38 comments

  • drfloyd512 hours ago
    Before kids it was easy to judge bad parents. Then one day with child I found myself due to circumstances in a store way past my child’s bedtime. She was screaming and crying, because it was way past her bedtime.<p>Then I realized… I was now “the bad parent” I had so easily judged.<p>Then it was easy to judge parents with children younger than mine.<p>Until I learned that not all children have the same issues in the same order.<p>Then I learned it’s easier not to judge at all.
    • brightball23 minutes ago
      I was the worlds best parent...before I had kids.
    • socalgal215 minutes ago
      I still judge parents, because I compare them to other parents.<p>Good parents = kids not 100% glued to phones&#x2F;tablets, social around friends and family, not throwing tantrums at 8-16 yrs old.<p>Bad parents = kids always throwing tantrums, kids basically always getting their way because they&#x27;ve learned parents will always give in, parents and kids 100% ignoring each other.<p>One set of friends - I go to visit, I play with their kids - we go out to dinner, we interact with both adults and kids<p>Another set of friends - I go to visit, they sent their kids to their room - we go out to dinner, they give the kids tablets and they&#x27;re entirely ignored for the whole time.
      • Trasmatta13 minutes ago
        &gt; Bad parents = kids always throwing tantrums<p>But sometimes there are legit behavioral issues that are extremely challenging, and are not the parent&#x27;s fault. Sometimes what looks like a &quot;tantrum&quot; on the outside can actually be autistic overwhelm and meltdown, which can happen with even the best parents. Not to mention stuff like Intermittent Explosive Disorder.<p>All this to say...if you see a kid in public throwing a &quot;tantrum&quot;, you still shouldn&#x27;t judge the parents without knowing the full picture.
    • rootusrootus1 hour ago
      Yes, when you have a toddler undergoing a public meltdown, it is easy to see who around you is an experienced parent, and who is not. Just by the look on their faces.<p>&gt; Then I learned it’s easier not to judge at all.<p>A skill we should all cultivate, IMO. Life is happier when you do not waste it constantly judging.
      • bcrosby9541 minutes ago
        I smile a bit and give a chuckle when a toddler is giving a parent a hard time. It reminds me of simpler times. The problems and consequences are so much smaller than teenage problems.
    • phatfish1 hour ago
      Badly behaved kids I am more understanding of now (at least the younger ones). But there are defintely easy ways out of problems some parents take that are not good for children.
    • bryanrasmussen2 hours ago
      Louis C.K had a routine about this <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=cr1aAYOhFsQ" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=cr1aAYOhFsQ</a>
    • Balgair1 hour ago
      Before kids, you take a look around a diner or a store or a playground and you see little ones happily eating some chips or browsing the foodstuffs or playing on a slide.<p>You think that this is what kids are like. They sit there, they walk a little, they giggle on the playground, they look cute as all get out, etc.<p>Then you have kids and you know.<p>You <i>know</i>.<p>Those kids sitting there in the booth sipping on their milk quietly while mom and dad happily eat their lunch? Those are the top 5% most calm kids out there. The other 95% of kids are with their adults screaming and throwing fits and covered in who knows what.<p>Life <i>lied</i> to you. It did it directly to your face, unashamed. The bias is <i>real</i>.
      • pimlottc3 minutes ago
        That&#x27;s not the impression I hear from my many intentionally childless friends. They take the negative behavior - the screaming, tantrums, chaos - as the norm.<p>It sounds like you always wanted kids. I don&#x27;t say this to criticize - it&#x27;s great that those who want to start families do so - but I don&#x27;t think your experience is universal.
  • jasonkester2 hours ago
    Before having kids, I expected it to be this huge life changing thing. That it would effectively end the part of my life where I was free to do whatever I wanted, and start the part where I was just Daddy, doing nothing except serving my childrens&#x27; needs.<p>But that didn&#x27;t happen. We just carried on being Jason and his partner, but with a baby in tow.<p>I had spent most of my 30s cramming in as much &quot;living&quot; as possible, to make sure I&#x27;d stocked away a lifetime supply of it. After all, I&#x27;d probably never get another chance to travel for long periods, keep up with climbing, and all that other stuff that Independent Jason could do.<p>But it was all for naught. We just packed the kid along and went traveling anyway. He had eleven stamps in his passport by his first birthday.<p>Life is just as much fun as ever. But now we have some kids to play with.
    • EvanAnderson26 minutes ago
      &gt; Before having kids, I expected it to be this huge life changing thing. That it would effectively end the part of my life where I was free to do whatever I wanted, and start the part where I was just Daddy, doing nothing except serving my childrens&#x27; needs.<p>Had a very similar feeling. When my wife told me the &quot;getting pregnant&quot; worked I mourned a little bit. I recognize we were exceedingly lucky to have had such a wonderful kid, and it has worked out very well.<p>For the first 6 mos. a lot did change, but after that things seemed to skew back to a new &quot;normal&quot;.<p>It will be 13 years in May since we had our daughter. I&#x27;m so glad we did it.<p>I know that it could have gone a lot differently, though. I&#x27;d never suggest that it&#x27;ll be great for everybody.
    • roarcher40 minutes ago
      &gt; We just packed the kid along and went traveling anyway. He had eleven stamps in his passport by his first birthday.<p>How do you keep a baby happy and quiet on long international flights? I currently have no kids but I may find myself in this situation in the next couple years. I&#x27;m dreading being the guy with a screaming infant on a 13-hour trans-Pacific flight that keeps everyone from sleeping.
      • dzink25 minutes ago
        First two years they can fly for free, but they have to ride in an adult’s lap and that gets tiring. Don’t believe the bassinet offerings - as soon as a plane gets turbulence, you have to get the sleeping baby out of the wall bassinet and good luck appeasing them. Age 1-2 is hardest for travel, so you can skip it. The only thing that worked was getting their own seat with the cosco scenera next car seat (or their own if they like it, but that one is $50 and light to carry). They would sleep nicely for large chunks and you get to enjoy travel again. After age 3 it’s much easier (they can ipad if that’s the only ipad time they ever get).
    • jbrun9 minutes ago
      Absolutely. Also, kids end up helping you focus on the travel, experiences and things that are truly worthwhile. You drop a lot of activities and TV and other activities that was frankly a waste of time anyways.
