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PrairieGirl

Carolyn Hax: Small children scare off this would-be mother

By Carolyn Hax
Monday, July 26, 2010

Adapted from a recent online discussion:

Hi, Carolyn:

I'm childless by choice because I don't enjoy being around small kids. However, I've always suspected I might be missing out on that aspect of life.

My sister recently commented on how fast her kids were growing up, and that she has forgotten what it was like for someone to need her every second. This made me wonder whether the thing I dread most -- that exhausting, annoying stage between infancy and 8 or 9 -- is really less of a big deal than I think it is. Do you think I am right to rule out being a mom, or is there a chance the ends would outweigh the journey?

Pennsylvania

Of course there's a chance, but with kids, you can't test your theory, say "Oops!" and change your mind.

So, I can't encourage you to go for it when there's any chance you'll be a cranky, put-upon nightmare to your kids for the highly formative first eight or nine years of their lives.

And if you're a grudging parent while they're small, don't expect angels when they hit your hoped-for age of reason. The better-behaved kids tend to be the ones whose parents really hung in there and did the hard work -- of saying no despite the risk of touching off a tantrum, of getting up in the middle of the night to soothe away nightmares despite being stumble-into-walls exhausted, of listening to them before they have any skill at expressing themselves, of letting them make normal kid mistakes without getting shrieky and punitive on them, and so on.

Even the best parents fall short here and there. But the best ones are, in general, with their kids in the moment, and not looking off to a distant somewhere else they'd rather be.

Remember, too, that not all kids come out with a full set of abilities. You have to be ready to be a wholehearted parent to a special-needs child.

So, have kids only if you really believe you're up to being that kind of parent for as long as you need to be, and if you really believe your life would be enriched by children, and, as always, if you truly believe you'd be the kind of parent you'd want to have.

Re: Pennsylvania:

Remember, you might be thinking of it as just eight or nine years, but for your kid it would be their whole life so far. Your temporary stage would be all of reality as they've ever known it.

Anonymous

Heartbreaking and true, thanks.

Re: Pennsylvania:

She could consider adopting. Usually the older kids have a more difficult time getting adopted.

Anonymous

True. However, older children often have had traumatic childhoods.

I realize that can be used to support two completely different arguments -- (1) they need the most awesome parents out there, or (2) any stable, non-abusive, permanent home is better than life in the foster system -- but either way, I'm reluctant to say to a reluctant parent, "Adopt an older child."

But I'll let you say it, and add a caution that it can't be just about getting a child after s/he gets "easier." It has to be about giving an older child a chance, for the sake of the older child.
Adopting is the same as having them yourself: you end up with a child for as long as you live. It's not nuclear physics to figure this thing out.
She admits she is CF by choice and does not enjoy being around small kids. I know parents say, "It's different when they're your own" but I don't buy that.

If you don't like dogs, you don't like dogs so going out and getting a dog is not going to make you like dogs.
I mean, would you keep eating a food you don't like? Someone (I mean the writer) doesn't know her own mind.
(07-27-2010 12:35 PM)NKBurlington Wrote: [ -> ]She admits she is CF by choice and does not enjoy being around small kids. I know parents say, "It's different when they're your own" but I don't buy that.

It is different when they're your own because you're stuck with them 24/7 and there is no return policy and your whole life revolves around the kids. By saying "It's different when they're your own" makes it sound like that the parents didn't really like or want kids, but will tolerate them because they're their DNA trophies.
What a train wreck. Did she actually consider that maybe her sister's kids grew up "fast" because her sister actually enjoyed most of motherhood? I'm pretty sure that 1st decade will feel like time is standing still if she does breed.

If she likes older kids enough to spend a little time with them, she can be a mentor or "big sister" without the life long commitment.
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