T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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784.1 | | 3D::CHABOT | That fish, that is not catched thereby, | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:39 | 10 |
| Don't trust rumors--I know women who've had their tubes tied before
they had any kids. Now, you may have to be persistent with your
doctor, or maybe even find a new one, but you can do it.
My best wishes for dealing with pressures from relatives and friends.
I can't tell you what to do about that (since it wasn't anything
that happened in my family), but do hear that your choice is supported,
by me, anyway!
Lisa
|
784.2 | In for a penny.... | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:41 | 19 |
| The only thing that would be "Selfish" or "bad" would be to have
a child for the *wrong* reasons. (Like getting people off your back
about something that is essentially none of their business)
Could you perhaps look at the list of pro's and con's and eliminate
as factors those types of items? Could you make a list of pro's
and con's that address *only* your feelings?
The thing with this is, you can't return the kid to Lechmere if
it turns out not to be what you wanted. And 18 years can be a
lo-o-o-o-ng time. For both/all of you. *NO*body who is handy with
the "have a kid, you'll love it" advice will be around AFTERwards.
You must go with *your* feelings because it will be *your*
responsibility.
Good luck.
Dawn
|
784.3 | Live your own life. | VAXRT::CANNOY | I was so much older then... | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:52 | 23 |
| RE: Sterilization
I have had friends, both male and *female* who were sterilized in
their very early 20s. It does take a bit of trouble sometimes to
find a doctor, depending on where you live. If you are in the Boston
area, I'd tend to think it would be relatively easy. My first
inclination would be to call Planned Parenthood in Boston (my favorite
charity) and get some information.
I know there is/was an organization centered in NYC which was a
sterilization advocacy group--i.e., if you wanted the operation thay
would find a sympathetic doctor. Now, this was in the early 70s
when it was often very difficult for unmarried or child-free women
to obtain voluntary sterilization. I don't know if they still exist.
Please don't let others pressure you into feelign guilty about *your*
choice. I understand quite well this sort of pressure. No child
should be born to uncertain or unready parents. Live your own life
and don't feel guilty.
Blessed be,
Tamzen
|
784.4 | - | FLOWER::JASNIEWSKI | | Mon Apr 04 1988 14:57 | 10 |
|
Seems to me you have rationalized your feelings quite well!
You should be applauded for the attention level you have chosen to give
this concern. And in concurrance with the previous replys, I must agree
that it's your life and your own decision *first* - what others
say and think is not nearly as important and should not sway your
choice from what is right for you.
Joe Jas
|
784.5 | some pointers | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | modem butterfly | Mon Apr 04 1988 15:04 | 14 |
| pointers to other notes similar to this:
146: Do You Ever Want Children?
156: Do You Like Being Around Children?
354: Having Kids Later In Life
maybe less relevant, but:
34: Women's Reproductive Rights
102: Contraceptives - What Do You Do?
-Jody
|
784.6 | it's YOUR life | RAINBO::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Mon Apr 04 1988 15:05 | 16 |
| I just want to add my voice to the support you deserve to choose your
own path. All of your points about the stresses of child-rearing are
right on the money. And for what it's worth, an infamous Ann Landers
survey about "if you had it to do over again would you have children"
got about a 70% negative return. Having children is one of those very
mixed things -- definite moments of satisfaction but at such an enormous
cost that I think a great many people push this "normal" behavior on
others so that don't have to examine their own ambiguous feelings about it.
As far as sterilization goes, just keep looking for the right doctor. I
wanted to do that when I was young (and already had two kids), and got a
very patronizing and condescending response from my gyn. I don't go to
male gyns anymore (call it sexism, but I don't think men belong in
midwifery), and the question is extremely moot nowadays. Having seen
the light, I use Mary Daly's preferred method of birth control --
"mister-ectomy"! (little radical humor, there).
|
784.7 | Disinterested 3d party's help | CIVIC::WINBERG | | Mon Apr 04 1988 17:43 | 18 |
| *Don't* have kids until or unless you are unequivocably ready!
Have you considered therapy? It's a great way to make peace with
yourself on this subject.
My daughter, who's about to turn 30 this year, only decided to get
married to her SO with whom she'd lived for almost 5 years, after
addressing not only the issue of children, but also of marriage.
