Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister has been married for over 25 years. She's successful, has many friends, and is very active and well known in her community. Her husband had been married before, young, it ended ugly, and he has (now grown) children. He told her when they were young enough that he'd have kids with her if that's what she wanted, but that if it were up to him alone he really didn't want more kids. She elected not to have any.
The other day she told me she "immensely regrets" her decision. I was surprised.
I'm just curious if anyone else reading this is in the same boat, and how you're dealing with it. I feel badly for her.
I know someone in a similar situation but I'm not sure if she regrets it. Think of all that money and free time! lol
Think of growing alone and nobody taking care of you… oh wait, that’s USA 101
Not this tired line again. Go visit several nursing homes and see how many people living in them have living children, then report back.
Huh? Children who love them and helped them move into assisted living or nursing home so that they could be better cared for? Who oversee their care to make sure they get the right medication, proper food, care and attention?
Do you really think they get care and attention and children supervise anything? The elderly get a shower once a week, they're drugged and sitting in bed most of the time and the children maybe visit weekly, if that. I'd rather die at home peacefully - parent with 2 kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister has been married for over 25 years. She's successful, has many friends, and is very active and well known in her community. Her husband had been married before, young, it ended ugly, and he has (now grown) children. He told her when they were young enough that he'd have kids with her if that's what she wanted, but that if it were up to him alone he really didn't want more kids. She elected not to have any.
The other day she told me she "immensely regrets" her decision. I was surprised.
I'm just curious if anyone else reading this is in the same boat, and how you're dealing with it. I feel badly for her.
I know someone in a similar situation but I'm not sure if she regrets it. Think of all that money and free time! lol
Think of growing alone and nobody taking care of you… oh wait, that’s USA 101
Not this tired line again. Go visit several nursing homes and see how many people living in them have living children, then report back.
Huh? Children who love them and helped them move into assisted living or nursing home so that they could be better cared for? Who oversee their care to make sure they get the right medication, proper food, care and attention?
Do you really think they get care and attention and children supervise anything? The elderly get a shower once a week, they're drugged and sitting in bed most of the time and the children maybe visit weekly, if that. I'd rather die at home peacefully - parent with 2 kids
The PP "children oversee their care" is ridiculous. There's also a lot of elder abuse by children toward their own parents. No one here seems to think that their own child might abuse them but it happens.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who is child-free by choice, I find it immensely odd when these discussions come up that so many think CFBC people pass on kids because of "travel and fun!" like we're perpetually stuck in our early 20s backpacking phase. Most of the CFBC people I know made that decision for bigger reasons such as knowing they wouldn't be good at it, or chronic illness, or intense jobs, or just it flat out didn't appeal to them. I don't think I've ever heard someone say, "think of all the travel and fun!" Weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only people I know well who don't have kids are women who aged out of having them prior to finding the right relationship. They regret that they didn't have kids, but I suppose feel that it was out of their hands. They more generally regret how their lives turned out.
I personally tried to have kids as a single mother. Although it was not successful, I am very glad that I tried (despite the expense and toll it took on my life). I think that I would regret it if I hadn't.
I would have been such a person. Instead I married the wrong person had a kid and divorced. It’s my second-worst-case scenario, worst being alone and childless. I never wanted to be a single mother but he was extremely abusive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone who is child-free by choice, I find it immensely odd when these discussions come up that so many think CFBC people pass on kids because of "travel and fun!" like we're perpetually stuck in our early 20s backpacking phase. Most of the CFBC people I know made that decision for bigger reasons such as knowing they wouldn't be good at it, or chronic illness, or intense jobs, or just it flat out didn't appeal to them. I don't think I've ever heard someone say, "think of all the travel and fun!" Weird.
+1 they're all moms with very limited imaginations
My best friend is child free by choice mainly because she likes her freedom. She has a lot of hobbies, including skiing all over the world, and feels she would be resentful if she lost the ability to pick up and go at a moment’s notice. And I fully support her! You don’t need a “serious” reason to be child free. Just not wanting kids is enough of a reason.
-mom of two
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone who is child-free by choice, I find it immensely odd when these discussions come up that so many think CFBC people pass on kids because of "travel and fun!" like we're perpetually stuck in our early 20s backpacking phase. Most of the CFBC people I know made that decision for bigger reasons such as knowing they wouldn't be good at it, or chronic illness, or intense jobs, or just it flat out didn't appeal to them. I don't think I've ever heard someone say, "think of all the travel and fun!" Weird.
