
My teenagers have actually been really easy, I can see an older me handling them quite well. Infant/toddler years kicked my butt though. Sleep deprivation is brutal.