    • ChrisMarshallNY2 hours ago
      <i>&gt; He had eleven stamps in his passport by his first birthday.</i><p>I was raised overseas (Dad[0] in the CIA).<p>Both good and bad. First, if it&#x27;s just &quot;traveling,&quot; and not &quot;living&quot; overseas, I suspect that it&#x27;s not so bad, but military brats have common quirks, for a reason. Our lives get torn up and replanted regularly. It&#x27;s hard to make friends, and we often end up having a difficult time, retaining long-term relationships, later in life.<p>But, man, the life story that it gives you. There&#x27;s few cures for xenophobia, better than immersion.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;cmarshall.com&#x2F;miscellaneous&#x2F;MikeMarshall.htm" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;cmarshall.com&#x2F;miscellaneous&#x2F;MikeMarshall.htm</a>
    • vermon2 hours ago
      I&#x27;m 6 months in and it has definitely ended my life as it was and nothing is the same. I&#x27;m pretty lucky that my wife gives me almost 16 hours of free time daily, from which 8 I work and 8 is for sleep. If I want to work out or do something else I need to steal it from the sleep time. It&#x27;s pretty early though so I might be looking back in a few years and think that it was not that bad actually :)
    • nDRDY2 hours ago
      You have just the one kid, right?<p>We were the same ;-)
      • jasonkester1 hour ago
        Two now. That’s still manageable.
    • tayo422 hours ago
      Travel with a baby isn&#x27;t that bad.<p>I think people struggle with losing their identity when they no longer get long periods of focus time or can participate in their hobbies with the dedication they would like.
      • genthree46 minutes ago
        IME babies are the very easiest for almost everything.<p>It&#x27;s way more work to travel with a 10-year-old than a 1-year-old. Then quadruple that difficulty for each additional kid of roughly that age...
      • loloquwowndueo2 hours ago
        Depends on the baby. Some are nightmarish.<p>That’s the main thing - each family and each child are different, so it’s kind of hard to base your decision on what you see and hear from others.
        • tayo421 hour ago
          Sure, the default for travel shouldn&#x27;t be it&#x27;ll be a nightmare though or impossible.
  • GlibMonkeyDeath1 hour ago
    Caveat emptor. I am a grandparent now, so I think I have some perspective on this.<p>Of course we love our kids, and we had (and still have) a lot of good times with them. But kids can really break your life and marriage, too - amongst my peers I can&#x27;t tell you how many have a struggling young adult kid or two (with relatively serious mental or physical health problems), with no resolution in sight.<p>So stay lucky - having a child is a wild act of optimism. And if you want kids, don&#x27;t wait too long. There is never really a good time to have a kid (just different trade-offs), so for the best chances for health, be as young a parent as possible. And men have a biological clock, too: e.g.: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;neurosciencenews.com&#x2F;genetics-sperm-mutation-neurodevelopment-29788&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;neurosciencenews.com&#x2F;genetics-sperm-mutation-neurode...</a>
    • brightball16 minutes ago
      The serious mental and physical health problems are real and a societal concern. Everyone &quot;notices&quot; the trends, but maybe it&#x27;s not you so you just think there&#x27;s nothing you can do about it and do your best to stay healthy.<p>Then you have a child and you are suddenly hyper-aware of <i>everything</i> going into the body and brain. Everything they eat, every doctor visit, every time they get sick and what could have exposed them, every word spoken on TV, every friend they have and how they act or how that friend passes along their parents influences, etc.<p>And suddenly you&#x27;re very concerned about societal level macro influences on food, medical, etc because those influences are going to affect your child&#x27;s life.
  • corry2 hours ago
    This is one of my favourites from PG, not least because it&#x27;s a bit antithetical to what I perceive as a growing trend among smart, ambitious people (for whom children might represent friction, inconvenience, etc)... as well as folks for whom COL is making the question irrelevant due to practical concerns.<p>Actually, it&#x27;s really striking that even in America -- the developed country with the #1 highest birthrate -- still falls below the replacement rate. What is it that&#x27;s inversely correlated between growing wealth and having children? Especially since it was likely to opposite for most of human history? (i.e. large families were a sign of wealth and power).<p>PS - I can&#x27;t resist offering my own experience as a parent - what a treasure to have discovered that I&#x27;m capable of such love, and to get to watch this love transform me into a better person than who I was before. This kind of love demands everything of you, but through it you discover a truer and stronger version of yourself too.
    • qsera40 minutes ago
      When someone asks me if starting a family is worth it, I borrow words from Agent K and tell them, &quot;Yes, if you are strong enough&quot;...<p>But as you say, I suppose everyone ends up becoming strong. Because there is no other way...
    • r14c2 hours ago
      Due to the extremely competitive nature of the US economy, a lot of people have to choose between career success (having money) and starting a family (which is expensive). I know a lot of women who want to have a family, but have struggled to get to a comfortable economic position where they can actually do it. Compounded by the wage stagnation, which makes it hard for most people to support a family on a single income. We have hollowed out our third spaces, so its difficult for people to relax and socialize. Even vibing ends up being a kind of competition because of the high costs. Not to mention the perverse incentives in the housing market.<p>None of this is conducive to starting a family.
      • genthree40 minutes ago
        I think the two-income household (two full-time paying jobs, specifically) is a lot of it, and seems to go along with &quot;rich&quot; countries.<p>Having all the stuff that <i>could</i> happen during the day if it were (if you will) someone&#x27;s full-time job, instead get crammed into evenings and weekends when you&#x27;re trying to also do non-chore stuff with your kids (or, for god&#x27;s sake, maybe get just one measly hour to do something you want to do, alone... or spend time with your spouse, without kids...) and take care of things that <i>have to</i> happen each evening (dinner, bed time stuff) really, really sucks.<p><i>Not</i> having chores piling up through the week to ambush you both on the weekend would be amazing. I can hardly even imagine how much more free we&#x27;d feel. With two working parents it&#x27;s like neither ever gets any actual time off that they&#x27;re not carving out by neglecting <i>something</i> they really ought to be doing (usually several somethings)
    • jmye7 minutes ago
      &gt; Actually, it&#x27;s really striking that even in America -- the developed country with the #1 highest birthrate -- still falls below the replacement rate. What is it that&#x27;s inversely correlated between growing wealth and having children?<p>I think a lot of people miss the simple fact that some people <i>just don&#x27;t want kids</i> and are unable to reconcile their personal experience with anyone else&#x27;s.<p>My partner and I are both wealthy enough that we could both afford children and we can afford to not have children. But neither of us think our lives would be improved by having them.<p>I think that&#x27;s really, really hard to understand for a lot of parents and people who want to be parents: being (relatively) wealthy creates choice, and that a growing number of people are <i>choosing different things</i> now that they have the ability to do so.
    • foxglacier13 minutes ago
      Kids cost time, not money. So the wealthier you are, the more difficult it is because you probably have less free time. You can pay someone else to raise your kids (daycare&#x2F;etc.) but then you lose a lot of the value of having kids.<p>This bullshit excuse that somebody can&#x27;t afford to have kids is proven wrong by the fact that poorer people have more kids than rich people. You can even be unemployed. Gone are the days of destitute single mothers having to give up their child to the church and work in the poorhouse. We have social welfare for that.<p>Maybe the fact that poor people can have lots of kids has taken away their value as a status symbol for wealth?