Doesn't really matter what *her* issues were, the point is that
by holding her attitudes and experience up before a *good* 3d party
"mirror" (therapist), within a matter of a few months, she arrived
at a state of inner resolution, based on insight. If this had
happened at all without a therapist, it might have been years in the
making; confronting herself with the help of a good professional,
shortened the entire process.
|
784.8 | TWO CHILDREN | UTAH::LINEHAN | | Mon Apr 04 1988 17:49 | 29 |
| I just thought I'd add my $.02 worth. I myself have two children
21 and 16. If I had to do over again I would. I love children.
If I had to do over again I would not have had my children at age
20.
It is a tremendous amount of work and unselfishness. I don't care
who we are, we all have times when we are selfish. That's normal.
I admire the fact that you have been able to put everything in it's
perspective. I have a friend who is also in her early 30's and
absolutely hates kids of all ages. So because of this has decided
not to have any children. The right is yours and no one elses.
No one has the right to make that decision but yourself.
After my husband and I had our two children, my husband decide he
would get a vasectomy. I fell in love all over again. I told him
go for it. You wouldn't believe the grief we had to put up with,
and we already had two kids.
Everyone has to put in there feedback. Stick to your guns. Not
everyone is the right person to have kids. That's part of the reason
why there is so much child abuse. Good luck in the future and don't
let anyone pressure you into something you are not ready for. They
say 18 is the leagal age that you become an adult. My daughter
is still at home and believe it or not still asking for advice.
So the worry never ends. It's a liftime committment.
Nancy
|
784.9 | THE MOTHER KNOT | ISTG::GARDNER | | Mon Apr 04 1988 18:40 | 28 |
|
Dear Anon:
A book that might interest you that I recently read and have
forgotten the author but not the title is "THE MOTHER KNOT".
I found it in Annie's Book Stop but your local library might
just have a copy.....at least they could do a regional search
for you. This deals with the realities of should I or shouldn't
I have a child in a most refreshing manner. I found it to
present motherhood in a most realistic manner and not "all
sweetness and light".
I had both my kids by the time I was twenty-three.....I don't
know if I would have had any kids or when if I had had the choice
with the first one.....second one was planned....only two months
off my schedule with that one. They are now 24 and 22 this year;
I wish in some ways I could start having them now (with what I
know now) instead of when I did.....but then.......
Once you are a mother/parent, you are a mother/parent the rest of
your life......this is what I kept telling my friends years ago
when they told me they were pregnant.....I said enjoy your freedom
now......most did not understand until after their babies were
born and they were into motherhood.
justme....jacqui
|
784.10 | A kernel of truth can be a dirty tactic | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Mon Apr 04 1988 20:05 | 36 |
| The worst thing about some of the arguments that people try to
use to coerce you into having kids is that there is a very real
amount of truth in thhem. This doesn't make them legitimate, it
just makes them better candidates for dirty tricks, and it makes
it harder to deal with the whole problem.
In particular I'm thinking of the arguments based on biology.
Each of us know women who in their twenties wanted nothing to do
with children and then in their thirties suddenly changed their
minds. Women who thought that they'd be lousy parents have
turned out to be very good at it and enjoyed. Biology is very
powerful it can turn your head around completely.
BUT that doesn't mean it will. There's just as big a chance that
you'll never want kids if you didn't want them when you were 25.
There are lots of people who were right when they thought they'd
be poor parents or who were wrong when they thought they were
going to be good ones.
I think it's important to be realistic about the factors
involved. You really can't be certain that you will never want
kids. But you can be fairly confident, and the lack of absolute
certainty is only a reason to evealuate your options carefully,
and not a reason to allow yourself to be talked into kids or out
of sterilization.
I agree with many of the suggestions already made. Figure out
what you really want. Talk with your husband and make sure that
the two of you can agree on the right thing. Use professional
help in both of these if you are confortable with that. It can
be a psychological profession or a religious leader, but you
want someone who can help you find the answers to what you want
and what you and your spouse can live with, and not someone
with their own agenda.
JimB.
|
784.11 | Parenting... | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | The best is yet to be | Mon Apr 04 1988 20:55 | 66 |
| The very fact that many people question their decision to not have
children explains the illogical basis of any decision to bear the
little darlings.
Who in their right mind would choose to spend the time, dollars,
tears and elbow grease on a child that will grow to be fourteen
and tell you how dumb you are?
