Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell do you expect?
Wages don't grow. Housing is completely unaffordable. Childcare costs are insane. Healthcare is ludicrous. Even if you had kids, stupid minivan to haul them around to soccer practice now costs $40k. And don't even talk about college costs....
You want to die in poverty? Have a kid.
Younger generations didn't create these problems. They're the ones that have to live with them though. The only solution is to not have kids just so that you can keep your financial head above water.
It's not money, it's decades of Hollywood and feminist propaganda. It's "cool" and "sophisticated" and "worldly" to piss away your prime fertility years living in the big city and traveling and waiting two hours to be seated for a hip brunch and rising the ladder at your make-work career, so you can piss more money away on shoes, travel, and instagram-worthy furniture. #GirlBoss #LeanIn
Oooooo the anti-brunch guy is back!!! I missed you and your rants against women going to brunch!!!
Is it really a dude? Gross.
I assumed it was a cranky old religious hag.
I'm not a "dude" or a "hag". I'm in my mid 40s, married, mother of three, one grandchild, a meaningful career, and all of my children attended top 25 universities. Play coy that being a wine or martini drunk, and wasting weekends away shopping and brunching weren't a "thing" for women over the last two decades. It's basically the premise of SATC. Waste your 20s and 30s and you'll land a Mr Big. Fertility? Don't worry about it! Have hedonistic fun! Millions of women who should have been married and having babies were wasting their lives on nothing. Pointless consumerism, and now, nothing to show for it. No heirs, no legacy, nobody will remember them. Genetic dead ends. Never mind end of life, imagine being stricken with an illness in your 30s 40s 50s and no husband or children to help. Or a husband who is exponentially more likely to leave you because he has no children with you. Never experiencing the joys of grandchildren. It's terribly sad how many women were conned.
Lord if you are only mid-40s, you sound prematurely ANCIENT. It's no longer a badge of honor to become a grandma at 45, sorry. And the fact that you think anything other than birthing babies is a complete waste of life...is deeply sad. I am sure you didn't mean to imply that Mother Theresa was a wasted life, or any woman or man who's struggled with infertility.
And guess what? If childfree people are stricken with illness in their 30s, 40s, 50s, they will pay for things using their very own health insurance that they get from their jobs, and they will get help from their friends and boyfriends and family members if they need it. It's so sad that you think that the only people who would ever help another human being are their spouses or their children. (Also WTF, I know you had your kids young but I doubt they are much help if you have cancer in your 30s.).
I do think there was a short window in which some women were misled. I am genX born in 1969 and I had more than one PHYSICIAN tell me in my 20s that I could start my family at 40 if I wanted to. This was in the early days of IVF when it looked like fertility could be extended for a lot longer than turned out to be feasible. But by the time I was in my 30s that was no longer any kind of conventional wisdom. I had my first of 3 kids at 34, no regrets.
And for the record, nobody watched sex in the city and thought, I will just have brunch and buy shoes and forget about having meaningful relationships. I didn't watch all of it because it seemed kind of stupid to me, but it was all about angst over husbands and babies with Kim Cattrell as the shocking rebel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell do you expect?
Wages don't grow. Housing is completely unaffordable. Childcare costs are insane. Healthcare is ludicrous. Even if you had kids, stupid minivan to haul them around to soccer practice now costs $40k. And don't even talk about college costs....
You want to die in poverty? Have a kid.
Younger generations didn't create these problems. They're the ones that have to live with them though. The only solution is to not have kids just so that you can keep your financial head above water.
It's not money, it's decades of Hollywood and feminist propaganda. It's "cool" and "sophisticated" and "worldly" to piss away your prime fertility years living in the big city and traveling and waiting two hours to be seated for a hip brunch and rising the ladder at your make-work career, so you can piss more money away on shoes, travel, and instagram-worthy furniture. #GirlBoss #LeanIn
Oooooo the anti-brunch guy is back!!! I missed you and your rants against women going to brunch!!!
Is it really a dude? Gross.
I assumed it was a cranky old religious hag.
I'm not a "dude" or a "hag". I'm in my mid 40s, married, mother of three, one grandchild, a meaningful career, and all of my children attended top 25 universities. Play coy that being a wine or martini drunk, and wasting weekends away shopping and brunching weren't a "thing" for women over the last two decades. It's basically the premise of SATC. Waste your 20s and 30s and you'll land a Mr Big. Fertility? Don't worry about it! Have hedonistic fun! Millions of women who should have been married and having babies were wasting their lives on nothing. Pointless consumerism, and now, nothing to show for it. No heirs, no legacy, nobody will remember them. Genetic dead ends. Never mind end of life, imagine being stricken with an illness in your 30s 40s 50s and no husband or children to help. Or a husband who is exponentially more likely to leave you because he has no children with you. Never experiencing the joys of grandchildren. It's terribly sad how many women were conned.
Lord if you are only mid-40s, you sound prematurely ANCIENT. It's no longer a badge of honor to become a grandma at 45, sorry. And the fact that you think anything other than birthing babies is a complete waste of life...is deeply sad. I am sure you didn't mean to imply that Mother Theresa was a wasted life, or any woman or man who's struggled with infertility.