  • yanis_t2 hours ago
    Having kids is a gift. But this is one of these kinds of knowledge that once you know you immediately can&#x27;t explain to others who don&#x27;t.
    • matsemann2 hours ago
      My problem with that wording is that it comes across a bit arrogant or &quot;I know better&quot;. I think many people _do_ understand what you mean even if they don&#x27;t have kids, they&#x27;re just not that interested in those parts of life, which also should be fair.
      • saghm1 hour ago
        At one of my earliest jobs (I must have been 19), I had a boss who was incredulous that I didn&#x27;t drink alcohol and said that I would when I was 21 because it was &quot;part of being an adult&quot;. I was pretty sure that making my own decisions rather than letting myself get pressured by others into what they assumed was best for me was a more important part of being an adult, and over a decade later I still don&#x27;t drink.<p>Comments like the parent one (pun semi-intended) basically sound the same to me as what my boss had said to me that day. Assuming that your own experience is universal is a flawed way to view the world, even if your experience is relatively common. If there are exceptions, it&#x27;s not going to be easy to see them if you have an assumption already about it being universal, and if the people in the majority are loud enough and annoying enough about it, those who aren&#x27;t will be even more incentivized not to share their experiences with you; I&#x27;d argue that people who regret having kids will potentially be reluctant to publicly say so. Most importantly, doing something because of societal pressure rather than genuine desire is going to greatly reduce the chance that someone truly finds it fulfilling, and there&#x27;s an emotional cost for children who are raised by parents who basically regret having them.<p>It&#x27;s totally reasonable to say &quot;I never truly understood how much I&#x27;d enjoy having kids until I did, and I suspect it&#x27;s the same for a lot of other parents&quot;. There&#x27;s no reason to go further than that unless you&#x27;re pushing an idealogy rather than actually trying to say something you know is correct.
    • genthree38 minutes ago
      Each one&#x27;s a reverse-lottery-ticket, though. Get the wrong draw and it&#x27;s <i>not</i> a gift. Can easily massively reduce the QOL for everyone around, including other siblings.<p>Mostly due to chronic illnesses, of either the physical or mental variety.
      • waynesonfire6 minutes ago
        There is significant suffering in the world. You and everyone else are drawing lottery tickets everyday. Kids are far from its only source or cause. I&#x27;m ill equipped to unpack the meaning of life, but I am certain that suffering is fundamental--your comment is probing at this idea.<p>This is a very difficult subject since there exists un-imaginable suffering and it&#x27;s hard to reconcile that. That life is a gift under the umbrella of un-imaginable suffering. Perhaps, that&#x27;s what spirituality tries to do, I don&#x27;t know.
    • Cerium2 hours ago
      A good friend of mine holds the belief that &quot;having friends with kids is better than having kids of your own&quot;, and I definitely feel the &quot;can&#x27;t explain&quot; part - there is an unexplainable reality when you have kids of your own.
      • NoGravitas2 hours ago
        I&#x27;m also told that being a grandparent is a lot better than being a parent - you can give them back.
    • fdghrtbrt2 hours ago
      I understand the idea but I take issue with the wording.<p>I CAN explain to others who don&#x27;t. It&#x27;s just that most of the time others aren&#x27;t interested in hearing.
    • ozarkerD2 hours ago
      Great way of putting it. It&#x27;s the sort of thing you just have to trust others and jump into. If you think about it too much it just doesn&#x27;t make sense.
    • drfloyd512 hours ago
      Love. Kids. Marriage. Divorce. Heartbreak. Death of a close partner.<p>Things you can’t explain to other people. But others with the experience just know.
  • mring336212 hours ago
    Having kids may not be for everyone, but it is the best thing that I have ever done in my life.
  • Daneel_2 hours ago
    I also had kids, and while I love my kids I haven’t loved spending time with my kids. This will hopefully change as they age, but the first six years have so far been very much a drag on my life and productivity, and not much else. They haven’t provided fulfilment, and they haven’t provided satisfaction. Some joy is there from time to time, definitely, but nothing in the way the author describes. Happiness for me typically starts after my kids are in bed or when I can escape them during work hours. My wife finds great happiness in our children, and I find happiness in that, but I’m desperately waiting for my kids to be old enough that I only need to spend time with them instead of constantly caring for them. Sorry if this is a bit of a dark comment, but I just wanted to say it’s not always the experience this author had, even if it seems common. Edit: Generally, I regret having kids (because of the impact on my life, not the kids themselves), but I also can’t change that decision and I would never back away from my choice - that’s completely unfair to them, as well as my wife. Such is life. I try to keep looking forward to when they’re older as a way of staying positive.<p>I truly do give my kids my all though, and they have a wonderful life and are loved and cared for in all senses of those words. They’re great kids and I give them everything necessary to be a great dad.
    • ozarkerD2 hours ago
      I can definitely relate. There&#x27;s nights my wife and I get to bed and sorta just look at eachother and go &quot;what the hell was that&quot;. Those days are hard.<p>I find the days that I forget myself and throw myself into trying to be a good dad are the days I find joy in fatherhood. Weekends especially I try to forget the stresses of work and productivity and everything else and try to spend as much time with them as possible. Playing, teaching, and learning with them.<p>Not saying it&#x27;s universal. Just a datapoint from me.
    • doubled1122 hours ago
      If it makes you feel any better, you&#x27;re not the only one that feels that way. I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s said very often because it almost feels taboo to say it.
      • swed4202 hours ago
        Apparently there are even private Facebook groups dedicated to this purpose.