I have been thinking about this note since it was entered. Normally
I would write something fiercely in favor of children because I
truly enjoy them...but I have thought this out and I don't know
why.
Yesterday they were all at the house with the two grandsons. Joseph
got a squirt gun for Easter and he harassed the cat with that...filled
the gun in the toilet, played with the kitty litter and ate tons
of candy and very little vegetables. Justin is 6 and very wise
and smart and tells us when we make mistakes. But those are grandkids
and they go home with their parents and perform their function in
the cycle of parenting (its a form of punishment that a parent receives
for prior sins against their parents).
The adult children were noisy, boisterous, competitive and
argumentative.
I thought of the alternatives...I could have gone out to eat with
an intelligent adult of similar interests and discussed the upcoming
Monet exhibit at the MFA, or we could have discussed politics.
We could have sipped wine, attended a play or a concert.
Instead I thoroughly enjoyed the day, the gifts, the hugs, the
camaraderie and the exhaustion that follows.
I have tried to show how illogical the decision should be. If you
decide not to have children, do that but don't expect to hear anyone
come up with a reason for having them that makes sense and gives
you a basis to argue your decision.
I firmly believe that the need to have, and the process of raising
children is very much instinctive. I have seen people change after having
children. And it seems that the people who have such deep concerns
about their ability to parent turn out to do well at the task.
Poor parenting usually occurs when people are not prepared for their
responsibilites and do not have the emotional or financial resources
to raise children.
I would never have been happy without children either my own or
adopted because my instinctive need was so strong. But if you do
not feel that need and if your questioning your decision is a result
of the pressure you are feeling from those around you stick by your
decision.
I want to end this reply with a feeling that having children is
good, painful, an experience and worthwhile....but also to tell
you that whatever you decide will cause you some pain. What people
rarely attest to is the emptyness they feel when they have decided
not to have children and they reach their fifties and sixties.
That comment is not made to make you change your mind....it is a
reality you have to be prepared to deal with. If I were making
this decision I would think of all the positive aspects of having,
raising and enjoying children. In so doing you would be preparing
yourself for that time when you might have regrets. The regrets
will be easier to take if you deal with them now.
Good luck...
|
784.12 | you have my support | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Apr 05 1988 09:41 | 29 |
| I think your medical history of having been tired a lot is a very
important factor to consider. If you have achieved a delicate balance
between physical energy/controlling depression/participating in
a relationship with a spouse/holding a job you like, it's important
to ask how a child would impact that balance. If the child upset
the balance (which sounds like it is fragile at times) and you were
tired a lot more, depressed a lot more, in trouble in your primary
relationship, or unable to work, would that work for you? Do you
feel resilient enough to keep moving forward if one of those factors
were affected?
I also think you have the right to seriously consider the issue, make
the decision, and then take the position "The decision has been made".
It is draining to have well-meaning people acting as though the
decision were still up in the air because you have not done what they
want you to do. The point must come where the decision is *made* and
everyone moves forward.
By the way, I feel exactly like you do. I had a fairly rough time
as a kid, and living responsibly as an adult and giving enough time
and attention to my work and the people currently in my life take
all the energy I have. I do not have enough to responsibly give
to a child.
I do like kids, though, and if I find myself with an abundance of
energy/money resources I will do as I have done in the past, and share
them with some of the children already in the world!
Holly
|
784.13 | Thanks for your courage! | MEMV02::BULLOCK | Flamenco--NOT flamingo!! | Tue Apr 05 1988 11:42 | 31 |
| I, too, support your decision. When I read this note, there were
so many similarities to my own life, I couldn't believe it! Thank
God there are more of us out there--I really thought for years that
I was somehow very abnormal for not wanting children. (It's not
like the world is down to 2 people, ya know..)
Without going into the details of my life, I have many children
of many ages in my life, and I enjoy them all. I am also very glad
when they go home with their parents! I can be MUCH more loving,
understanding, and human with them; knowing that they are not *my*
responsibility.
I am extremely fortunate to have a mother who understands my outlook,
and supports it. I'm sure most of our parents would enjoy
grandchildren for the same reasons I enjoy the kids in my life--you
can spoil them and have fun with them, but they are not yours.
