Anonymous wrote:Only if he's truly a full partner in parenting & adulting. And I'd wait for a year to start trying again. 15 months is REALLY close together.
Anonymous wrote:I’d just got for it. Worst (or best?) case scenario is they are 15 months apart, but it’s way more likely that it takes a couple months, or you go through a miscarriage first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s best to wait much longer if you want to give your second child the best chance at being healthy. I guess you aren’t nursing but even then, your body needs to recover just from the pregnancy.
OP here. I am breastfeeding but I fail to see why what even matters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can, give your child a sibling. That's the best thing you can do for your child.
100% agree. Nothing worse than an only child. And before all the single children out there that are about to disagree with me, it absolutely normal to feel the way you do simply because you don’t know the difference your life would have been. What’s worse is if a single child has to go through a parents divorce, and yes 50% will.
seriously???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have several friends who have 2 easy babies, so it absolutely can happen. I think some people just have laid back personalities and make laid back kids. That said, I would wait until a year because 6 month olds are pretty easy (if they sleep well) and misleading as to the energy required once they get mobile.
If you’re breastfeeding, your period may not yet have returned, and so you are less likely to get pregnant until you wean. But odds go up if your baby is not breastfeeding overnight.
OP here. I am breastfeeding but he is combo fed. He sleeps from 8-7 and eats 5 times a day. I'm not really that concerned if the second child will be easy. I think any child can be easy at one stage, and then hard the next stage. I have heard that laid back parents result in laid back babies, and high strung parents result in high strung babies.
I'd probably start around 9 or 10 months. Frankly, your fertility is not increasing. If you think you want one more, waiting a year doesn't seem like a good bet. And yes, you could get a tough baby. You'll make it through.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s best to wait much longer if you want to give your second child the best chance at being healthy. I guess you aren’t nursing but even then, your body needs to recover just from the pregnancy.
OP here. I am breastfeeding but I fail to see why what even matters?
Breastfeeding is nature’s birth control. It’s very unlikely that you even have a period at 6 months.
I breast fed each of my two kids until just over a year. I was in my early 30’s and we didn’t even bother with birth control until 9 months - and that’s because I was paranoid. I got my period shortly after weaning each kid - around 13 or 14 months postpartum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can, give your child a sibling. That's the best thing you can do for your child.
100% agree. Nothing worse than an only child. And before all the single children out there that are about to disagree with me, it absolutely normal to feel the way you do simply because you don’t know the difference your life would have been. What’s worse is if a single child has to go through a parents divorce, and yes 50% will.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would wait to 12 months.
Yes - not that much time in terms of your fertility but HUGE difference for your kids.
OP here. I want to wait until a year before we start trying for another one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have several friends who have 2 easy babies, so it absolutely can happen. I think some people just have laid back personalities and make laid back kids. That said, I would wait until a year because 6 month olds are pretty easy (if they sleep well) and misleading as to the energy required once they get mobile.
If you’re breastfeeding, your period may not yet have returned, and so you are less likely to get pregnant until you wean. But odds go up if your baby is not breastfeeding overnight.
OP here. I am breastfeeding but he is combo fed. He sleeps from 8-7 and eats 5 times a day. I'm not really that concerned if the second child will be easy. I think any child can be easy at one stage, and then hard the next stage. I have heard that laid back parents result in laid back babies, and high strung parents result in high strung babies.