      • cortesoft34 minutes ago
        Sometimes I feel like there is this sense that you are a bad parent if you ever express that there are times you might wish you weren’t a parent, even if the feeling is much more “I wish I didn’t have to be a parent RIGHT NOW”. You can even see in this thread that people are expressing how they feel sorry for the commenter’s children because he feels regret sometimes about being a parent.<p>I wanted to be a dad more than anything in the world, and I absolutely love my kids and I love being a dad.<p>Most of the time.<p>There is a TON of things you have to do as a parent that objectively sucks, and you have to do it no matter how you are feeling and no matter what else you also have to do. It is impossible not to feel trapped, at times, by the understanding that it never ends, that you are a parent 24&#x2F;7&#x2F;365.25 and that your kids dominate your life. I don’t care how much you love your kids, you are going to feel that sometimes (or you are so strongly into the self-denial that you force yourself to pretend you always like it).<p>That doesn’t mean you aren’t a good parent, or even that you made the right choice to be a parent. Most of the best things in life involve sacrifice, and doing things you don’t want to have to do, and powering through even when you want to give up. It’s cliche, but the struggle makes the rewards even sweeter. Doesn’t mean the struggle doesn’t suck sometimes, and you might want to give up, and you have to use all your self-control tricks to maintain.<p>I feel even worse for parents who did IVF or other fertility treatments, or who adopt. In my conversations with some close friends who are in those situations, they talk about how much pressure they feel to never complain when it is hard. They spent a ton of money and effort and used insurance money and many doctors and procedures (or all the interviews and inspections and money for adoption) so they could have kids, and now they want to complain about being a parent? Of course, they still have all the same struggles and pains and nostalgia for their before life, no matter how much this is what they want.<p>Anyway, I am not sure what my point is. I just want people to be honest with themselves, and other parents and future parents, about what the entire parenting experience really is. Sometimes I think parents don’t want to scare potential parents off of being parents, which I think is understandable but overstated. There is simply no way to convey to non-parents what it is actually like to be a parent, and this applies to both the good and bad things. I thought my wife and I were prepared and knowledgeable and ready, and we were to the extent we could be. But so many things we imagined about what it would be like is not the reality at all, but even if we had a Time Machine I couldn’t explain to my previous self what it is actually like. You just have to experience it… if you want to. I would never tell people they should have kids, because it is such an all-encompassing thing that everyone has to decide for themselves… all without knowing what it will actually be like.<p>It is a hell of an adventure, though.
    • fdghrtbrt2 hours ago
      I would like to hear in what sense you love your kids, given that &quot;he first six years have so far been very much a drag on my life and productivity, and not much else. They haven’t provided fulfilment, and they haven’t provided satisfaction. (...) Happiness for me typically starts after my kids are in bed or when I can escape them during work hours.&quot;<p>Do you say &quot;I love my kids&quot; because that&#x27;s what everybody says, or is there any truth in it?<p>EDIT: Just to be 100% clear: I mean absolutely no judgement. I&#x27;m not going to tell you off or try to change your mind. I ask out of pure curiosity.
      • Daneel_2 hours ago
        I go above and beyond to give them a great life - to care about providing them with a rich education, as well as a wide variety of life experiences, to immerse them in quality time with friends and family, to travel with them and spend time amongst various cultures and amongst nature. I’m there for them whenever they need me, and also when they don’t. I take the time to give genuine answers, to feed their curiosity, to make them great people. I give them the tools to explore things on their own and foster their independence. I also encourage risk taking while supporting them when it doesn’t work out.<p>Critically: I give them my full attention.<p>I could choose to spend all that mental effort on myself, but I choose to spend it on them. That’s as good a demonstration of love as any, in my book anyway.<p>Edit: no offence taken! I didn’t interpret it that way at all.
        • majkinetor1 hour ago
          You are overdoing it. Don&#x27;t know who is your role model, but that behavior is IMO what leads to that outcome.<p>Show mostly by example, not by direct mentoring.<p>What rich education and various cultures for 6-year-olds (or less)? That is simply irrelevant at that age and logistics of it just makes you hate everything. Do you even take your kids to dozen of arbitrary chosen classes?<p>Tone it down, everybody will feel better and you won&#x27;t have to fake it. Happy parent is more important for family than robo parent.
          • fdghrtbrt1 hour ago
            What a rude thing to say. Different people raise their kids differently. There&#x27;s nothing wrong with that answer.
            • majkinetor1 hour ago
              It&#x27;s you who are being rude by not allowing opinions. I am trying to help. I might be right or wrong or somewhere in between (which is all perfectly OK) but its on OP to judge it by himself if my words have any meaning for him. I said them because I noticed the pattern around me. Please stop with the drama.
              • fdghrtbrt1 hour ago
                You&#x27;re the one making drama. &quot;nooo kids don&#x27;t need a robot parent&quot; lol
          • Daneel_1 hour ago
            It’s not forced, and we do show by example. I also disagree that they’re too young to be immersed in a love for education, culture, and people. Oh and music too. We listen to a lot of music (for fun!).<p>My family and friends are multi-cultural so they’re naturally exposed to several cultures, for example. It’s also important to my wife and I as the world itself is multi-cultural, so having an appreciation that different people live their lives differently is important. We lead by example simply by living in a multi-cultural life and embracing it.<p>Take that same approach and apply it across the rest of the points I made. Nothing is forced, I promise.
      • rootusrootus2 hours ago
        &gt; Do you say &quot;I love my kids&quot; because that&#x27;s what everybody says, or is there any truth in it?<p>It is true that some people are not really cut out to be parents. But unfortunately it is difficult to tell whether that will be you or not. I see people looking at comments in threads like this and then chiming in with sentiments along the lines of &quot;see, this is why I never wanted to be a parent.&quot; There is no way to know that, and such statements strike me as cope. Becoming a parent changes you, but you won&#x27;t know how until you do it. There is a lot of biology and psychology in play, for certain.<p>As I tell my own kids, however, be careful because you only get to become a parent <i>one</i> time. Cannot blame someone for opting out of the risk, even if the counterfactual is that they would have been amazing parents with amazing children and been much happier.
    • synergy202 hours ago
      I have a few kids, raising them is a mix of good and bad, like everything else. it took a toll on my career, pushed my temper to the edge, and stressed me out all these 20+ years, but I also enjoyed many moments. it does not go away when they got older by the way, it&#x27;s a life long strong bond, at different phases there are different challenges.<p>If I have a second life, I don&#x27;t know what to do though, I probably will first make enough money before having kids at least.
      • jasonkester2 hours ago
        <i>I probably will first make enough money before having kids at least.</i><p>I think you’ve hit the key difference.<p>I waited until I was 40 before having kids, and it just feels like I’m doing it on easy mode.<p>We had time and money sorted out, and tons of free baby stuff donated from all our friends who had done it already.<p>It’s still lots of work, but you’re at a place in life where you can handle it. I can’t imagine trying to raise kids in my 20s, with my crappy stressful office job and no money in my little studio apartment.<p>Hats off to anybody who can do that.
        • eloisant32 minutes ago
          On the flip side, you&#x27;ll still have a 20yo university student to take care of at age 60, while all your friends will have an independent adult child earlier...
      • tayo421 hour ago
        That&#x27;s funny becasue if I could do it again I&#x27;d have my kids younger.
