Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My wife says the same. Kids are 4 and 7. She loves them but if had to do it over, she wouldn't. I imagine when kids are grown she will feel differently. I feel like compassionately seperating from her so she can live her life free from the burden of children. I would rather raise them solo.
When I bartended, a surprising amount of women confessed to me they regretted having children. I never once heard that from a man. Anecdotal, but interesting.
I am a woman and I definitely feel this way. I love my son, but if I had a time machine and could undo becoming a mother and all the stress, job difficulty, sleeplessness, loss of freedom, and loss of quality of life that comes with it, I would. Being a mother is a thankless job in this society in which jobs make life impossible for mothers and men are basically useless.
I actually am in a similar situation as the PP. I actually think on a deep level my wife regrets the two kids we have. She admitted that she missed her old life of travel and being unencumbered. I am the more stable, default parent in our marriage. I don't mind it one bit and enjoy the kids and my career (which I spent time developing so I could scale back once I had kids). I don't enjoy my marriage, though. It makes it difficult being around someone who doesn't necessarily want to be there, but also doesn't want to leave.
So, you are left with the difficult choice of leaving and opening the can of worms that is divorce (I would absolutely take a bath as the primary earner and lose at least 50 percent of custody to someone who doesn't even necessarily want it but doesn't want to look like a mother abandoning her children). Or I grin and bear it, enjoy my pleasant, superficial marriage and enjoy my kids and take a break once they are either in college or finished with college. I've chosen the latter road and while it's been bumpy once interesting side effect is that my wife actually has grown to love parenting. She enjoys older kids and teenagers. And while I am more happy now, I am still looking at the door once we are done raising the kids (7 years). I'll be 50 and I'll take a bath in the divorce, but I'll have time to re-earn and re-build my life.