Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I met DH when I was 24, got engaged at 27, married at 29 and had 3 kids in my thirties. Now that I’m older, I wish I had kids earlier. I had my third child at almost 40. I will be in my seventies when I am a grandmother.
I have some acquaintances who are in their mid to late fifties and their kids are getting married young. They will be grandmothers by age 60.
It's not about age. It's about when you are in a healthy, loving relationship
I would think most people agree with this. The point is that you probably shouldn’t spend your 20s like the earlier poster who justified being old because she spent her 20s having casual sex and partying too much. Maybe one should…not do that.
Could not disagree more. Partying, traveling, and having fun in my 20s gave me the security to settle down in my 30s and feel totally peaceful about giving a few years really committing to motherhood. I did it all, had a very full and exciting life with lots of experiences and memories to draw on when I’m sitting in the dark rocking a screaming baby for hours a day. Had I not spent those years having fun and exploring I bet I’d feel super trapped and unfulfilled by the hard early childhood years.
I had mine at 33 and 37. The right age is whenever you feel you’re done with the first phase of your life and excited about the second. It’s different for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I met DH when I was 24, got engaged at 27, married at 29 and had 3 kids in my thirties. Now that I’m older, I wish I had kids earlier. I had my third child at almost 40. I will be in my seventies when I am a grandmother.
I have some acquaintances who are in their mid to late fifties and their kids are getting married young. They will be grandmothers by age 60.
It's not about age. It's about when you are in a healthy, loving relationship
I would think most people agree with this. The point is that you probably shouldn’t spend your 20s like the earlier poster who justified being old because she spent her 20s having casual sex and partying too much. Maybe one should…not do that.
Could not disagree more. Partying, traveling, and having fun in my 20s gave me the security to settle down in my 30s and feel totally peaceful about giving a few years really committing to motherhood. I did it all, had a very full and exciting life with lots of experiences and memories to draw on when I’m sitting in the dark rocking a screaming baby for hours a day. Had I not spent those years having fun and exploring I bet I’d feel super trapped and unfulfilled by the hard early childhood years.
I had mine at 33 and 37. The right age is whenever you feel you’re done with the first phase of your life and excited about the second. It’s different for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I met DH when I was 24, got engaged at 27, married at 29 and had 3 kids in my thirties. Now that I’m older, I wish I had kids earlier. I had my third child at almost 40. I will be in my seventies when I am a grandmother.
I have some acquaintances who are in their mid to late fifties and their kids are getting married young. They will be grandmothers by age 60.
It's not about age. It's about when you are in a healthy, loving relationship
I would think most people agree with this. The point is that you probably shouldn’t spend your 20s like the earlier poster who justified being old because she spent her 20s having casual sex and partying too much. Maybe one should…not do that.
Anonymous wrote:Ideal is 26-30. Too bad I couldn't find a decent person to marry until 29. It wasn't for lack of trying that's for sure!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I met DH when I was 24, got engaged at 27, married at 29 and had 3 kids in my thirties. Now that I’m older, I wish I had kids earlier. I had my third child at almost 40. I will be in my seventies when I am a grandmother.
I have some acquaintances who are in their mid to late fifties and their kids are getting married young. They will be grandmothers by age 60.
It's not about age. It's about when you are in a healthy, loving relationship
Anonymous wrote:I met DH when I was 24, got engaged at 27, married at 29 and had 3 kids in my thirties. Now that I’m older, I wish I had kids earlier. I had my third child at almost 40. I will be in my seventies when I am a grandmother.
I have some acquaintances who are in their mid to late fifties and their kids are getting married young. They will be grandmothers by age 60.
Anonymous wrote:I had mine at 37 and a few weeks shy of my 40th birthday. Love my kids, but in an ideal world I would NOT have had them this late. Depends on the person obviously, but I think 28-33 is a good balance of being financially stable but also young enough from a physical perspective. Being well into your 40s and changing diapers, lugging strollers, etc. is...bleh.
Anonymous wrote:34-year-old pp here. Thanks for the reality check. My doctor suggested we wait until a year of ttc before we do any tests or look into IVF - is this wise at our age?
Anonymous wrote:I had my kids at 29 and 32. My only complaint with that timing is now mixing perimenopause with teenage hormones.