    • microtonal2 hours ago
      Interesting, my experience has been the opposite. Before getting kids, I thought that I would only enjoy having kids once they were the age where you could have conversations with them, etc., that the first one or two years were more something that mothers would like. But for me it was not like that at all, aside from some sleepless nights, it&#x27;s so cool to be part of them discovering the world.<p><i>have so far been very much a drag on my life and productivity, and not much else</i><p>At some point when our kid was still young, I started working 4&#x2F;5 FTE, taking the afternoons off after ~14:00. I feel like that provided a lot of mental space. Since I was working part-time, I did not feel bad&#x2F;guilty about not working the afternoons and I would be focused on being very productive from 8:30 to 14:00. The free hours were for doing stuff together or accommodating their playdates (picking up from school, ensuring the house doesn&#x27;t get torn down).<p>Now they are an age where they want to do things without parents, so I am working full-time again, but do miss those early days where she would be with me in her seat on my bike and we&#x27;d cycle to the city and she&#x27;d be singing aloud from joy.<p>But every person is different and I think that there are also parents that start enjoying having kids more when they are older. So, your years may still come :).<p><i>dark comment</i><p>My dark comment would be: we are all learning on the job and I feel like I could do some things better with the experience I have now.
    • eloisant39 minutes ago
      The curse of parenting is that when they&#x27;re small you can&#x27;t wait for them to grow up so you can get more time for you, and when they grow up you&#x27;re nostalgic of their childhood when they were willing to spend more time with you.<p>So my advice is: find activities to do with them that you would both enjoy. Maybe going to parks, museums, have them help you on house chores... You only have a few years left under they get to middle school and start becoming more distant.
    • rybosworld2 hours ago
      I think this is a fairly common experience but many people are afraid to admit it.
    • cortesoft1 hour ago
      While I have always loved being a dad, I can certainly relate to the things you describe.<p>I will say that a lot of those issues have gotten better as they have gotten older (they are now 10 and almost 7). They don’t require the same level of constant attention that they used to, they are getting more and more interesting to talk to, and have developed interesting personalities and senses of humor.
      • Daneel_1 hour ago
        I’m glad to hear that - it backs up what I’m hoping&#x2F;expecting will happen. I think I’ll enjoy time with them much more as they age, especially once they’re 7+.
    • Foobar85682 hours ago
      I enjoyed much more the first 6 years than the following 6 ones.<p>Seeing them grow was fun, seeing them turning teenagers is a pain.
    • lukevp2 hours ago
      Thank you for posting this. It’s totally understandable and believable that you simultaneously love them and regret some things about it. There’s this insane pressure in our society to never acknowledge the toll that kids have and to never speak out about this. I remember when this article was first posted and how I received it, like I was wrong for not being sure about kids, and that some change would come over me when I had them. Truth is, that doesn’t happen with everyone. Then the world tries to gaslight those people who don’t feel that way into feeling like they’re broken somehow.<p>I’m sure you love your kids and take great care of them, and it’s not your fault that you feel this way.<p>It would benefit all of us if this taboo was lifted, so that we could speak truthfully about the impact of kids on families, and maybe then we’d have to provide more support and encouragement to convince people to have them. Not everyone has free daycare from their grandparents or a large social network to babysit or the finances that make having a child less of a burden.
    • FunnyLookinHat2 hours ago
      I think it&#x27;s important to share the difficult &#x2F; hard experiences of having kids as much as the good ones. I&#x27;ve noticed that there is a huge bias towards only sharing the good moments and white-washing all of the bad as something you can &quot;laugh about later.&quot; To be frank, not enough people were honest with me about what it would be like having kids before I had them - and I was incredibly upset when I realized that (several years into being a parent).<p>I now make it a point to be honest with people when they ask &quot;Should we have kids?&quot; and tell them about how hard it can be, etc. Most importantly, I tell people that they shouldn&#x27;t have kids unless they would still want to do it if their experience doesn&#x27;t land in the middle of the bell curve. We tend to romanticize the decision, and expect that everything &quot;just gets even better&quot; with kids. There are all sorts of ways your experience can be less than ideal. Unless you&#x27;re evaluating your decision with those potential outcomes in mind, you&#x27;re doing yourself, your partner, and even your future children a disservice.
    • iamwil2 hours ago
      The quip I keep going back to is: &quot;All joy, no fun.&quot;
    • peacebeard2 hours ago
      Everyone is different, and even though I don&#x27;t share your experience, I don&#x27;t view yours as either good or bad, it just is what it is. My experience is different but I&#x27;m not planning on ever telling anyone &quot;Oh don&#x27;t worry about it just have kids it&#x27;ll be the best experience of your life&quot; in blind faith.
    • hudon2 hours ago
      The single folk envy the married and the married envy the singles. Life is suffering either way.
    • vorpalhex2 hours ago
      Your experience is the opposite of mine.<p>I can&#x27;t wait to play with my 3 year old and 1 year old. I get so mad at work when I have an odd late meeting because it is keeping me from them.<p>My three year old helps me build furniture (he gets screws started, counts out parts, helps apply glue). I love showing him synths and instruments and seeing his face light up.<p>My one year old is a cuddle monster who likes listening to jazz with me. She also really enjoys when the cat climbs up on our lap and she gets to pet it.<p>I don&#x27;t know your situation, but most miserable parents I know see their kid as something to manage, like some kind of annoying work underling.<p>I see my kids as little detectives.<p>My goal isn&#x27;t to solve their case or even help them approach it in the right way. It&#x27;s to give them an occasional hint (or step stool), keep them from danger, and help them discover the correct way to behave.
    • bcrosby952 hours ago
      Having kids becomes a lot easier if you can do the things you enjoy with them. For me that includes all sorts of stuff such as D&amp;D, warhammer, painting miniatures, drawing, magic the gathering, board games, etc. I also include them when I have to fix something around the house or some random electronic device that broke.<p>If the only thing you can enjoy is adult stuff or working then you might have a rougher time at it if you don&#x27;t find joy in the pure act of raising a kid. For me the first few months were meh, but once they started to get a personality I found it more entertaining.
      • Daneel_2 hours ago
        Many of those are things I greatly enjoy, as well as many other things from a very diverse range of hobbies. My kids aren’t old enough to join in on those things yet (6 and 4), so I only find time to do those things once every few months, as opposed to once or twice a week pre-kids. It’s improving as they get older though, hence my hopefulness.
    • nxor21 hour ago
      It&#x27;s mysterious to me that you write all this _and_ that you do truly love your kids and are great. If I was in your position I&#x27;d at least concede that people do deserve parents that don&#x27;t regret them. Do their thoughts toward it even matter?
      • Daneel_1 hour ago
        I think people deserve parents that give a damn. And I do give a damn. Several in fact. It just doesn’t make me happy.
    • toomuchtodo2 hours ago
      Do not despair, I felt the same. Mine are halfway to 18, still feel the same, unsure if it changes. I love them, just not the experience. I have friends who feel the same, so I&#x2F;we are not alone.<p>I tell others not to do it unless they are prepared to suffer. You won&#x27;t know if its for you until you&#x27;ve already gone through the one way door. I wish others luck. For the unlucky, I wish grit and stoicism.
