disneyholic family said:
that's actually a very good reason...
that is a thought that often crosses my mind.....life isn't necessarily easy...in fact, it's often quite the opposite....
even for my kids, who are gifted and were lucky enough to be born into a family that's at least reasonably financially confortable, still life could well be difficult for them....possibly more than difficult....
so i wonder to myself, how kind it was of me to bring my kids into that...
into a life where they may have to struggle and suffer.....(and given the current geopolitical turn of the world - the suffering is probably going to get much worse before it gets better - if it ever does)..
it's funny really, because back in the 60's that was one of the mantras - how we shouldn't bring children into this awful world.....and some of the people i know who don't have kids today are products of the 60's....but in the ensuing years, that point of view seemed to go undercover......but i think it may be coming back again...or at least, i've finally come around to that point of view...
what a cheerul topic for a board that's supposed to be about the happeist place on earth.....
That's a totally bogus reason not to have kids.
Today's world, despite all the sadness and hardship, is the best world in Human history, especially in the developed countries like North America and Europe.
Polio is gone. Smallpox is gone. Diptheria is gone in the developed world. Mumps and measles are considered simple childhood diseases instead of instant death sentences. People are actualy living through cancers and tumors, and look at the state of emergency medicine and surgury - injurries that would have been guaranteed fatal only 40 years ago are routinely fixed today. The average Human life span is up to around 75 years, whereas it was in teh 40s only a few centuries ago.
In countries like the US, people are born with so much to eat that obesity is actually becoming a health problem. Not only do we have plenty, but we have the widest variety of foods ever - beef, chicken, pork, fruits and vegetables of all descriptions, any kind of grain, and the variety of seafood that can be found in any grocery store anywhere in the US is absolutely miraculous. Just 50 years ago, fresh shrimp was considered the height of luxury in landlocked states, and beef was tough to get if you didn't live in the parts of the country where it was raised. Heck, I can get real lobster at my local Chinese buffet for $10!
There are still homeless people, but when is the last time you saw a shanty town? Not in my lifetime.
Wanna travel? Even people in what the US calls the "poverty" level often have cars and can save up enough to take a vacation once a year. Not everyone can afford WDW or Vegas, but a camping trip to the mountains or a few days at the beach are within the grasp of the vast majority of people.
Communications? Entertainment? Education? All have made advances in the last 200 years that would have made Ben Franklin curse the fact that he was born 18th century instead of the 20th.
Yes, there are still bad things in the world - war, poverty, disease, hunger, and worst of all, hatred. But each of these things is smaller and far less pervasive than they have ever been in all of Human existance, and they are only getting smaller. The world will never be perfect, but it is better now that it ever has been, and it's only getting better.