Anonymous wrote:I am having panic attacks about my upcoming embryo transfer. I have waited so long to be a mother and have put up with so much from my husband who...is really immature among other things. We fight all the time and spend a lot of weekends stone walling each other. He has emotional regulation issues and was an alcoholic in the past although no longer. He does not deal with change well and I am anxious about adding a baby to the dynamic.
I want a baby desperately but I want the whole package. I want a wonderful warm home, financial stability, a mature, kind, emotionally stable husband and father who will be my rock and a good role model for our child.
I just don't feel like i can have it all as I am in my late thirties. I just want to cry with this stress!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a baby in a bad marriage for similar reasons and donât regret it for 1 second. I am so happy being a mom and she and I have an amazing relationship (she is 3).
I still hate my husband but have made peace with NOT having âthe whole packageâ and that will be key for you in my opinion if you choose to move forward.
I agree with this. Life is never perfect. Husbands aren't, kids aren't.
Give up on the perfect life, try to calm yourself, and have a baby. For many, the kids is the most important goal.
I have a friend who gave up IVF and adopted. Her marriage was ok at the time. Everything went spectacularly south when the kids were in elementary school. One kid has anxiety and struggles in school, the other is hyperactive. My friend is am educated, intelligent, compassionate person.
My main point is, relationships are kind of a dice roll anyway. In the situation you're in, you know what you're facing. To give that up for an unknown that could be better or worse doesn't make sense to me.
2nd best is to do a bunch of egg freezing, divorce, and try to find a better partner for your needs. But men don't usually like biological clock pressure.
I'm assuming single motherhood doesn't meet your "want it all" threshold.
I believe there is some chance that the IVF process is worse for your relationship and stress than having a baby.
Have you, ârelationships are a dice rollâ person, been in a difficult or bad marriage?
No relationship is perfect but someone who has addiction and emotional regulation issues is throwing out a bunch of red flags for having a child. Most children add a large amount of stress to a marriage.
PP addressed. I do not need to explain what's imperfect in my life to you, to be qualified enough to share my opinion. I think I have sufficient experience.
I am old enough to have seen a lot. And to have been surprised by a lot. In both positive and negative directions. I think many families have red flag tendencies...so I don't rush to judge people for having kids "anyway".
Of course you donât have to explain yourself. In fact you donât need to respond at all. But I can certainly take your opinion with a grain of salt when you donât indicate that you have personal experience with what Op is experiencing- the panic of planning for a family with a troubled partner. Weâre all pretty old around her and opinions are like you know what⌠everybody has one.
This isnât about idiocracy or society⌠itâs about OPâs life and the well being of herself and her children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a baby in a bad marriage for similar reasons and donât regret it for 1 second. I am so happy being a mom and she and I have an amazing relationship (she is 3).
I still hate my husband but have made peace with NOT having âthe whole packageâ and that will be key for you in my opinion if you choose to move forward.
I agree with this. Life is never perfect. Husbands aren't, kids aren't.
Give up on the perfect life, try to calm yourself, and have a baby. For many, the kids is the most important goal.
I have a friend who gave up IVF and adopted. Her marriage was ok at the time. Everything went spectacularly south when the kids were in elementary school. One kid has anxiety and struggles in school, the other is hyperactive. My friend is am educated, intelligent, compassionate person.
My main point is, relationships are kind of a dice roll anyway. In the situation you're in, you know what you're facing. To give that up for an unknown that could be better or worse doesn't make sense to me.
2nd best is to do a bunch of egg freezing, divorce, and try to find a better partner for your needs. But men don't usually like biological clock pressure.
I'm assuming single motherhood doesn't meet your "want it all" threshold.
I believe there is some chance that the IVF process is worse for your relationship and stress than having a baby.
Have you, ârelationships are a dice rollâ person, been in a difficult or bad marriage?
No relationship is perfect but someone who has addiction and emotional regulation issues is throwing out a bunch of red flags for having a child. Most children add a large amount of stress to a marriage.
PP addressed. I do not need to explain what's imperfect in my life to you, to be qualified enough to share my opinion. I think I have sufficient experience.
I am old enough to have seen a lot. And to have been surprised by a lot. In both positive and negative directions. I think many families have red flag tendencies...so I don't rush to judge people for having kids "anyway".
Anonymous wrote:https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1204801.page
This
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a baby in a bad marriage for similar reasons and donât regret it for 1 second. I am so happy being a mom and she and I have an amazing relationship (she is 3).
I still hate my husband but have made peace with NOT having âthe whole packageâ and that will be key for you in my opinion if you choose to move forward.
+1
Donât give up your best shot at motherhood because your husband is a loser. Have the baby and then see how things pan out and proceed accordingly.
Yes, only do whatâs best for you. Screw the child, they are only there to serve the desire of the woman to be a mother.
There are plenty of married women who are terrible mothers and single women who are great mothers.
Or should only married cis heteronormative people become parents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a baby in a bad marriage for similar reasons and donât regret it for 1 second. I am so happy being a mom and she and I have an amazing relationship (she is 3).
I still hate my husband but have made peace with NOT having âthe whole packageâ and that will be key for you in my opinion if you choose to move forward.
I agree with this. Life is never perfect. Husbands aren't, kids aren't.
Give up on the perfect life, try to calm yourself, and have a baby. For many, the kids is the most important goal.
I have a friend who gave up IVF and adopted. Her marriage was ok at the time. Everything went spectacularly south when the kids were in elementary school. One kid has anxiety and struggles in school, the other is hyperactive. My friend is am educated, intelligent, compassionate person.
My main point is, relationships are kind of a dice roll anyway. In the situation you're in, you know what you're facing. To give that up for an unknown that could be better or worse doesn't make sense to me.
2nd best is to do a bunch of egg freezing, divorce, and try to find a better partner for your needs. But men don't usually like biological clock pressure.
I'm assuming single motherhood doesn't meet your "want it all" threshold.
I believe there is some chance that the IVF process is worse for your relationship and stress than having a baby.
Have you, ârelationships are a dice rollâ person, been in a difficult or bad marriage?
No relationship is perfect but someone who has addiction and emotional regulation issues is throwing out a bunch of red flags for having a child. Most children add a large amount of stress to a marriage.
Anonymous wrote:PP. Meant to explain by "going spectacularly south" that husband had affairs and they divorced. I'm horrified that he agreed to adopt kids and then would do that. The kids have abandonment issues because they know they are adopted and he is a very lazy divorced dad with respect to custody.