      • fastball2 hours ago
        Would be interesting to see if there is other personality overlap with people that feel this way, which people could use as a pre-test for whether or not they would enjoy the experience of having kids.<p>I wonder if there would be something identifiable in common if we fMRI&#x27;d your brains, as while you are definitely not alone it does seem like a pretty strong exception that makes the rule.
        • ivan_gammel2 hours ago
          That could be something to put on Tinder profile.
          • toomuchtodo2 hours ago
            Sure, give me a verified badge on dating marketplace apps (Feeld, Fetlife in my case) based on my fMRI imaging interpretation. Use it as input for the matching algo. Way more useful than simply putting &quot;neurodivergent&quot; in a profile imho. Adjacent to &quot;If your policy doesn&#x27;t exist in code, it doesn&#x27;t exist.&quot;
    • gib4442 hours ago
      I admire your frank honesty<p>&gt; Generally, I regret having kids<p>Please don&#x27;t ever, ever let them know this, or even allow them to figure it out. Especially before they&#x27;re at least ~30 and able to begin to understand.
      • Daneel_2 hours ago
        I would never let them think I regret them - that’s such a cruel thing to inflict upon them, and it’s certainly not their fault. I also don’t regret the joy it’s brought my wife.<p>I regret the loss of my mental energy and personal time, but not them, if that makes sense.
        • karmakurtisaani1 hour ago
          For me it helped to realize that the things I would have done with the extra time and energy would not have been that great. Some occasional dopamine bursts for a very mediocre outcome. Having kids is a better investment, but a less fun one.
        • gib4441 hour ago
          &gt; that’s such a cruel thing to inflict upon them<p>It certainly is. Speaking from personal experience. And he let me know in a very direct and cruel way.
          • Daneel_1 hour ago
            I’m genuinely sorry to hear that.<p>I make sure my kids know I love them in many, many ways.
    • raincole2 hours ago
      I mean, the birth rate is decreasing everywhere for a reason.
      • phatfish1 hour ago
        The reason isn&#x27;t because it is more difficult or people enjoy having kids less (like the parent). Its because children used to be a way to provide security for your family and community. More hands to help or sent off to earn money younger for example.<p>Now with smaller family units and less community interaction they represent a risk to security, mainly financially.
      • loloquwowndueo2 hours ago
        “A” reason?<p>Given the post you’re replying to, it seems you’re implying a specific reason, but what if it’s a different one? How about “I love children but having kids is super expensive”?
        • raincole2 hours ago
          <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Income_and_fertility" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Income_and_fertility</a><p>&gt; There is generally an inverse correlation between monetary income and the total fertility rate within and between nations.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.statista.com&#x2F;statistics&#x2F;241530&#x2F;birth-rate-by-family-income-in-the-us&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.statista.com&#x2F;statistics&#x2F;241530&#x2F;birth-rate-by-fam...</a><p>&gt; In 2021, the birth rate in the United States was highest in families that had under 10,000 U.S. dollars in income per year<p>And a few thousands more links.
          • dominotw1 hour ago
            &gt; How about “I love children but having kids is super expensive”?<p>always surprises me when ppl say this when they clearly observe the opposite in action. whats going on here.
            • doubled1121 hour ago
              Every mouth to feed costs more. Baby formula seems like a racket. Diapers are expensive.<p>My oldest will need a laptop for school next year. It isn&#x27;t optional or provided.<p>Maybe you need a bigger car because car seats take up a lot of room.<p>What if your kid decides they want to join a sports team? A friend of a friend told me they did the math on a year of competitive swimming. It was $10,000 by the time they were done with equipment and travel.<p>A trip to the dentist for my family of four is about $1000 for just cleanings. Braces for my oldest were $3000 if I could pay cash or $4000 to finance. You could skip dental care, but some might consider that neglect.<p>What if the school tells you to get your child tested? That costs about $3000 in my part of the world. Half of the kids on my block are neurodivergent somehow. What do you do?<p>In a less well off part of the world, most of these &quot;concerns&quot; probably disappear. I think we have pretty high expectations of parents that aren&#x27;t poor.
              • knorker34 minutes ago
                Your arguments (explanations?) would seem way more relevant if they didn&#x27;t go 100% counter to observation.<p>I don&#x27;t know why you&#x27;re trying to explain an outcome that is opposite of the observed outcome.<p>Are you saying that while more money is correlated with less fertility (the fact), that somehow <i>even more money</i> will reverse the trend and start going the other way?<p>Based on observed data, one could almost make the case that if only billionaires start stealing from the poor even more, then birth rates should go up.
            • eloisant26 minutes ago
              The highest income you have, the more pressured you are to give them an expensive education, activities, etc. Everyone want their kids to do at least as well as themselves.<p>So it&#x27;s expensive no matter what income bracket you&#x27;re in.
        • microtonal2 hours ago
          Yeah, I don&#x27;t envy the 30 year olds who can&#x27;t buy an house because it&#x27;s become unaffordable, made even harder by many only getting freelance jobs.<p>Also: having many children used to be an insurance policy, but as countries become more developed it&#x27;s less necessary.
    • hosel2 hours ago
      This is truly eye opening that people feel this way about their children. I appreciate the honesty, but I pity your children. Kids can be annoying and a handful sometimes but you don’t enjoy spending time with them? Getting to experience the world again through your children is one of life’s greatest gifts and it’s just an inconvenience to you.
      • gk12 hours ago
        Shaming like this doesn’t change people’s minds, it just makes them hide their feelings and introduces new or even greater feelings of guilt. The opposite of what you (hopefully) intended.
        • nxor22 hours ago
          Ironically, you are telling the above commenter to not comment as they did, so that op can comment as he did. If one person is allowed to share their thoughts then so is the other.
          • matsemann1 hour ago
            One shared his own experience, the other is a direct attack on his kids and the parent. Quite a big difference. The &quot;I pity your kids&quot; is straight up vile.
            • nxor21 hour ago
              Also ironically, you attack with the word &quot;vile&quot; and frame the other comment as an &quot;attack.&quot; I can&#x27;t with this site.
              • librish47 minutes ago
                There&#x27;s a difference between attacking an experience share and attacking an attack.
      • jen729w2 hours ago
        &gt; is one of life’s greatest gifts<p>This is stated as some sort of universal truth.<p>It is not. Please don’t make OP feel bad, whether you mean to or not.
