Anonymous wrote:I have a boy and a girl and I don't give gender-specific advice.
I tell them do not assume someone else will support you. Always make your own money. My belief is allowing someone else to support you financially permanently alters critical dynamics in the relationship. Beyond that, they will figure it out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have four adult daughters. They’re all fine. We never “advised” them on any of this BS. All we’ve ever done is support them on whatever they want to do. You’re overthinking this, OP. It’s almost as if you’re projecting your own regrets on to them.
Lol, are you daughters 50+ years old, if not you don't really know how it will all "work out".
They’re all well into their 30s. All four have master’s degrees. Three are married, all to great guys. Two have children. The other two don’t and don’t plan to.
Yes, it’s all worked out. They’ve taken different paths and taken different amounts of time to arrive to different places and we’ve supported them all along the way without “advising” them on anything unless they ask first. You model behavior for them. You don’t tell them what to do.
not impressed.
Anonymous wrote:Do not waste your college and especially grad school years. Shop for a husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks.
I think I just worry because I didn't work for so long, and the women they know who do work (aunts, friends, neighbors) all appear to have this great balance - I worry they have a unrealistically rosy picture of motherhood, that's all. Like, can doctors even take a few years off to SAH, or is that impossible? (Just an example)
Why do they need to take time off?
I'm a great mom and I never stopped working.
Also, how do you know they'll be able to have kids?
How do you know they'll find a partner to have kids with?
How do you know they'll want to have kids?
How do you know they'll have a spouse/partner who assumes they should be the one to take time off if they have kids?
You're making A LOT of antiquated assumptions about womanhood/motherhood.
Your children - whether male or female - should pursue a career they are interested in and life will happen along the way. But right now is about college or career path, not planning for parenthood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have four adult daughters. They’re all fine. We never “advised” them on any of this BS. All we’ve ever done is support them on whatever they want to do. You’re overthinking this, OP. It’s almost as if you’re projecting your own regrets on to them.
Lol, are you daughters 50+ years old, if not you don't really know how it will all "work out".
They’re all well into their 30s. All four have master’s degrees. Three are married, all to great guys. Two have children. The other two don’t and don’t plan to.
Yes, it’s all worked out. They’ve taken different paths and taken different amounts of time to arrive to different places and we’ve supported them all along the way without “advising” them on anything unless they ask first. You model behavior for them. You don’t tell them what to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am suggesting Emergency Medicine. Shift work with good pay and can flex in/out in terms intensity as family stuff changes. That's irrespective of gender.
plus don't forget to sprinkle in some trauma and exhaustion from working night shifts.
I feel like there are a lot of glowy people on here about being a dr. My relatives that are young drs work far harder than basically all others in my cohort except big law (and honestly I would still argue in residency they work harder than my friends who have done that). Yes there are some unicorn specialties but they may not be ones your kid is actually interested in and they are usually the hardest to get into for residency. If you are passionate about medicine do it! We need great drs. Of course. But don't go into it thinking it's anything but a pretty tough road for awhile. Good salary when out of residency but HUGE loans for the vast majority which cuts into it for another 5-10 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To not have kids unless you really love children and have an incredibly strong desire.
Looking back, I had kids because everyone told me how great it is and it seemed like the next step in life. Major regrets.
Um, okay.
I don't "really love children" and didn't have an "incredibly strong desire," and my kids are the best thing that I've done and I've never regretted it.
OP, leave this particular crap to your kid to decide.
Anonymous wrote:It's taking advice from other people that leads people down paths that make them unhappy. If you give them any advice at all, it should be "don't listen to advice."
If you've supported their self-esteem and autonomy, given them a good education, taught them common sense and practical life skills, they'll be fine no matter what they decide to do.
So many people choose a path because that's what they "ought to do," and they end up resentful and unhappy. Don't be part of that pressure, explicitly or implicitly. Just give them the tools to know their own minds, and to advocate for themselves and their needs in any relationship, personal or professional.
Anonymous wrote:I am a lawyer and there are a lot of doctors in my family.
Doctors like to b**ch a lot about their jobs, but the reality is in some specialty you can have good hours and get paid well. Much more so than law, where if you have a government job you work full time and top out at 176k, or if you are the rare biglaw partner, you can make a ton but work terrible hours.
For ex, one of my relatives is a psychiatrist who works three eight hours days at a hospital and makes 140k. That's not bank, but that's for 24 hours, total. No on call, etc. To make that much as an attorney, you'd be working at least forty hours a week and probably more like fifty or more. My other relative has a practice that involves procedures, works maybe thirty to forty hours a week, and makes half a million a year.
My point is, dont discourage med school just because she wants to be a mom.