And guess what? If childfree people are stricken with illness in their 30s, 40s, 50s, they will pay for things using their very own health insurance that they get from their jobs, and they will get help from their friends and boyfriends and family members if they need it. It's so sad that you think that the only people who would ever help another human being are their spouses or their children. (Also WTF, I know you had your kids young but I doubt they are much help if you have cancer in your 30s.).
I do think there was a short window in which some women were misled. I am genX born in 1969 and I had more than one PHYSICIAN tell me in my 20s that I could start my family at 40 if I wanted to. This was in the early days of IVF when it looked like fertility could be extended for a lot longer than turned out to be feasible. But by the time I was in my 30s that was no longer any kind of conventional wisdom. I had my first of 3 kids at 34, no regrets.
And for the record, nobody watched sex in the city and thought, I will just have brunch and buy shoes and forget about having meaningful relationships. I didn't watch all of it because it seemed kind of stupid to me, but it was all about angst over husbands and babies with Kim Cattrell as the shocking rebel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The good ones are all snapped up in college or grad school. You don’t have to marry right away, but they are all seriously committed by 25. At least in my own experience - this describes everyone I know in a healthy stable marriage with a reasonably equal partner. Even if they waited to marry/have kids, they were together fairly young.
You need a wider circle. dH and I met at 27 and 29, married now almost 25 years.
Right?? Several of my friends met and married their classmates at top business schools - where MANY of the men were single in their late 20s. Most of them (men) got married in their early 30s and have started having babies in their mid 30s. Your timeline is maybe only accurate for super religious people, less educated and then maybe regionally the Midwest or south
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The good ones are all snapped up in college or grad school. You don’t have to marry right away, but they are all seriously committed by 25. At least in my own experience - this describes everyone I know in a healthy stable marriage with a reasonably equal partner. Even if they waited to marry/have kids, they were together fairly young.
You need a wider circle. dH and I met at 27 and 29, married now almost 25 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a single mother by choice in my 30s. Wonder if Brunch Granny thinks I’m more or less horrifying than the child free folks in their 40s?
Are you part of the elite 5-10% of girlboss women?
The issue isn’t people like you.
The issue is society thinking all women can be like top 5-10% girlboss women.
What are girlboss women?
Usually that refers to women who shill trashy MLMs, like smelly wax melts and overpriced nail stickers, which makes Granny using it (incorrectly) even funnier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really don’t know anyone who had a child before 30. And I got married young. I had my first at 30 and was one of the youngest.
Imagine being smug about waiting until your 30s to have your first child. High probability you and/or your husband die before you experience the joy of grandchildren.
I absolutely do not care whether I live long enough to meet my grandchildren. My mother married young, had me young but still died when her first grandchild was 14 months old because the time she grew up in encouraged smoking. Your life is about more than your children and grandchildren, I hope.
Darling, you have exposed yourself. I 100% guarantee you do not have children. There is no greater joy than children and a close second is the great joy in seeing another generation come into this world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a single mother by choice in my 30s. Wonder if Brunch Granny thinks I’m more or less horrifying than the child free folks in their 40s?
Are you part of the elite 5-10% of girlboss women?
The issue isn’t people like you.
The issue is society thinking all women can be like top 5-10% girlboss women.
What are girlboss women?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell do you expect?
Wages don't grow. Housing is completely unaffordable. Childcare costs are insane. Healthcare is ludicrous. Even if you had kids, stupid minivan to haul them around to soccer practice now costs $40k. And don't even talk about college costs....
You want to die in poverty? Have a kid.
Younger generations didn't create these problems. They're the ones that have to live with them though. The only solution is to not have kids just so that you can keep your financial head above water.
It's not money, it's decades of Hollywood and feminist propaganda. It's "cool" and "sophisticated" and "worldly" to piss away your prime fertility years living in the big city and traveling and waiting two hours to be seated for a hip brunch and rising the ladder at your make-work career, so you can piss more money away on shoes, travel, and instagram-worthy furniture. #GirlBoss #LeanIn
Oooooo the anti-brunch guy is back!!! I missed you and your rants against women going to brunch!!!
This is my favorite post ever.
Is it really a dude? Gross.
I assumed it was a cranky old religious hag.
Hmmm, it could be. I always pictured a greasy, pasty incel who think the reason he can't find a sex partner is because all us gals are off at brunch with our besties and posting our meals on IG.
Either way, I find the vendetta against brunches hilarious. 1000 years from now, when historians write textbooks on the downfall of Western Civilization, it will all come down to one thing......brunch. The Eggs Benedict that dried up 4 billion women's eggs. Women both ate the bacon and brought it home. We waffled on having kids because we wanted to eat the waffles, and then it was too late.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a single mother by choice in my 30s. Wonder if Brunch Granny thinks I’m more or less horrifying than the child free folks in their 40s?
Are you part of the elite 5-10% of girlboss women?
The issue isn’t people like you.
The issue is society thinking all women can be like top 5-10% girlboss women.
What are girlboss women?