So I don't have that pressure to deal with, thank God. I think
that in-law/parent/friend pressure on you and your spouse is the
lowest, meanest, rudest, and most uncalled for action on this planet.
Previous noters have made some excellent points--one of the best
(and one that I have had to come to terms with myself) is that not
everyone is meant to be a parent. That's hard to believe when you
see *everyone* with kids, I know. But I do thank you for putting
this note in, and having the courage to talk about it.
Good luck to you and your husband. Go with your feelings.
Jane
|
784.14 | Another opinion | CLAY::HUXTABLE | Listen to My Heartbeat | Tue Apr 05 1988 12:32 | 15 |
| My SO and I don't want children. Like you, we get some pressure
from family, but they're mostly accepting. Our nieces and nephews
are sometimes fun, sometimes a pain. One of them tempts me
sometimes, even when she's being a real hell-raiser. But we aren't
willing to change our lifestyle for children.
Because we aren't *positive* we'll never want kids, we've never
gone through with sterilization for either of us. In another 5-10
years, though...There's also a high probability that I can't get
pregnant, anyway...I think you have to want kids more than we do
to adopt. It's not a rational decision, it's an emotional one.
Good luck, and trust yourself!
-- Linda
|
784.15 | Thoughts | MSD36::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Apr 05 1988 13:10 | 25 |
| My fourteen year old daughter (and only child) has said several
times in the past year, "I don't think I'm ever going to want kids."
I realize that everytime she says it I hope that sometime, in the
next 20 yrs.-hopefully after she has a college degree), she'll change
her mind and have one or two. This is because I know that when
I'm older I'd love to have a couple of grandchildren (especially
girls) to "spoil". I love little girls under the age of 5. But,
then I always remind myself that Melissa's life is not my life,
and that if Melissa never wants kids then that's just my tough luck,
that it's more important that my daughter have a happy, rewarding
life than it is that I have grandchildren. If it turns out she
never has kids, I hope I remember that and never badger her about
it.
One of my aunts, who is now in her 70's and a widow was telling
me once that people often ask her if she regretted never having
had any children. She told me that she does not regret it, that
she and her husband had a wonderful life together. They had enough
money and free time to do just about whatever they wanted, as far
as going out, taking trips, buying things. She said they had a
happy life and she wouldn't change any of it. I think this is a
lifestyle that is underestimated in our society.
Lorna
|
784.16 | Me, too! | WARLRD::CFLETCHER | Short Stuff | Tue Apr 05 1988 15:35 | 25 |
|
Wow!
It sure is nice to see that other women don't want chilren,
either! I was beginning to think I was the only one in the world,
too!
Surprisingly, the only person who hasn't hit me with the "oh,
you'll change your mind" stuff, is my mom!
She supports me 100% percent.
I'm either going to get myself "fixed" for my birthday this
year, or next.
I look forward to it - even the small chance of getting pregnant
with good birth control scares me.
Don't give in to what others want you to do - do what will make
YOU happy.
Good Luck
Corinne
|
784.17 | quick note | PIGGY::MCCALLION | | Tue Apr 05 1988 16:41 | 7 |
| Holly.
I don't have time right now to read all the responses, just wanted
to say one thing very quickly. I had my tubes tied at age 33, married
2 years with no children. And not all that many questions were
asked. I did resent the doctors asking my husband to sign to release.
I'lll read the other replys as soon as I can...
|
784.18 | | ERASER::DCARR | | Tue Apr 05 1988 17:20 | 10 |
| And on the flip side...
I, too, made the decision years ago neither to have children nor
to marry (and not in any particular order). As a result, there
is a presumption among my brother and sister (older and younger
respectively with their own families) that I therefore have the
financial and emotional resources as well as the time to care for
my elderly parents who in many ways have become like children.
So, in many ways, the decision became moot.
|
784.19 | another vote of support | CADSE::TURAJ | | Wed Apr 06 1988 11:00 | 24 |
| I feel so angry when I read the base note. That anyone thinks that
they can tell you how to live your life and that you are obligated to
listen really sets me off. I guess that's because, naive though it
may seem, I think a lot of the problems in this world are because
people just won't let other people live their own lives. I know
for me living my own life is responsibility enough, and sometimes
more than I can handle, much less running someone elses. (Though
I guess every once in a while I do catch myself.....)
