I don’t think I want children until my 40s.
“Why?” I hear you cry. Because I’ve got shit to do, that’s why.
At the ripe old age of 33, I feel like I’ve barely ticked off a tenth of the ‘to do list’ items I want to accomplish before I’m packing school lunches and taking the kids to soccer practice. And despite the obvious ‘but your ovaries are withering and dying with every day!!’ reality I’m constantly reminded of by people who’ve apparently made my reproductive system their business, I’ve just never put pressure on myself to have kids in my thirties.
Unfortunately though, when you hit the big 3-0 you tend to find yourself surrounded by women who are hearing their biological clocks tick with a canine-like precision and have absolutely no dramas reminding you that you’re also in the middle of a fertility countdown by behaving in a way that suggests their internal monologue consists of just one sentence… “I’M RUNNING OUT OF EGGS!”
Now before the outrage machine goes into meltdown, I am not saying that these are not totally valid concerns. I get it. Us ladies are all running out of time with our finite reproductive resources, while Tom, Dick and Harry are able to sow their wild oats until well past the point where their seed drill should have been packed up in the shed, covered with a sheet and forgotten about. Sometimes it seems hard to believe that despite Darwin’s theory of evolution, our lady bits have apparently not gotten the memo that we’re all marrying later and focusing on career and trying to be financially secure in a day and age where that is nigh on impossible, so it’d be really great if they could ‘evolve’ too and just give us an extra 10 years to get shit done. I studied ‘economies of scale’ at school, if those little egg factories are pumping out 400,000 follicles already, an extra 200,000 to tide us over for a decade really shouldn’t break the bank.
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I am 43 without kids. I’ve looked back on life and realize that I want to experience a family and kids. My boyfriend whom I love dearly thinks I’m selfish because I’d be in my 60s while my kids are in their 20s but I have much energy, love, affection, good health and experiences and wisdom to give. I agree with the author of course I could be hit by a bus or any other tragedy that could come down the pike of life but so can anyone besides if you ask children with older great parents their experience I bet you’d hear no lack of love or admiration. I look at my life and soon my parents and all my aunts and uncles will be passing on so who at that point will be there to enjoy life with? Besides friends my age that I have?
I totally agree with Mrs H (see previous comments). I am approaching 39 and have never been sure if I want kids or not but I tend to lean on the "not" side. I read the post and felt like it was empowering. I don't think the author is selfish, nor do I think she is trying to make any claims disputing health/science etc. I think she is basically telling all of the crap we are bombarded with as females that she doesn't care what everyone else does and that she wants to wait until 40 and if she has them, great, if not - it seems like she is ok with that. All of you women on this posting that are carrying on about her being selfish or that it's cruel for her to "force" her potential kids to have older parents - to you I say this: clearly you are not happy. I am sorry that you are not happy but take a look at what you posted. There is so much judgement and passive-aggressiveness in your words. You sound like women who are mean to other women who have something that you want but don't have or that you are just so tired and frustrated that getting your angst or spiky words onto someone else is your only remedy. I applaud any woman who is not afraid to seek out her own destiny and say "to hell with" all of the chatter about when and if you should have babies. Life is a mystery. Yes, science is great but it is also evolving and a great mystery. The things breath, eat, drink and feel are so different from what our ancestors did so to base your present life on the statistics from historical data is a haphazard way to live. Even statistics based on current data are just that.. statistics. You have no way of knowing what every sample in that population eats, or where they live, their level of physical fitness, if they have ever had STDs or taken birth-control pills or were outside on a windy day when a nearby farmer happened to be spraying his crops. We should support each other. Not tear each other down. Everyone has the right to live their life differently and believe things differently. Do you really think that one day down the road she is going to remember a snide comment about how her 20 yo child will resent her being in her 60's and think "gee, I really wish I would have listened to MrsUser28 and had kids younger, maybe my son and I wouldn't be arguing so much right now" ---she won't.