Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What you, and the OP miss is how this impacts the second child if conceived after relentless nagging by the mother. A child that the father never wanted. Sounds awesome. SOunds like you and the OP are very selfish. No thought whatsoever to the unborn child who might have a dad who never wanted him.
Why is it you think that the husband's resentment at having another child is Oh So the Most Important Thing in the Universe, but the wife's resentment at being forced into barrenness is just like a pimple - easily dismissed and unseemly to complain about? You want to talk about effect on the child? What about the effect on the first child, who is being denied siblings and forced to grow into loneliness? I can just see the conversation ten years from now:
"Mommy, how come everyone has brothers and sisters and I don't?"
"Because daddy thought that would be too much responsibility so he forced mommy not to have any more children."
This is truly offensive to all people who can have only one child or choose only one child. It's offensive to the children, too. It is offensive to call the childless "barren."
Is there anyone you managed to not offend with your ridiculous hyperbole?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "NO" always wins.
OP, since you are the one who is always bringing this up, you are the problem. stop.
Your one child should not have to grow up in a divorced home because you want what you want.
If it's OK for the husband to revoke his commitment to more than one child, it should be OK for the wife to revoke her commitment to marriage. I am not saying she SHOULD do this. I am saying it's not impossible, unreasonable or even unexpected to grow to hate the spouse who is forcing you into the image of the family they now decided they want - after promising you something entirely different. You're saying that the only reasonable way out is for the wife to shut up and get over it, and that's just not true. True, you can't force someone to have another child. Equally, you cannot force someone into continued love and respect of someone who betrayed a vision the wife thought they shared.
Good lord. You act like there is no one on earth whose perceptions differed from reality. I tis not an active betrayal like sleeping with someone else or having a double life. It's called change.
Many people, myself included, always thought they would have a big family Then they had one kid and the reality was far different. Yes, my husband wanted more than one child. But childbirth and pregnancy and the first year were horrible and I didn't want another one. My husband was understandably upset for awhile, but then he moved on because he valued what he ACTUALLY had more than some dream.
So the options for OP are 1. Browbeat her husband into having a kid he doesn't want and will regret
2. Browbeat her husband into having a kid he MAY not regret
3. Get out of her marriage because she can't get over her resentment
4. Or deal with it and move on.
I know what I would go with. And saying her husband is a manchild at 50 because he doesn't want to start over again as a parent? Wow. It seems like she has her own set of unrealistic perceptions she has to deal with.
Unless the OP's husband is a medical miracle, none of the hardships of pregnancy and childbirth will fall to his lot. What else do you have?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What you, and the OP miss is how this impacts the second child if conceived after relentless nagging by the mother. A child that the father never wanted. Sounds awesome. SOunds like you and the OP are very selfish. No thought whatsoever to the unborn child who might have a dad who never wanted him.
Why is it you think that the husband's resentment at having another child is Oh So the Most Important Thing in the Universe, but the wife's resentment at being forced into barrenness is just like a pimple - easily dismissed and unseemly to complain about? You want to talk about effect on the child? What about the effect on the first child, who is being denied siblings and forced to grow into loneliness? I can just see the conversation ten years from now:
"Mommy, how come everyone has brothers and sisters and I don't?"
"Because daddy thought that would be too much responsibility so he forced mommy not to have any more children."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it you think that the husband's resentment at having another child is Oh So the Most Important Thing in the Universe, but the wife's resentment at being forced into barrenness is just like a pimple - easily dismissed and unseemly to complain about? You want to talk about effect on the child? What about the effect on the first child, who is being denied siblings and forced to grow into loneliness? I can just see the conversation ten years from now:
"Mommy, how come everyone has brothers and sisters and I don't?"
"Because daddy thought that would be too much responsibility so he forced mommy not to have any more children."
Forced into barrenness?
Being denied siblings?
Grow into loneliness?
Forced mommy not to have any more children?
Uh, project much?