+1 they're all moms with very limited imaginations
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The grass is always greener, but you have to live with your choices. Kids aren’t easy.
Exactly. But you don't know what the other path looks like without going down it. We ended up in the opposite situation: we had kids but wish we didn't.
Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister has been married for over 25 years. She's successful, has many friends, and is very active and well known in her community. Her husband had been married before, young, it ended ugly, and he has (now grown) children. He told her when they were young enough that he'd have kids with her if that's what she wanted, but that if it were up to him alone he really didn't want more kids. She elected not to have any.
The other day she told me she "immensely regrets" her decision. I was surprised.
I'm just curious if anyone else reading this is in the same boat, and how you're dealing with it. I feel badly for her.
I know someone in a similar situation but I'm not sure if she regrets it. Think of all that money and free time! lol
Think of growing alone and nobody taking care of you… oh wait, that’s USA 101
Not this tired line again. Go visit several nursing homes and see how many people living in them have living children, then report back.
Huh? Children who love them and helped them move into assisted living or nursing home so that they could be better cared for? Who oversee their care to make sure they get the right medication, proper food, care and attention?
Do you really think they get care and attention and children supervise anything? The elderly get a shower once a week, they're drugged and sitting in bed most of the time and the children maybe visit weekly, if that. I'd rather die at home peacefully - parent with 2 kids
Anonymous wrote:It’s not too late for your sister, there are so many kids that need to be adopted between 12 and 17, they need good stable families, she won’t be raising them from the ground up but what she will give them is a new homebase, when my kids are gone that’s what I’m gonna do.
These kids stay in the foster system and get moved around from time to time never find a place to call home, eventually they age out, are giving a little bit of assistance and then basically booted out.
It’s likely not going to be an immediate bond like she would have with an in ant but that could change over time; she’s basically just telling a kid that hey listen I’ve got you for the next three years or whatever but this will always be your home, go out into the world and come home for Christmas, call me when you have a bad break up, everyone deserves a place to dread going to Thanksgiving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The grass is always greener, but you have to live with your choices. Kids aren’t easy.
Exactly. But you don't know what the other path looks like without going down it. We ended up in the opposite situation: we had kids but wish we didn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister has been married for over 25 years. She's successful, has many friends, and is very active and well known in her community. Her husband had been married before, young, it ended ugly, and he has (now grown) children. He told her when they were young enough that he'd have kids with her if that's what she wanted, but that if it were up to him alone he really didn't want more kids. She elected not to have any.
The other day she told me she "immensely regrets" her decision. I was surprised.
I'm just curious if anyone else reading this is in the same boat, and how you're dealing with it. I feel badly for her.
I know someone in a similar situation but I'm not sure if she regrets it. Think of all that money and free time! lol
Think of growing alone and nobody taking care of you… oh wait, that’s USA 101
Not this tired line again. Go visit several nursing homes and see how many people living in them have living children, then report back.
Huh? Children who love them and helped them move into assisted living or nursing home so that they could be better cared for? Who oversee their care to make sure they get the right medication, proper food, care and attention?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister has been married for over 25 years. She's successful, has many friends, and is very active and well known in her community. Her husband had been married before, young, it ended ugly, and he has (now grown) children. He told her when they were young enough that he'd have kids with her if that's what she wanted, but that if it were up to him alone he really didn't want more kids. She elected not to have any.
The other day she told me she "immensely regrets" her decision. I was surprised.
I'm just curious if anyone else reading this is in the same boat, and how you're dealing with it. I feel badly for her.
I know someone in a similar situation but I'm not sure if she regrets it. Think of all that money and free time! lol
Think of growing alone and nobody taking care of you… oh wait, that’s USA 101
Not this tired line again. Go visit several nursing homes and see how many people living in them have living children, then report back.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who is child-free by choice, I find it immensely odd when these discussions come up that so many think CFBC people pass on kids because of "travel and fun!" like we're perpetually stuck in our early 20s backpacking phase. Most of the CFBC people I know made that decision for bigger reasons such as knowing they wouldn't be good at it, or chronic illness, or intense jobs, or just it flat out didn't appeal to them. I don't think I've ever heard someone say, "think of all the travel and fun!" Weird.
Anonymous wrote:Kids are about creating legacy. No kids, no legacy. When you leave the earth, you're gone. Nobody will remember you.
But your kids would.[/quote
Why would this matter to you? You’ll be dead. Legacy only has meaning to you while you’re alive.