Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure. My kids are 4 years apart, though. The bigger age gap is awesome for us. I've gotten to really enjoy/focus on each one''s babyhood, and when I get babied-out with the little one, I can spend big-kid time with the big one.
I had the first at 33 and second at 37, so I had age somewhat on my side...I didn't feel desperate to have the second. Also, I wasn't sure I wanted a second for a long time...not until after the first turned 3.
I would have felt so old having my first kid at 33.
Is your peer group fairly uneducated? Not one of my friends had a baby before 30 due to advanced degrees and careers.
+1.
I have a law degree and am a practicing lawyer. Ivy-educated. First kid at 29, third (and last) at 33. Sorry to disappoint.
Being so well educated, seems like you would have known it's not healthy to have kids so close together.
...and you should know it's not healthy to have a first pregnancy at 38, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure. My kids are 4 years apart, though. The bigger age gap is awesome for us. I've gotten to really enjoy/focus on each one''s babyhood, and when I get babied-out with the little one, I can spend big-kid time with the big one.
I had the first at 33 and second at 37, so I had age somewhat on my side...I didn't feel desperate to have the second. Also, I wasn't sure I wanted a second for a long time...not until after the first turned 3.
I would have felt so old having my first kid at 33.
Is your peer group fairly uneducated? Not one of my friends had a baby before 30 due to advanced degrees and careers.
+1.
I have a law degree and am a practicing lawyer. Ivy-educated. First kid at 29, third (and last) at 33. Sorry to disappoint.
Being so well educated, seems like you would have known it's not healthy to have kids so close together.
Sounds like they were all two years apart. Isn't that what WHO recommends?
Nope. The recommendation is to wait two year after the birth of a child to begin trying for another pregnancy. So even if you were to get pregnant right away, the kids would be close to three years apart.
I am baffled at the. Number of people who can't seem to figure this guidance out. The PP is right, children should be spaced a minimum or 2 years 9 months apart for optimal health.
Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. There seems to be judging for judging sake which just seems unnecessary. There are so many factors that go into family planning/child spacing, some of which we have so little control over. I believe that whatever works for the couple is none of my business and as it has little, if any, impact on my life, why even have an opinion. I think my child spacing is perfect for us. I think my friends' and family's child spacing is perfect for them. It all works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 year is too soon, 3 years is too long.
This
And I also refuse to have my kids be anything where there is a .5. For example, I wouldn't be cool with a 1.5. 2.5 etc age gap.
I like when birthdays are around the same time.
That is bizarre.
Not really. Maybe I'm OCD. But I hate how my one sister is 7 years older than me half the year and 8 years older the other half.
Then you get kids who are 2.5 years apart but three grades apart. I like things neater than that.
Plus, I refused to give my kids birthdays in Nov-March. Those suck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure. My kids are 4 years apart, though. The bigger age gap is awesome for us. I've gotten to really enjoy/focus on each one''s babyhood, and when I get babied-out with the little one, I can spend big-kid time with the big one.
I had the first at 33 and second at 37, so I had age somewhat on my side...I didn't feel desperate to have the second. Also, I wasn't sure I wanted a second for a long time...not until after the first turned 3.
I would have felt so old having my first kid at 33.
Is your peer group fairly uneducated? Not one of my friends had a baby before 30 due to advanced degrees and careers.
+1.
I have a law degree and am a practicing lawyer. Ivy-educated. First kid at 29, third (and last) at 33. Sorry to disappoint.
Being so well educated, seems like you would have known it's not healthy to have kids so close together.
Sounds like they were all two years apart. Isn't that what WHO recommends?
Nope. The recommendation is to wait two year after the birth of a child to begin trying for another pregnancy. So even if you were to get pregnant right away, the kids would be close to three years apart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure. My kids are 4 years apart, though. The bigger age gap is awesome for us. I've gotten to really enjoy/focus on each one''s babyhood, and when I get babied-out with the little one, I can spend big-kid time with the big one.
I had the first at 33 and second at 37, so I had age somewhat on my side...I didn't feel desperate to have the second. Also, I wasn't sure I wanted a second for a long time...not until after the first turned 3.
I would have felt so old having my first kid at 33.
Is your peer group fairly uneducated? Not one of my friends had a baby before 30 due to advanced degrees and careers.
+1.
I have a law degree and am a practicing lawyer. Ivy-educated. First kid at 29, third (and last) at 33. Sorry to disappoint.
Being so well educated, seems like you would have known it's not healthy to have kids so close together.
Sounds like they were all two years apart. Isn't that what WHO recommends?
Nope. The recommendation is to wait two year after the birth of a child to begin trying for another pregnancy. So even if you were to get pregnant right away, the kids would be close to three years apart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy hell. Now we're saying 33 is old to have a first child?
NP here, I wouldn't say old but definitely not young.
That poster said she felt she has time on her side, I think that's crazy,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure. My kids are 4 years apart, though. The bigger age gap is awesome for us. I've gotten to really enjoy/focus on each one''s babyhood, and when I get babied-out with the little one, I can spend big-kid time with the big one.
I had the first at 33 and second at 37, so I had age somewhat on my side...I didn't feel desperate to have the second. Also, I wasn't sure I wanted a second for a long time...not until after the first turned 3.
I would have felt so old having my first kid at 33.
Is your peer group fairly uneducated? Not one of my friends had a baby before 30 due to advanced degrees and careers.
+1.
I have a law degree and am a practicing lawyer. Ivy-educated. First kid at 29, third (and last) at 33. Sorry to disappoint.
Being so well educated, seems like you would have known it's not healthy to have kids so close together.
...and you should know it's not healthy to have a first pregnancy at 38, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure. My kids are 4 years apart, though. The bigger age gap is awesome for us. I've gotten to really enjoy/focus on each one''s babyhood, and when I get babied-out with the little one, I can spend big-kid time with the big one.
I had the first at 33 and second at 37, so I had age somewhat on my side...I didn't feel desperate to have the second. Also, I wasn't sure I wanted a second for a long time...not until after the first turned 3.
I would have felt so old having my first kid at 33.
Is your peer group fairly uneducated? Not one of my friends had a baby before 30 due to advanced degrees and careers.
+1.
I have a law degree and am a practicing lawyer. Ivy-educated. First kid at 29, third (and last) at 33. Sorry to disappoint.
Being so well educated, seems like you would have known it's not healthy to have kids so close together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure. My kids are 4 years apart, though. The bigger age gap is awesome for us. I've gotten to really enjoy/focus on each one''s babyhood, and when I get babied-out with the little one, I can spend big-kid time with the big one.
I had the first at 33 and second at 37, so I had age somewhat on my side...I didn't feel desperate to have the second. Also, I wasn't sure I wanted a second for a long time...not until after the first turned 3.
I would have felt so old having my first kid at 33.
Is your peer group fairly uneducated? Not one of my friends had a baby before 30 due to advanced degrees and careers.
+1.
I have a law degree and am a practicing lawyer. Ivy-educated. First kid at 29, third (and last) at 33. Sorry to disappoint.
DH and I both went to Stanford, I had my kids at 29 and 31 and you sound like a godawful insufferable smug b*tch.
Anonymous wrote:Because they're old when they start having kids and have to pop them out quickly before it's too late.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 year is too soon, 3 years is too long.
This
And I also refuse to have my kids be anything where there is a .5. For example, I wouldn't be cool with a 1.5. 2.5 etc age gap.
I like when birthdays are around the same time.
That is bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Holy hell. Now we're saying 33 is old to have a first child?