Krissalee said:I am 32 years old. I have been married since I was 25 (celebrating our 7th anniversary at WDW).
DH and I choose not to have children. I have never wanted to have children. Early in our marriage, people asked questions about kids, and we always said, "We aren't having any. We are happy as we are."
I guess they thought we were bluffing, because the questions have been coming hard and fast.
My usual responses, depending on the questioning:
"No, we are not having children"
"No, we are not planning on having children."
"We don't want to have children - our dogs are enough."
"We don't want children - we are very happy with our life as it is."
"We choose not to have chidren."
"We choose to be child-free."
"We choose not to be parents."
"We want to be good aunts and uncles, and that will satisfy us"
People keep on asking, and they don't find my answers acceptable. They don't feel that my choice is VALID?
It makes me angry, but it also makes me sad. I think a lot of people are having children because it is expected of them, and not what they really want.
Any one want to give their input - I would appreciate it!
Kris & Steve said:
My biggest pet peeve with talking to people who ask why we don't have kids, etc. is, I get told the same thing over & over again. I call it the infamous quote...you know how it goes..."You'll change you mind when you get older".
My DW and I (I am also a woman) tell people we would like to have kids, and people are genuinely surprised that we do. They seem to think it's not possible. Also, many people believe that the only reason to get married is to have children, but what about octogenarians who marry? Are they going to be giving birth anytime soon?LuluLovesDisney said:Just a thought I had- married couples get the "why don't you want kids??" question, but if a homosexual couple *does* want kids they get the "why *do* you want kids?" question.
The issues are somewhat related. Those who desperately want kids shouldn't be denied the opportunity and those who don't want them shouldn't be pressured. People shouldn't have kids just because it's the "next step" but because they really want them and are prepared for all the consequences both positive and negative. Waaaay too many neglected and unwanted children out there. It's not good any way you look at it.
I was just thinking about a friend of mine- both he and his partner would love to adopt a child, but they live in the South and have been shamed strongly the few times they've mentioned it. They would be excellent parents, too.
Just another spin on our topic . . .
nono said:I still get asked if I'm "trying" all the time from non-friends...I guess to some people, children aren't really "yours" unless they are bio. I feel bad for them for being so narrow-minded. They're probably the same folks asking you guys about being child-free. I always respond, "Are you asking me if I have s*x with my husband?" That generally redirects the conversation!
TDC Nala said:I ducked out of this thread because it was meant for married persons to answer and I'm not. I should have stayed out of it to start with.
But, good grief, would people really step over an injured child to help a cat? Wow.
I'll go back into my hole under the rock now.