Anyway, it sounds like you've spent a lot of time getting to know
yourself and thinking about this issue. That takes energy and courage,
and I commend you. It also seems like most of the reasons for not
having children come from inside you, and most of those for having
come from outside.
I really support you in making the decision that's right for YOU.
And I liked what someone said (I think it was Holly): you can
make a decision and, no matter what you decide, the decision is
made. Period. Even if others don't like your decision, it doesn't
matter, because the issue isn't an issue anymore.
I wish you strength and happiness in whatever you decide.
Jenny
|
784.20 | Don't do it for company... | GENRAL::DANIEL | If it's sloppy, eat over the sink. | Wed Apr 06 1988 19:13 | 32 |
| re; < Note 784.11 by MARCIE::JLAMOTTE "The best is yet to be" >
>What people
>rarely attest to is the emptyness they feel when they have decided
>not to have children and they reach their fifties and sixties.
>That comment is not made to make you change your mind....it is a
>reality you have to be prepared to deal with.
I wonder if it is a "reality" because we have been mentally geared
(brainwashed?) to feel that our main function in life, once we have retired, is
to enjoy the grandkids; most people that age do have kids or grandkids, but I
think that to have kids because you're worried about being lonely when you're
older is to have kids for the wrong reason. For one thing, if you alienated
your children the way my mother alienated me (after all, she was abused, too),
you wouldn't have them for company (my mom never sees me). What a pain, taking
all that time to raise and dominate a child, only to have that child turn on
you and not give you the company you thought you deserved.
I made a decision. My decision was to enjoy my life, even if I had to spend
the rest of that life, living alone. There are friends. There is personal
creativity that, once you have a child, is spent on the child, rather than the
self (I do not say this from *personal* experience; it is what I have
observed), and whatever it is you wish to give to the world in the form of art,
business expertise, et cetera. It is possible to be happy enough within
yourself to be alone a good deal of the time. I have done so. Incidentally,
it wasn't until I reached this point, that I began a relationship with a
wonderful man. If something happens to that relationship, I know I can be
happy alone, because I know how to do it. I don't know if I'm going to want to
have children, or not. I am open to the possibility. I also feel that the
option of remaining childless is viable and just as rewarding.
Meredith
|
784.21 | Reproduction/Instinctive | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | The best is yet to be | Wed Apr 06 1988 23:29 | 26 |
| My reply to this note (.11) is a little disjointed and I don't believe
I was clear in what I was trying to convey.
I believe there is an instinctive need to reproduce. I feel that
if you make a decision to deny that need for valid, logical and
good reasons you have to be prepared to deal with the instinctive
need that will produce an emptyness at various times in your life.
This usually occurs in the 30's when the biological clock starts
running down and in the 50's when you are facing your mortality.
I believe that people like the author of the base note would like
someone to come up with some 'logical' reasons for having children
and there aren't any that I can think off. And in giving reasons
such as company, or I like children proponenents of childlessness
than say "there is no guarantee" that having children will prevent
loneliness and or will be likeable.
If you choose not to reproduce which I feel is instinctive I feel
you need to deal more with your own bodies demands than those of
mothers and mothers in law. I think that is where the real conflict
is and although I respect an individuals right to choose whether
or not they become parents my warning is they need to deal with
the instinctive reactions that will occur during various times in
their life.
|
784.22 | instinct <> reproduction, to me | MOSAIC::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Thu Apr 07 1988 13:23 | 23 |
| re: 21
I have to disagree with the idea that reproduction is instinctive. I'm
homosexual, and never in my life had the slightest urge to reproduce.
I still don't, and although the fact is that I have done so might
be interpreted as proof of your theory, I have my own very different
analysis of why I ended up having children. It has more to do with lack
of self-esteem and surrender of my life at a time when it had no meaning
-- I was a non-woman, a non-man, my 145 IQ and Ivy League scholarship
meant nothing to that fact that I could not be loved. A man came along
that wanted me, and the idea that I had some value as a woman-commodity
was so amazing I gave up everything... and ended up walking away 7 years
later with two kids (birth control failures and lack of guts and money
for abortion) and sense of self that had come as close to annihilation
as a human being can come and still be breathing. Although I love my
children fiercely, more than any other humans on the planet, I still do
not enjoy the degree of vulnerability I feel through them. I will never
understand what the satisfaction of reproducting oneself is supposed to
be. I'm afraid I'm pretty insensitive to the agony of infertility for
the same reason. I would have considered myself lucky to be that free,
and would have indulged my nurturing urges by caring for abused and
homeless women and children. I'm looking forward to the freedom of
being older and on my own. I expect to be quite the wild old crone...
|
784.23 | More...instinct | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | The best is yet to be | Thu Apr 07 1988 13:40 | 14 |
| To me the fact that you state that you love your children, that
you cared and care for them and have provided for their well-being,
indicates that you are motivated by instinct.