Anonymous wrote:Why is it you think that the husband's resentment at having another child is Oh So the Most Important Thing in the Universe, but the wife's resentment at being forced into barrenness is just like a pimple - easily dismissed and unseemly to complain about? You want to talk about effect on the child? What about the effect on the first child, who is being denied siblings and forced to grow into loneliness? I can just see the conversation ten years from now:
"Mommy, how come everyone has brothers and sisters and I don't?"
"Because daddy thought that would be too much responsibility so he forced mommy not to have any more children."
Anonymous wrote:
What you, and the OP miss is how this impacts the second child if conceived after relentless nagging by the mother. A child that the father never wanted. Sounds awesome. SOunds like you and the OP are very selfish. No thought whatsoever to the unborn child who might have a dad who never wanted him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is 50, the age of a typical new grandfather. This is a no brainer.
grandfather at age 50? maybe in west va
Anonymous wrote:Your DH is 50, the age of a typical new grandfather. This is a no brainer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "NO" always wins.
OP, since you are the one who is always bringing this up, you are the problem. stop.
Your one child should not have to grow up in a divorced home because you want what you want.
If it's OK for the husband to revoke his commitment to more than one child, it should be OK for the wife to revoke her commitment to marriage. I am not saying she SHOULD do this. I am saying it's not impossible, unreasonable or even unexpected to grow to hate the spouse who is forcing you into the image of the family they now decided they want - after promising you something entirely different. You're saying that the only reasonable way out is for the wife to shut up and get over it, and that's just not true. True, you can't force someone to have another child. Equally, you cannot force someone into continued love and respect of someone who betrayed a vision the wife thought they shared.
Good lord. You act like there is no one on earth whose perceptions differed from reality. I tis not an active betrayal like sleeping with someone else or having a double life. It's called change.
Many people, myself included, always thought they would have a big family Then they had one kid and the reality was far different. Yes, my husband wanted more than one child. But childbirth and pregnancy and the first year were horrible and I didn't want another one. My husband was understandably upset for awhile, but then he moved on because he valued what he ACTUALLY had more than some dream.
So the options for OP are 1. Browbeat her husband into having a kid he doesn't want and will regret
2. Browbeat her husband into having a kid he MAY not regret
3. Get out of her marriage because she can't get over her resentment
4. Or deal with it and move on.
I know what I would go with. And saying her husband is a manchild at 50 because he doesn't want to start over again as a parent? Wow. It seems like she has her own set of unrealistic perceptions she has to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is ridiculous to agree on the number of kids you are going to have before you even have kids. Talk about it - sure. Discuss what you THINK you want.
You have no idea what kind of parent you or your spouse will be. You have no idea how your life circumstances might change - for the better or worse. You have no idea how you will feel about being a parent until you are one. You have no idea what kind of needs or extra time and resources your child will require. You have no idea how your financial situation might change.
So to make some hard and fast 'rule' as though it is some kind of contract before hand is ridiculous. It isn't moral failure or lack of integrity or character to decide after living the reality of child that you now feel differently. Maybe you thought you only wanted one, but now want 2 or 3. Maybe you thought you wanted six but realize that 2 is what is best for you. Maybe you thought you wanted 3 but you haven't been able to conceive easily and the one you have it.
Life changes. Holding grudges and resentment over this will ruin your marriage.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is ridiculous to agree on the number of kids you are going to have before you even have kids. Talk about it - sure. Discuss what you THINK you want.
You have no idea what kind of parent you or your spouse will be. You have no idea how your life circumstances might change - for the better or worse. You have no idea how you will feel about being a parent until you are one. You have no idea what kind of needs or extra time and resources your child will require. You have no idea how your financial situation might change.
So to make some hard and fast 'rule' as though it is some kind of contract before hand is ridiculous. It isn't moral failure or lack of integrity or character to decide after living the reality of child that you now feel differently. Maybe you thought you only wanted one, but now want 2 or 3. Maybe you thought you wanted six but realize that 2 is what is best for you. Maybe you thought you wanted 3 but you haven't been able to conceive easily and the one you have it.
Life changes. Holding grudges and resentment over this will ruin your marriage.