The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Broomstick wrote:
That's because of our fucked up health "system", and the better prenatal care only applies to women who have decent, private insurance - which is getting to be a smaller slice of the pie.
It still comes off to me as your basically advocating that I shoulder the burden and encourage my children to get artificial insemination at age 20 or something.
Uh... no.
In fact, I
don't advocate artificial insemination
or single parenthood. There are situations where they may be valid, even good, alternatives, but they are very much the exception and not the rule.
Please do not distort my argument - I advocate women start having children between 20-29, NOT "at age 20".
I prefer they be a stable partnership with another adult.
Of course, there are no guarantees in life. You could be 25 in a wonderful marriage to someone with a six figure income, and it could all come crashing down around your ears due to said person's death or a natural disaster. After which you muddle along as best you can because that's what people do.
What I am saying is that if having biological children is very important to a woman - and to many women it very much is - then
ideally she should get going with this in her 20's. That's best from a
biological standpoint. Society, of course, while claiming to be pro-children, is very much anti-parenting in fact as demonstrated by our shitty to non-existent parental leave, lack of social safety nets, appalling lack of universal health care, and various other atrocities.
Young marriages largely don't work, and one's maturity is certainly not going to be sufficient until after the age of twenty-five for any kind of relationship; god knows I learned that the hard way in my prior relationships.
That is YOUR experience - yet my parents married before 25 and spent nearly 60 years together. I married before 25 and I'm at 20 years and counting. My sister the doctor married for the
second time before 25 and that marriage is going on 30 years. In fact, the only one of us who married past 25 weathered an ugly divorce several years ago.
I suspect there's more at work here than
just the age at marriage. "Maturity" occurs at wildly differing ages for people. Some families will encourage true independence and maturity at an early age. Others will foster dependence well into adulthood.
I'm not disputing your statistics, they are real. But you shouldn't raise your children as statistics but as individuals, some of whom may defy the statistics. By all means, encourage them to higher education and careers, but be prepared for the one that decides to settle down and have children early.
Another maxim I consider vital to raising responsible children is that you should never let them outnumber you--one that I'm actually far more strict about than the age of having children. Raising more than two children at once probably will result in some being uninterested in education and so on, because you don't have the time to devote yourselves fully to nurturing and guiding them to achieve their full mental development.
Excuse me? So you're saying that because my parents had four children at least two of us were automatically neglected? Or that we were uninterested in education? (with 9 degrees among 4 children, and one of them working on yet another one, that sort of defies logic here)
It most certainly IS possible to raise more than two at once. I agree that in today's world two per couple is not an unreasonable ideal - just be aware that triplets can occur naturally, and birth control is not 100% reliable, and not everyone who finds herself accidentally pregnant will opt for abortion, even if they're a pro-choice atheist such as my mother.
You also seem to be assuming that any girl child (or indeed, any child) you have will want to pursue higher education, or have the capacity to pursue an advanced degree. That is not always the case. Have you considered what you would do it you had a child that simply did not have the mental power to be a PhD or pursue an intellectually demanding career?
There are plenty of collegiate professions which are not particularly intellectually demanding.
So vocational training is not an option for your children? Having children THEN going to college (assuming a stable financial situation) is not an option? You're not very flexible, are you?
If your hypothetical daughter decides to marry at 20 and start having kids, putting her further education on hold what are you going to do? Aside from being furious at her rebelliousness?
Focusing, tenderly, on two very young children and making sure to foster their development each step of the way will provide the most straightforward way of avoiding that situation. And should they be incapable even then, pursuit of a stable union job will necessarily occupy most of their 20's anyway.
Why would you think that a "stable union job" - by which I assume you mean trade or factory work - would occupy a decade? What if they go into the military at 18, then marry at 20?
Children having a habit of growing up to be individuals with their own opinions. At a certain point you just have to accept that they've planned a different course in life than you expect. I'm surprised you don't internalize that, given some of the curve balls you've thrown your own family.
And, actually, you don't have to have your children close together,
especially if you start young. A five year separation, even six, has merit.
If you had expressed that scenario as "tendency" or "increases the chances" I would have let it slide, but no, it is not guaranteed.
Perhaps not, but I want my children to genuinely be able to appreciate the world.
Just don't try to force them too hard into a mold. As I said, kids have a way of surprising you, of going off on tangets, and generally being contrary in some respects.
Do you see me taking it as anything other than deathly serious in this thread, exactly?
Actually, in some respects I think you're taking it a little TOO seriously.
I'd just love to hear why you think a stable relationship before 25 has any real chance of forming on a statistically significant level.
Experience from my own family, where long term stable marriages exist where the two partners married in their early 20's.
I don't disagree that a
lot of marriages end in divorce. I do, however, think you're confusing statistics with destiny. Frankly, some marriages are so terrible they SHOULD be terminated - Dr. Sister's first one lasted six months, and thank goodness they had the sense to end it then, they never should have gone through with the wedding in the first place.
Fortunately they didn't have religious hang ups about divorce, which enabled them to correct their mistake and get on with their lives. As proof - her second marriage is 30 years and counting. Part of the problem is people getting married for the wrong reasons, and
staying married due to bullshit like religious prohibitions on divorce.
It's just wiser to wait. And I see you completely ignored my observations that if the social network for mothers in the US was better that my advice would change, or if I was living in a different country. I guess that wasn't what you wanted to think about, was it? Even though you yourself admit that the reason for poor prenatal care in 20 year olds is due to a lack of UHC.
Oh, I didn't ignore it - but a woman who is 22 can't wait 10 or 20 or 30 years for this country to change if she wants to have kids at what is
biologically the best age window. I think it's appalling, the current state of these things in the US, but you have to deal with reality as it is, even while trying to make it better. I'm not going to question a woman who chooses to delay child bearing to her 30's, I DO want her to be fully informed of potential consequences of doing so.
This isn't about parenting being less valuable, Broomstick. It's about children being so important, so very important, that it's better not to have them at all than to have them when you're unprepared!
You know, most conceptions are to some degree accidental, you know that, right? Birth control is never 100%. Not everyone will opt for an abortion when birth control fails. Waiting until everything is "perfect" is pointless because perfection never arrives. Children need a
good environment, not a perfect one.
You're nurturing an entirely new sapience into the world. That's extremely, deeply serious work, to be approached with patience, tenderness, and a serious reverence for the scale of your task, which will indeed continue for the next thirty years and give you precious little in the way of breaks.
No,
it lasts a lifetime. Assuming you are a halfway compentent parents you NEVER stop nurturing your children, although the
form of your support certainly does change over time. That's the reason that, when my nephew who was fully adult, on his own, and self-supporting had his car accident and was lying in a coma my sister dropped everything and ran to his side. That's why when my Dr. Sister had to have a Cesarean in her early 30's her mom went to Buffalo and spent two weeks caring for both her daughter and her grandchildren.
Parenting doesn't stop at 18 or 20 or 25 or 30. It lasts
forever. Or at least as long as you keep breathing.
And that level of commitment to their children is something which most women younger than thirty cannot muster.
Oh, bullshit - you do great disservice to many young parents, both female and male. I'll grant you, in past generations a better job was done preparing people to have children and be adults before 25. Our society infantilizes what should be fully grown adult humans. Of course, encouraging people to move far away from their parents doesn't help - in the old days the grandparents would customarily provide advice and guidance (along with some babysitting) to new parents. A lot of families have lost that, and it's to our detriment as a society.