I might again, have not stated my theory completely. It is possible
to override instinct with intellect. Also in observing animals
there are those that refuse to respond to the instinct to reproduce
and who refuse to care for their offspring.
Also, Catherine, I think the years one tend to feel the urge after
making a decision to remain childless are in the middle 30's and
early 50's. I assume you had your children before you (and you
don't even look like you have reached your 30's ;-) ) reached that
time.
|
784.24 | even sex <> reproduction! (gasp) | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Thu Apr 07 1988 13:41 | 33 |
| Yes, I also disagree that the urge to reproduce is instinctive,
and "will out" one way or another. Certainly, there are many folks
for whom that may be true, or alternatively, many folks who are
believing on a conscious level that they want to have kids. But
I don't believe that those of us who *don't* want to be parents
are going to have to go through <something> because we're "bucking
our instincts".
I believe this came up in part because someone mentioned having
a family holiday with "the clan" gathered 'round, and the idea that
childless folk in thei 50's and 60's will probably be lonely because
they have no kids/grandkids.
Well, first off: if you have kids to prevent lonliness in your
declining years, you're hurtin' right off the bat. Ok, maybe if
you're only a marginal parent, they'll STILL have to have you around,
but really....is it *that* comforting to know these people feel
*obligated* to take you in?
Secondly, there are many people who have decided that for their
own quality of life, they must be very separate from their parents.
So that didn't help the folks to keep from being lonely.
None of this "lonliness stuff" has the least bit to do with *instinct*.
It's totally societally based.
Now, the urge for sexual activity is another bag of artichokes!
Now *there's* an instinct for you! But hey! We've already done a
marvelous job at "subduing" the Earth. Why, there's enuff of us
to subdue the *hell* out of the Earth! We can stop now.
--DE
|
784.25 | Another in support of your right to choose. | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | An Ancient Multi-hued Dragon | Thu Apr 07 1988 14:45 | 19 |
| re. basenote
I support you in your decision completely.
re. last few
I do not believe that all women/men have the instinct to reproduce.
I do believe that some women/men have a very strong sense of needing
to reproduce, but for most it is only moderate. I enjoy my two
children but I am not sure I would have had them if I had had a
real choice.
_peggy
(-)
|
Sometimes reproduction does not mean
parenting - it may mean influencing.
|
784.26 | the mysteries of biochemistry... | MOSAIC::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Thu Apr 07 1988 15:02 | 18 |
| re: 23
While I still believe that reproduction isn't necessarily instinct,
I'm quite certain that a lot of the mother-child bonding that occurs
after the event must be. If there wasn't a powerful biological
mechanism at work, then as soon as a new mother realized she would never
sleep again the baby would be mastodon-food.
I must confess I can offer no opinion on the effects of childlessness at
different ages. I'm 34 now -- my son is 14 and my daughter 12. I have
had hardly any life at all without dependents. It's a little strange
for me to see so many acquaintances my age having their first child.
This urge seems to be no respecter of sexual orientation -- the lesbian
baby boom seems just as pronounced as the heterosexual one. I have to
confess that one of my reactions to all these babies is gratitude that
its over for me. My sexual instincts are still going strong, but I'm
glad to be liberated from reproduction. There's very little chance of
me having an accident with a turkey baster!
|
784.27 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Apr 07 1988 18:33 | 10 |
| Re: not having kids is "selfish"
Of course. What's wrong with that? Everyone is selfish. Some
people are better at overcoming it than others, but everyone is
selfish. (I don't believe in inherent good/evil, I believe in
inherent selfishness.) If you don't want 'em, don't have 'em.
I'm (currently, anyway) not interested in having and raising kids.
