Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If we did a third, we’d have to get a second hotel room, one kid would sit by themselves during a flight, amusement parks, one kid would need to bring a friend or ride alone, car space would be tight. I’m happy with my two.
Most airplanes I go on are three seats across each way. So it’s 3 + 2. No kid sitting alone.
Yes, it does make travel more expensive. But I wouldn’t not have a second kid because of being uneven at an amusement park. It’s fine not to want a third kid, but to not have a third to avoid one parent ride solo on a roller coaster during an annual Disney trip is probably not a good reason. The truth is that all of these are reasons you like having two - they’re not reasons to NOT have a third. And that’s fine.
Yes for economy. Not so for business.
Anonymous wrote:After we had two I realized risking having a third that could potentially have special needs wasn’t just a risk I was taking on, but a risk for our whole family. In the most obvious way, it would impact my kids and the time and resources we had for them. We’ve seen it happen with two sets of friends. Their healthy/non-sn child gets significantly less of their parents attention, and that’s manifested in not so good ways. Their needs often come second.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 kids are just not getting the parental attention that 2 are. It’s mathematically impossible. And 2 kids are getting less than an only child. It’s just a decision you have to balance. My sister is just baby/toddler crazy. But once the kid can walk/talk/pee on their own, they must fend for themselves and she is on to the next baby.
Disagree. In my experience too much parent attention is not great for kids. Lots of special snowflakes out there who really struggle with the real world. Kids with 2+ siblings seem to be better adjusted in general. The helicopter parenting many people take on today is not good for kids. They are more anxious, insecure, self centered, and rigid.
My sister helicopter parents her 3 kids. I have 2 children, one of whom boards.
You don’t know what you are talking about at all. Keep your mouth shut.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 kids are just not getting the parental attention that 2 are. It’s mathematically impossible. And 2 kids are getting less than an only child. It’s just a decision you have to balance. My sister is just baby/toddler crazy. But once the kid can walk/talk/pee on their own, they must fend for themselves and she is on to the next baby.
Disagree. In my experience too much parent attention is not great for kids. Lots of special snowflakes out there who really struggle with the real world. Kids with 2+ siblings seem to be better adjusted in general. The helicopter parenting many people take on today is not good for kids. They are more anxious, insecure, self centered, and rigid.
I agree with you.
I think each child/sibling group/family is different and you can’t just make blanket statements like this. Some kids in larger families feel emotionally neglected (I am one of these. My siblings were more difficult kids and demanded more of my parents’ attention than I did and the assumption was that I would be fine and didn’t need parental attention as much) and would benefit from more one-one time/attention from parents. Some kids need more space and independence from parents to thrive. Some parents are helicopter-y (no matter how many kids they have) and this can be bad. Some parents are too hands-off (no matter how many kids they have) and this can be bad too.
Anonymous wrote:How did you decide to stop at 2 kids or decide to have more? We are on the fence about baby #3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 kids are just not getting the parental attention that 2 are. It’s mathematically impossible. And 2 kids are getting less than an only child. It’s just a decision you have to balance. My sister is just baby/toddler crazy. But once the kid can walk/talk/pee on their own, they must fend for themselves and she is on to the next baby.
Disagree. In my experience too much parent attention is not great for kids. Lots of special snowflakes out there who really struggle with the real world. Kids with 2+ siblings seem to be better adjusted in general. The helicopter parenting many people take on today is not good for kids. They are more anxious, insecure, self centered, and rigid.
I agree with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 kids are just not getting the parental attention that 2 are. It’s mathematically impossible. And 2 kids are getting less than an only child. It’s just a decision you have to balance. My sister is just baby/toddler crazy. But once the kid can walk/talk/pee on their own, they must fend for themselves and she is on to the next baby.
Disagree. In my experience too much parent attention is not great for kids. Lots of special snowflakes out there who really struggle with the real world. Kids with 2+ siblings seem to be better adjusted in general. The helicopter parenting many people take on today is not good for kids. They are more anxious, insecure, self centered, and rigid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If we did a third, we’d have to get a second hotel room, one kid would sit by themselves during a flight, amusement parks, one kid would need to bring a friend or ride alone, car space would be tight. I’m happy with my two.
Most airplanes I go on are three seats across each way. So it’s 3 + 2. No kid sitting alone.
Yes, it does make travel more expensive. But I wouldn’t not have a second kid because of being uneven at an amusement park. It’s fine not to want a third kid, but to not have a third to avoid one parent ride solo on a roller coaster during an annual Disney trip is probably not a good reason. The truth is that all of these are reasons you like having two - they’re not reasons to NOT have a third. And that’s fine.
Anonymous wrote:I think Gavin McInnes said it best. One is for losers. Two is for gays. Three is the bare minimum.
Anonymous wrote:I think Gavin McInnes said it best. One is for losers. Two is for gays. Three is the bare minimum.
Anonymous wrote:1. Is the best thing you can do for the environment.
2. We had the bandwidth for another typically developing child, but not a high-needs child. Nobody thinks they’re going to get the kid with severe disabilities, but it happens.
3. We looked at the projected cost of college. If you haven’t looked in awhile, it’s staggering.