Anonymous wrote:I'm pregnant with my first and just starting to announce and people are surprised and saying I'm "really" young to be having a baby. I'm 26 and married, not 17! We both have good jobs and I'll be returning to work after the birth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News flash. You should be thinking of winding it up by 30, not just starting to think about it. It is this extended adolescence thing thats fueling this. No, you don't have to travel around the world, buy the huge house.
Wrong. Smart women make sure they are set in their career and are on track for retirement and home ownership before having kids who are extremely expensive.
Really wrong. It's the house thing that's killing this generation. You want it all right away. And...retirement? That is a joke when you are 59 to 62 and you have kids in college. No retirement happening until late 60s ....if you are lucky.
Please don't tell me about how expensive kids are....we all did it.
I was 25 when I had my first son. I was three years out of grad school, we both had good jobs with career tracks, and owned our home. We lived below our means and have saved well for retirement and for college for our three sons. It can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News flash. You should be thinking of winding it up by 30, not just starting to think about it. It is this extended adolescence thing thats fueling this. No, you don't have to travel around the world, buy the huge house.
Wrong. Smart women make sure they are set in their career and are on track for retirement and home ownership before having kids who are extremely expensive.
Waiting until your in your 30s does not automatically make you smarter than a woman that had a child in her 20s. What is wrong with you? That line of thinking is the farthest thing from smart.
Most people don't need to wait until they own a house to have kids. Kids can also live in apartments and townhouses or heaven forbid a rental home. They don't need to see your name on a mortgage to be well taken care of and well adjusted children.
Kids are expensive, but so are IVF treatments and their cost burden on the healthcare system and so is the fact that you will have young children at the same time that you have to take care of aging parents, that will be incredibly draining on your finances if it occurs simultaneously. It will also be worse for you if you end up with your own serious health problems right around the time your kids are in high school or college.
There are pros and cons on both sides. Don't act like you are so much smarter. That just makes you sound incredibly dim witted.
It doesn't make you smarter but it does make you more likely to have gotten to a place in your career where you can have a child and coast for a bit while still earning good money. It also makes you more likely to be financially stable and able to afford kids.
When I was 26 I had a job that required a lot of travel. I know make 2x as money and very rarely have to travel. Having a child at 26 would have destroyed my career. I probably would have had to take a few years off from working. Instead I continued to climb.
Many IVF treatments are a result of male factor. Waiting a few extra years to have kids doesn't mean you're on a fast road to IVF. There's a huge difference between having kids at 26, 35 and 40. You have to weigh the options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News flash. You should be thinking of winding it up by 30, not just starting to think about it. It is this extended adolescence thing thats fueling this. No, you don't have to travel around the world, buy the huge house.
Wrong. Smart women make sure they are set in their career and are on track for retirement and home ownership before having kids who are extremely expensive.
Waiting until your in your 30s does not automatically make you smarter than a woman that had a child in her 20s. What is wrong with you? That line of thinking is the farthest thing from smart.
Most people don't need to wait until they own a house to have kids. Kids can also live in apartments and townhouses or heaven forbid a rental home. They don't need to see your name on a mortgage to be well taken care of and well adjusted children.
Kids are expensive, but so are IVF treatments and their cost burden on the healthcare system and so is the fact that you will have young children at the same time that you have to take care of aging parents, that will be incredibly draining on your finances if it occurs simultaneously. It will also be worse for you if you end up with your own serious health problems right around the time your kids are in high school or college.
There are pros and cons on both sides. Don't act like you are so much smarter. That just makes you sound incredibly dim witted.
It doesn't make you smarter but it does make you more likely to have gotten to a place in your career where you can have a child and coast for a bit while still earning good money. It also makes you more likely to be financially stable and able to afford kids.
When I was 26 I had a job that required a lot of travel. I know make 2x as money and very rarely have to travel. Having a child at 26 would have destroyed my career. I probably would have had to take a few years off from working. Instead I continued to climb.
Many IVF treatments are a result of male factor. Waiting a few extra years to have kids doesn't mean you're on a fast road to IVF. There's a huge difference between having kids at 26, 35 and 40. You have to weigh the options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News flash. You should be thinking of winding it up by 30, not just starting to think about it. It is this extended adolescence thing thats fueling this. No, you don't have to travel around the world, buy the huge house.
Wrong. Smart women make sure they are set in their career and are on track for retirement and home ownership before having kids who are extremely expensive.
Waiting until your in your 30s does not automatically make you smarter than a woman that had a child in her 20s. What is wrong with you? That line of thinking is the farthest thing from smart.
Most people don't need to wait until they own a house to have kids. Kids can also live in apartments and townhouses or heaven forbid a rental home. They don't need to see your name on a mortgage to be well taken care of and well adjusted children.
Kids are expensive, but so are IVF treatments and their cost burden on the healthcare system and so is the fact that you will have young children at the same time that you have to take care of aging parents, that will be incredibly draining on your finances if it occurs simultaneously. It will also be worse for you if you end up with your own serious health problems right around the time your kids are in high school or college.
There are pros and cons on both sides. Don't act like you are so much smarter. That just makes you sound incredibly dim witted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News flash. You should be thinking of winding it up by 30, not just starting to think about it. It is this extended adolescence thing thats fueling this. No, you don't have to travel around the world, buy the huge house.
Wrong. Smart women make sure they are set in their career and are on track for retirement and home ownership before having kids who are extremely expensive.