      • throwaway231141 hour ago
        This is the kind of response that prevents people from being honest about the feeling. I also didn&#x27;t enjoy a lot of the time with my young child. Some things -- like travel -- got better, because what was tedious to me had become novel to him, and that was rewarding to see. But some things just stayed tedious, and some got more so.<p>Example: it took us an hour to walk the mile home from preschool together together. It&#x27;s astounding to me to think that someone could be fulfilled and engaged for every minute of every day of that walk. That there&#x27;s nowhere else they&#x27;d rather be. That some days it wouldn&#x27;t just feel _slow_.<p>Being present for your kids can be hard work, and it sucks to be judged for putting in that work even when you don&#x27;t enjoy it. I wish people would stop thinking they&#x27;re better parents just because they _like_ spending a higher percentage of their time with their kids. All that means is that it&#x27;s easier for them.<p>Celebrate the parents who put the work in, even when it&#x27;s hard.
      • Daneel_1 hour ago
        I’m glad it’s eye-opening; that means not enough people talk about their negative experiences, thus justifying my original post even more.<p>My kids miss out on nothing, don’t worry. There’s zero reason to pity them - they’re amazing and they have an amazing life. I purely regret my loss of mental energy and personal time.
  • chzblck2 hours ago
    Love seinfield&#x27;s quote about kids -<p>&quot;One of the nice things God does, is that he doesn&#x27;t let people who don&#x27;t have kids know what they&#x27;re missing&quot;
    • BigTTYGothGF2 hours ago
      One of the nice things about not having teenage daughters is you don&#x27;t have to worry about Jerry Seinfeld hanging around.
  • jen729w2 hours ago
    Kids aren’t for everyone. Please don’t guilt-trip people for not having them. (I know this article isn’t doing that.)<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wearechildfree.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wearechildfree.com&#x2F;</a><p>Disclosure: Zoë is my cousin.
    • eloisant20 minutes ago
      Of course people are free not to have kids... But I&#x27;ve always find it weird to &quot;celebrates childfree lives&quot;.<p>And I&#x27;m frankly annoyed by the growing activism to ban kids from public places in the name of &quot;adults quietness&quot;.
    • gametorch12 minutes ago
      &gt; Tired of doing this alone?<p>That&#x27;s some pretty ironic copy xD
  • markus_zhang2 hours ago
    I have a ~6 years old boy and I&#x27;m quite neutral about that -- that is, if I somehow go back to a few years ago, I may or may not go forth for a kid -- which was my attitude back then anyway.<p>There are some upside, but they are...tangible. The downside is concrete and solid. From hindsight, having a kid has nothing to do with my long-term objectives, but since I can’t dial back in time, I&#x27;ll try to be at least a median good father -- I have gotten the financials covered, and I&#x27;m pretty sure in that part I&#x27;m better than the median, but for the focus part I&#x27;m not sure.
  • hotfrost2 hours ago
    I would really like to have kids, but I don’t have my act together. I also feel like my partner is not suitable or capable of properly taking care of our kids. Feels pretty awful and am scared to not have any kids as I grow older. I worked hard to get a good relationship with my partner, and now that we have one I worry kids will only ruin what we have now
    • Daneel_1 hour ago
      I hope you’re in a position where you can have an honest conversation about it with your partner. I’ve come to realise over time that honest and open communication is the most critical thing in any relationship. I really hope it works out for you both!
    • chzblck1 hour ago
      You&#x27;ll never feel ready but you will always be ready. One of my biggest regrets is not having kids sooner
    • dominotw2 hours ago
      just go for it. there is never a really good time to have a kid.
  • sp4cec0wb0y2 hours ago
    This is an easy perspective to have if you are of the generation that got into a home purchase before they went out of control. Gen Z is being priced out of creating families.<p>Hacker news has a bias because most people here are working in software and <i>probably</i> make more than the median household income (solo).
  • JeremyHerrman2 hours ago
    I&#x27;m in the thick of it right now as a serial founder with a 5 and a 1 year old. One thing I&#x27;m surprised paulg didn&#x27;t touch on is how much it can evolve your relationship with your partner (for the better!).<p>Watching my wife have special moments with our kids fills my heart like nothing else.<p>Seeing her be an amazing mom is like watching your cofounder take on a completely new role outside of their previous experience and crush it. Except it&#x27;s even better since you&#x27;re in love with them and have all these biological&#x2F;chemical signals to help kick that in high gear.
  • jorisboris2 hours ago
    I see a lot of different opinions here, from very positive to very negative.<p>I think the answer is, it&#x27;s both.<p>When I was an employee sometimes I was happy, like when a promotion was lurking, and sometimes I was unhappy and stressed, when getting fired, when facing deadlines, ....<p>But when I started working for myself the amplitude of emotions became way stronger, every week I would fluctuate between feeling doomed forever or feeling like a genius.<p>Life with and without kids is the same: The emotional highs of having kids are way higher than anything I experienced without kids, but sometimes the lows are very low.
    • eloisant15 minutes ago
      People can also have very different experiences because kids can be very different.<p>My kids have been really easy, no big problems, but sometimes I see other parents dealing with really serious issues with their kids.<p>It starts with babies, some of them sleep easily while other cry all the time, to teenagers who can be nice kids with no problem at school to being called to the director&#x27;s office all the time and have to seriously worry about their future.
  • meitham2 hours ago
    As a father of 3, nothing is more satisfying than raising kids.
    • gdcbe2 hours ago
      Father of three here as well, amen to that. Soo hard, but oh so amazing.
    • metalliqaz2 hours ago
      As a father of 2, that really depends on a few factors.<p>I&#x27;d wager that you picked a good wife and that your kids are healthy and bright.<p>Things can go from satisfying to draining real quick.
  • Trasmatta10 minutes ago
    I&#x27;m 36, and unlikely to ever have kids. I&#x27;m both very grateful for the freedom that&#x27;s afforded me in life, and occasionally feel grief for parts of the human experience I&#x27;ll never feel.
  • grahamburger2 hours ago
    The great thing about kids is that just when you start to miss their toddler temper tantrums, they start having teenage temper tantrums!
  • vardump2 hours ago
    While there are always those lows, when the kids are sick, scream, have tantrums, do something stupid, I would not trade a second of that away. A lot of happiness and laughs as well, along the way.<p>They grow and you&#x27;re privileged to live with them for a while. Also you&#x27;ll grow with them.<p>Having kids was my best decision ever. Thrice.
  • i_am_a_peasant32 minutes ago
    I once had neighbors above me whose kids yelled all the time. all the time. and sometimes they were sick of the yelling and they put their girls outside of the apartment door. and she was just punching hard the door over and over and yelling “MAMAAAA!”.<p>Sure I feel sorry for the kids being distressed for one reason or another. but these guys did literally nothing.<p>There just has to exist someone on the planet for which the title “shit parents” does objectively apply no matter how you look at it.
