Anonymous wrote:y forAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will probably get flamed for this, but... As you get into your late 40s and 50s, it is not that you are too tired, but that the DESIRE to do the whole parenting thing decreases. Car pool, test prep, mommy dramas, birthday parties, sports cheering, saving for college, acquaintances of kid parents, getting up early, Saturdays spent at games, picky eaters, worry about teens sex life, ect that you start to think ... no more. Life is too short. Some people just want a more adult oriented life style. that frankly others are living. The days of travelling in your 30s are long passed by that point. OK vent over.
Disagree! You can be like me.....a 45 woman who tried to be a mom for many years....and finally, this year, adopted a newborn...and could not be more ready and excited for it all!!
We struggled with infertility for years too. So I feel like I am so grateful for my kids and probably enjoy all the kid-oriented stuff more because I know it could have not been. I live a pretty full life before our kids came along so now I am thrilled to bits to be a parent, something I longed for for so many years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There have always been older mothers. Not too many generations ago women started having kids in their late teens when they married and had them until their early 40s when menopause stopped things.
My mother was born to my grandmother when she was 40 -- this would have been in the mid 1920s.
These young, insecure DCUM moms who try to shame women in their late 30s through 40s should open a history book once in a while.
Absolutely correct. Older moms are nothing new. My grandmother had seven children, her first in 1941 at age 25 and her last in 1959 at age 43. My MIL was 42 when she had her youngest (my DH) in 1965.
What IS new is older first time moms. But I can't see how that matters one way or another. If anything the older first time mom is in a better position--not already worn out from raising the older children.