pearlieq said:Exactly! Having a child is the single biggest predictor that a woman will end up in poverty. Kids, as much as we love them, are a huge economic risk and burden and they severely limit women's choices and opportunities.
I would encourage any young women to delay having kids as long as possible and to be ultra, ultra careful about birth control.
I am offended by this. Yes, my children limited my choices and opportunities (I still wound up with a JD, thank you very much) but at least I am not like many women I know spending $20K or more on in vitro because they waited into their 30s to get pregnant.
I was raised really poor (my mother was a single mother on welfare) and believe me, when you are trying to put food on the table for 4 people with nothing but food stamps, you have enough troubles today without worrying about saving for tomorrow (besides, if you try to save on welfare, they reduce your benefit, so the incentive is not to save).
My mother managed to claw her way into a technical education and got married (boy did that second income help) and had both children go to college (I went to a VERY expensive private school) and professional school. I know it can be done, but the condecending tone of some of the posts on this thread just rubs me the wong way.