'Anonymous wrote:* Whether to stay with a 2x cheating spouse. Made the wrong decision, but made the right one when it was a 3x cheating spouse.
* Whether to take on a multiple murderer as a client, under heavy pressure from my firm--the only question was whether he should get the death penalty, which I am against, but I turned it down because I wouldn't feel physically safe with him anywhere near me. Do not regret in the least.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent my 20s living the good life in France. My job was ending and I had no prospects and did not want to go back to the US. I was despondent. Then suddenly not one but two offers materialized: the first was for a super-high paying, long-lasting, non-teaching job at an international organization in Geneva, the second was teaching French at the American school in Rome for one year for a maternity leave replacement. I had never lived in Italy but had studied Italian and wanted to improve it. I saw that as the bold, adventurous choice. I had been in France for a number of years, spoke French well and would be able to continue to live in France with the first offer. The location was only two hours away from where I was then living. I saw that as the safe choice. In the end I went with the money. It was a grown-up job. I bought a car. It was a beautiful area. I had a great time. I don't regret my choice at all but often think about what kind of life I would have had had I picked the job in Rome.
This really spoke to me. I'm in my 20s (no kids but DCUM is a good source of information regardless!) and recently turned down a full-time, permanent government job in order to take a temporary contract with an international organization in Paris. I kind of regret not taking the safe option but I'm having such a great time here that I'm hoping it ends up being worth it.. It's so scary not knowing how things will work out, but hopefully if I work hard and keep being proactive something good will come along once my contract ends!
Anonymous wrote:I spent my 20s living the good life in France. My job was ending and I had no prospects and did not want to go back to the US. I was despondent. Then suddenly not one but two offers materialized: the first was for a super-high paying, long-lasting, non-teaching job at an international organization in Geneva, the second was teaching French at the American school in Rome for one year for a maternity leave replacement. I had never lived in Italy but had studied Italian and wanted to improve it. I saw that as the bold, adventurous choice. I had been in France for a number of years, spoke French well and would be able to continue to live in France with the first offer. The location was only two hours away from where I was then living. I saw that as the safe choice. In the end I went with the money. It was a grown-up job. I bought a car. It was a beautiful area. I had a great time. I don't regret my choice at all but often think about what kind of life I would have had had I picked the job in Rome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:- Not reporting my rape in college because I didn't want to let my parents down (yes, that was my thought process). I now regret that decision and wish I had but at that point, I thought it would hurt them too much and I know they wouldn't be okay with me living away from them. It was tough to keep that to myself and to this day, they don't know. It still hurts.
- Finally deciding to fight back against my abusive ex boyfriend. It saved my life although when 911 finally showed up (took a while) they didn't know what my chances would be with how much blood I had lost.
- Deciding to walk away from my fiancé after a devastating miscarriage. He tried to rush me to get over it and didn't understand why I didn't want to immediately try again. He had no idea what losing a baby felt like and despite being perfect in every other way, I knew that I couldn't one day marry this man. I loved him then and part of me still loves him now, but my whole world came crashing down when the miscarriage happened and I still don't know if I've fully recovered from it.
Counseling would have been another option. People respond very differently to grief.
Anonymous wrote:To have a child on my own - single mom by choice style, not an 'oops, now what do I do' situation. Hardest but best decision of my life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To have a child on my own - single mom by choice style, not an 'oops, now what do I do' situation. Hardest but best decision of my life.
Great for you. Same here but why do you feel the need to clarify is was not an "oops, now what do I do' situation?
Do you think you are a better person or mother b/c you actively made the choice before conceiving?
NP. Way to read into things. I believe the PP's point regarding "single mom by choice" meant that was the HARD DECISION. Which is the point of the thread.
Move along if you are going to insert your own insecurities.
I read it as she was clarifying that she was debating whether to do it before getting pregnant, so it wasn't a scenario of contemplating being a mom vs. abortion or adoption but rather a scenario of "do I try to get pregnant or not". Important distinction as those are very different decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To have a child on my own - single mom by choice style, not an 'oops, now what do I do' situation. Hardest but best decision of my life.
Great for you. Same here but why do you feel the need to clarify is was not an "oops, now what do I do' situation?
Do you think you are a better person or mother b/c you actively made the choice before conceiving?
NP. Way to read into things. I believe the PP's point regarding "single mom by choice" meant that was the HARD DECISION. Which is the point of the thread.
Move along if you are going to insert your own insecurities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To have a child on my own - single mom by choice style, not an 'oops, now what do I do' situation. Hardest but best decision of my life.
Great for you. Same here but why do you feel the need to clarify is was not an "oops, now what do I do' situation?
Do you think you are a better person or mother b/c you actively made the choice before conceiving?