I don't want to put in the effort of doing it well, and if you're
not going to do it well, why do it at all?
|
784.28 | Look to the future, if possible | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | DECnet-VAX | Thu Apr 07 1988 19:25 | 42 |
| Here's another vote in agreement with the overwhelming concensus
that having children for the wrong reason (e.g. to add the prefix
"grand" to your parents) is a bad idea. When weighing alternatives,
one thing to definitely consider is where you expect your life
(individual and family) to be five, ten, twenty years hence.
The decision to have or not have children should really be part
of a coordinated "life plan", to the extent that such is possible.
There's some interesting cross-referencing possible between this
topic and the one on mid-life crisis, which may for some people
be easier to deal with if aided by a more extended family.
On the subject of "instinct", I suspect that a lot of the negative
reaction to this relates to people wanting to somehow distance
themselves from the animal kingdom, and trying to believe that
homo sapiens is somehow different. Even among other animals,
the degree to which individuals exhibit various instincts varies,
and so I would assume the same to be true with us. Were there
not an instinct to reproduce, the race would have died out (to
the considerable betterment of the planet) long ago. There's
still time, though.
On "selfishness", HAVING kids is also selfish. I get riled when I
see references to families of eight children (or any number above
two, actually, though if my parents had felt this way I wouldn't
have had any sisters), and also when I hear people who say they want
more children because they "love the experience" of childrearing.
For any child beyond the second, this is (my view!) both selfish and
irresponsible in this overpopulated world. People who want a
third (through nth) child should adopt.
None of this is to influence the base noter to not have children.
If I read between the lines of the base note accurately, it sounds
as though some more detailed conversations with her spouse are
warranted, since she didn't seem certain what his feelings were.
(Even if they are on different sides of the issue, they should
both know where the other stands.)
(For reference; I'm one of four children and have none; among myself
and my three siblings ranging in age from 35-40, there are three
offspring (one each from my three siblings), so we've managed to
undo my parents' overproduction.)
|
784.29 | not instinct | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Fri Apr 08 1988 14:06 | 12 |
| RE: .28
> Were there
> not an instinct to reproduce, the race would have died out (to
> the considerable betterment of the planet) long ago.
Umm, I disagree with this instinct theory. People find sex pleasurable,
and children tend to be the result of that. I bet we'd have a lot
fewer people on this world if we relied on the instinct to have children
where neither party found any pleasure in the begatting thereof.
...Karen
|
784.30 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sat Apr 09 1988 16:58 | 4 |
| Animals also aren't faced with the problems of juggling offspring and
creative jobs. Their work is food and shelter for the most part, and
probably allows them to be a bit more attentive to their young than
many of us could be.
|
784.31 | End of rathole (for my part, anyway) | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | DECnet-VAX | Sun Apr 10 1988 21:22 | 12 |
| re .30
Some animals do - primarily (probably exclusively) those classified
as homo sapiens.
At the risk of continuing the rathole, RE .29, that sex involves
pleasurable sensations certainly evolved to encourage its maximum
use to increase the species. But if a man and a woman were to meet
with no knowledge of sexual mechanics, would they figure it out? If
the answer is "no", then perhaps no instinct is involved. Instinct
gets a bad rap because it violates our ego, which wants to believe
that our cerebrums control our cerebellums.
|
784.32 | | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Mon Apr 11 1988 13:45 | 4 |
| RE: .-1
If they "figure it out" it could imply an instinct to have
sex, not an instinct to have children.
|
784.33 | another file | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Apr 28 1988 23:39 | 3 |
| a converstation on this topic has been started in words::parenting.
Bonnie
|
784.34 | snappy comeback | 3D::CHABOT | California born | Wed May 18 1988 19:32 | 8 |
| I saw a great cartoon in a San Jose paper last week, and with luck
I won't blow the retelling...
One woman talking to another:
"Oh, don't pity me for not having children!
But if it will make _you_ feel better, go ahead
and have one for me."
|
784.35 | On my overpopulation horse again | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | DECnet-VAX | Sun May 22 1988 18:25 | 3 |
| re .34
Amusing, but a bad idea in practice.
|
784.36 | Or reverse itself | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon May 23 1988 11:10 | 5 |
| Not really. If there were only one baby produced for every woman
in the population (and zero for every man, of course), the population
problem would disappear.
Ann B.
|