Anonymous wrote:MayBug wrote:First, congratulations on the birth of your second kid! My employer and his wife, who works as a therapist, have three children. They seem to manage their careers well. If you both enjoy a certain amount of flexibility in your jobs, I don't see a reason why you shouldn't. For a fourth kid, however, you probably would need to wait until the eldest could support you.
Do not expect your oldest child to help you raise your other children. That's abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious how many of these responders have three kids. Everyone I know with three+ kids wouldn’t change it. It’s human nature to adapt. If you have a strong marriage, similar desire for more kids, and means - go for it.
I can, off the top of my head, think of 3 different families who confessed that while they adore kid 3, that having 3 kids pushed them over the edge from a mostly sane life to an insane one and they probably wouldn't have done it if they knew. One of my mom friends likes to say "3 kids is about .5 kids too many." (Because at 2 kids you don't yet know you should just be done, for your own sake.)
I’m one of those people me say this too. But I doubt I’ll say it in 15 years when these years are a hazy memory and I have 3 adults to (hopefully) enjoy. I’m not saying to have a 3rd if it will truly push you over the edge, but it can be truth that for a period 3 kids is total chaos and you joke about that and long term it was still the right choice for you and your circumstances
Right now (with a 2/4/6yo) I do have many moments of thinking how incredibly easier life would be by now with only a 4 and 6yo. But now is a phase, the 2 and 4 yos are becoming friends in a way the 6yo would never….theres pros and cons
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious how many of these responders have three kids. Everyone I know with three+ kids wouldn’t change it. It’s human nature to adapt. If you have a strong marriage, similar desire for more kids, and means - go for it.
I can, off the top of my head, think of 3 different families who confessed that while they adore kid 3, that having 3 kids pushed them over the edge from a mostly sane life to an insane one and they probably wouldn't have done it if they knew. One of my mom friends likes to say "3 kids is about .5 kids too many." (Because at 2 kids you don't yet know you should just be done, for your own sake.)
Anonymous wrote:I’m curious how many of these responders have three kids. Everyone I know with three+ kids wouldn’t change it. It’s human nature to adapt. If you have a strong marriage, similar desire for more kids, and means - go for it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a PP on this thread and will add that what you want your kids to believe is important is another critical piece of the puzzle.
We work hard and want to accomplish something. Are we going to cure cancer or invent whatever comes after the electric car - of course not - but going to work every day, caring about working, believing it's important - doesn't that have some impact on your child's perception of the world? More than his/her benefit of micromanaged homework?
This is what I think about, and I lean to the former. Otherwise we would step down, focus on comfort, and stop pushing so much. But that just feels like giving up on life. Don't we need people in the world who push for better things? And don't parental examples help build that motivation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are not a small side gig. They need more attention and hands-on time than those types of careers allow. I am a FT working mom of two who made a lot of sacrifices to be present as a parent, and just from an hours-per-kid-per-week perspective I was at the bare minimum. Three kids would have been too much. I speak as someone who has always worked and whose own parents were so career focused they really effed up my brother and me with their lack of attention and detachment from our daily lives.
This is a real thing. I feel guilty of it. I can tell my kids want and need me way more. But I enjoy my high earning career and struggle with young children.
I personally think adding a third would be selfish and mean.
Also your marriage matters.