pigletgirl
Mama to 4 Disney loving kids!
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,404
I think you have to decide what is best for you and your husband. Who am I to judge? 

A-MEN!
We need to stop and think about what we're saying when we bemoan having older parents or being older and having a new baby. Consider the alternative.
A-MEN!
We need to stop and think about what we're saying when we bemoan having older parents or being older and having a new baby. Consider the alternative.
I don't understand the angst about "People thought my parents were my grandparents"... "My mom didn't want to sleep on the ground"... "I only had my parents in my life until I was 40.".
Are those things unfortunate? Sure. But the alternative is that you were never born. Is that better?? I sure don't think so.
I'm pretty sure that your dh would prefer that his parents decided to have him at the ago of 40, despite his hating having older parents, as opposed to not having him at 40, and he wouldn't be on this earth, married to you with with is own 5 children.
I just posed this to my husband....seems he thinks its fine for a man (he's 45) and not so fine for a woman (I'm 35).....he needs a good talking to.
well, my mother is 41, her boyfriend of 7 years is 33 and they're having a baby that's due in the summer.
BTW...i'm 23....![]()
Actually the alternative is a moot point since the people *bemoaning* having older parents were actually born. I knew a girl who had older parents and was teased relentlesly because of it, I'm pretty sure she has the right to bemoan the fact that her parents were older. We don't know what these people have been through so we don't have the right to judge their feelings about their own lives.
If the alternative were pointed out to these ungrateful people, maybe they would stop their moaning. Kids find all kinds of things to tease other children about, you can't stop it. What about kids who are short? Or fat? Or those that have red hair (like I do)? I was teased quite a bit too, for something I had no control over. Does that mean that I had the right to bemoan the fact that I had red hair?
I have a similar situation in my family.well, my mother is 41, her boyfriend of 7 years is 33 and they're having a baby that's due in the summer.
BTW...i'm 23....![]()
Hmmm, I don't remember saying that my dh preferred his parents not having him or being upset that they had him at 40. What he hated was that they couldn't do the things with him that younger parents do with their children. And he knew they wouldn't be around when he was as old as them to enjoy his kids.
I would appreciate thoughts and presumptions not be put/made on me. And you wouldn't understand the angst about having older--grandparent aged parents unless you experience it first hand. Insinuating "the alternative is that you were never born" is rediculous to bring into what I said. I don't think anyone in their right mind would feel that way
As I said in my post, not for me, but if they can afford it and health is good, go for it. It doesn't affect me in anyway. Just telling my personal story with older in-laws. I have seen the problems and dh be upset at seeing his older parents health deteriorate and have to help take care of their financial matters because there was no will. Its been a mess. I think there is alot that an over 40 year old should think about before they make that kind of decision to have a baby at that older age. Im not for it or against it. Just all for doing their research before they take the plunge.
If the alternative were pointed out to these ungrateful people, maybe they would stop their moaning. Kids find all kinds of things to tease other children about, you can't stop it. What about kids who are short? Or fat? Or those that have red hair (like I do)? I was teased quite a bit too, for something I had no control over. Does that mean that I had the right to bemoan the fact that I had red hair?
I am noticing that a lot of posters are saying they wouldn't because they have already had their children. I can totally understand not wanting to have more kids at age 44, but what if this was to be your first and possibly only child? My DH and I didn't really want kids, then at our "advanced age" (isn't that a lovely label they put on us older moms?) we decided that we did. In a way I actually do wish that we had had them earlier, but then they wouldn't have been the two darling boys we ended up with! Anyway, I'm glad that we didn't toss the possibility aside just because I would be 40 and 42 when giving birth. Wouldn't have traded that for the world.
This reminds me of something Dear Abby used to tell readers that were thinking of doing something at a later age. Deciding not to do something because you will be 44 when you do it. Guess what? You will STILL be 44 whether you do it or not!
Why don't you walk a mile in their shoes before you make that assumption because when you say something like taht you are really just being a judgemental. Or better why don't you tell my friend that she was just an ungrateful kid because she bemoaned the fact that her mother was older and died of alzheimer's before she was even 30 years old. You can tell her how ungrateful she was when she was crying at her casket that she wished she had more time with her mother.
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I was making an observation, not trying to be snarky or mean, honestly. I'm sure there are kids born to young parents that are teased for all sorts of reasons, there will always be something so teasing isn't a reason I wouldn't have a child at that age.
I also don't think of older parents as grandparent aged parents, they're just older parents. I think of grandparents starting at 60 and older, so a 40 something is still way under that radar.
My brother came along 16 years after I did. Sure my mother was older than when she had me, but she was (and is) in great physical shape. There was nothing she didn't do with him that she did with me. She was on the go with my brother day and night, and did all the activities any younger parents did and then some. She walks 3 miles everyday even now.
I don't think age is as big a factor as physical fitness and financial well being but that's just my opinion.
Sorry if you were offended by my comments, they weren't meant to be offensive.
That's very sad and I'm sure it was devastating to your friend. But parents can die when they are young too. Unfortunately, we just never know. Many people lose their parents before they even turn 18. So, there are no guarantees either way. I am sorry for your friend.
That's very sad and I'm sure it was devastating to your friend. But parents can die when they are young too. Unfortunately, we just never know. Many people lose their parents before they even turn 18. So, there are no guarantees either way. I am sorry for your friend.
You can tell her how ungrateful she was when she was crying at her casket that she wished she had more time with her mother.
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That is true but in the case of my friend her mother died of disease that is brought on with old age. She lived a long healthy life up until that point so although we never know, my friend did actually know that her mother didn't die young. I know my friend only wishes that she was as fortunate as her brothers to have had much more time with her when she wishes her mom hadn't waited so long to have her and that is as far from ungrateful as one can be.
My point to that poster is to show that we have no idea what people go through in their own lives with their parents and none of us have the right to accuse them of being ungrateful or whiners or moaners when we have never been in their shoes.
It must have been a terrible thing for your friend to watch her mother die and to lose her by the time she was thirty. I'm sure everyone who has a parent die wishes that they had had more time with them.
So while I'm deeply sympathetic to your friend, the point remains... which would she prefer? To have only had her mother for 30 years or not to have been born at all?
Yes, that would be very sad. I am sure my younger siblings wish they had more time with our parents. But no matter how much time we all get, it is never enough. I saw my parents young, stressed, and always working. My younger siblings saw them older, and able to spend more time with the family at home.
I am glad my mother had me when she was young. I do feel sorry that my younger siblings won't have as much time. But the time they have had has been wonderful.
I agree that nobody should accuse someone else of being ungrateful if they haven't walked in their shoes. We all have out own pain and life isn't easy.