  • alexchantavy2 hours ago
    My favorite part is how pg says how kids made him less ambitious, but then:<p>“On the other hand, what kind of wimpy ambition do you have if it won&#x27;t survive having kids? Do you have so little to spare?”
    • camillomiller2 hours ago
      It’s called having kid while rich so you can hire nannies, tho
      • genthree2 hours ago
        100%. I had to drop about half my interests and hobbies after having kids, to remain sane (trying to continue juggling all of them was plainly just going to lead to never doing anything, really), and adjust all the others to fit better with kid-having.<p>If you can&#x27;t hire &quot;help&quot;, it&#x27;s like losing 20 waking hours from your week, at least, just for the not-at-all fun or &quot;quality time&quot; parts of having a kid (extra housekeeping [so... very much more], extra shopping, taxiing the kids places, extra household planning, basic hygiene stuff, et c). And on top of that you need to spend &quot;fun&quot; time with them, too, like that part may be more enjoyable but it&#x27;s non-optional and a lot of stuff an adult might want to do or accomplish doesn&#x27;t integrate well with it.<p>Slice ~30-40 hours off the waking hours of <i>both</i> adults in the household, on top of 45-50 hours of work and other stuff necessary for work (commute, et c.) and... yeah this is just bullshit if you can&#x27;t hire help.<p>[EDIT] Oh, this reminds me of a certain genre of LinkedIn post that I especially hate: the CEO bragging about how they find time for family despite having five jobs. The real answer to this mystery is that zero of those jobs are actually full-time work, <i>and</i>, the part they never mention, is that they pay others to do tens of hours of work per week that normal people have to do themselves, like lawn care, housekeeping, fixing broken shit in their house, shopping, keeping track of and making appointments and such, et c.
      • alphawhisky2 hours ago
        This. Don&#x27;t forget that HN is extremely biased towards High income&#x2F;net worth viewpoints. The reality for a lot of parents is much worse than most commenters here
  • OnAironaut1 hour ago
    There is nothing more narcissistic and selfish than having kids. There is nothing noble about fulfilling your biological imperative to leave a descendant. Quite the opposite, really, it&#x27;s a rather primitive egoistical desire to somehow continue oneself after death.
    • chzblck1 hour ago
      Probably good you are taking yourself out of the gene pool
      • OnAironaut1 hour ago
        If idiocracy is good then yes.
        • gametorch8 minutes ago
          Talking to a psychotherapist or reading fiction might help you feel more at ease. It&#x27;s a crazy, contradictory world. I wish you well.
  • btilly2 hours ago
    There is a politically correct thing to say about having kids. It is wonderful, I love them, it made me want to be a better person. That&#x27;s all true.<p>I&#x27;m not going to be politically correct. I&#x27;m going to be honest. For some of us, it is a hard reality check.<p>As children, many of us had various kinds of hard experiences. You can get a rough idea of how hard your background likely was by tallying up the different kinds of Adverse Childhood Experiences that you had. The result is your ACE score, and it is a standard risk assessment tool. You can find the list near the end of <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;my.clevelandclinic.org&#x2F;health&#x2F;symptoms&#x2F;24875-adverse-childhood-experiences-ace" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;my.clevelandclinic.org&#x2F;health&#x2F;symptoms&#x2F;24875-adverse...</a>.<p>My ACE score is 9&#x2F;10. Most of you won&#x27;t have had that level of challenge, but a lot of you had problems. I&#x27;ve done a lot to deal with my background, work on my mental health, and so on. I swore to break the cycle, to give my children a better start than I had.<p>I mostly succeeded. Only mostly. The impact of my failures became obvious when COVID turned many homes into hothouses for mental illness. My kids were not unique in their struggles. But within their peer group, it was my kids that were hit first and hardest. And then I did not cope well with the result. As a result I, also, have been having mental health problems.<p>For people like me, I recommend a long and hard think before having children. If you do have children, you will naturally try to do your best. I certainly did. You are extremely unlikely to succeed as well as you&#x27;d like. I certainly didn&#x27;t. And so you should also prepare to give yourself grace for the ways in which you might fail. If I had done better on that, then I would have been better able to carry on and try to pick up the pieces when the shit hit the fan.<p>To everyone who is beginning on this journey, I wish you luck. Cherish what you have. Do your best.<p>And if your best did not turn out to be as good as you wanted, you have my sympathy.
  • globular-toast2 hours ago
    Taking drugs is great too. But I know not everyone will do it. You won&#x27;t get to experience everything so just be glad about the things you do get to.<p>I&#x27;m so glad I&#x27;ve avoided kids.
  • bayarearefugee2 hours ago
    As a 52 year old I specifically avoided having kids.<p>For decades I have been convinced that we are speed-running into a global environmental crisis that we will continue to ignore until it is far too late and this will result in associated resources wars and I never wanted to doom other people into having to live through that.<p>I sincerely hope for the sake of those of you who made a different choice that I turn out to have been overly doomerist, but watching the Trump 2.0 years play out I now think that I wasn&#x27;t doomerist enough.
  • throwaway773851 hour ago
    I wish there was a way to make this decision rationally. My wife and I are coming up to the point of no return. We either do it now, or never.<p>Now let&#x27;s try to figure this out: Do we have enough money? Yes, probably. We could survive 10 years without making another dime. I don&#x27;t know what kind of safety net is recommended, but people do it with a lot less. We live in a country with free health care, so illness won&#x27;t end our lives like it does in the USA.<p>With that out of the way, let&#x27;s get to all the other points:<p>How much do I want children? Personally, I don&#x27;t get it. If my wife wasn&#x27;t dead-certain she _must_ have at least one child, I would never, ever consider it. I hate noise and chaos. I even find co-habitation challenging.<p>I was an only child and I think I&#x27;m mildly autistic. To me, &#x27;alone time&#x27; and &#x27;quiet time&#x27; are sacred and required for my sanity. Well, I know that goes out the window with children. My wife is the opposite: Many siblings, has always been around noise and chaos. Loves giving love. To me, the dog, to anyone. And that is why she seems to have this need. So, the decision is: Do I give up what I want, to make her happy?<p>Her happiness is about as important to me as my own. So that&#x27;s a stalemate. She keeps saying how worried she is that it will ruin my life. But I also don&#x27;t want us to split up over this, knowing that I have &#x27;taken&#x27; her fertile years. She won&#x27;t have a kid except with me. So that&#x27;s also a stalemate. I have had a pretty terrible childhood. So I know I&#x27;m biased. I don&#x27;t want to let fear dictate my life.<p>Almost any occasion where I&#x27;ve stepped outside my comfort zone or done things I didn&#x27;t want to do out of fear turned out to be things I was grateful to have done.<p>I can also see how raising children could be very rewarding. Even my therapist said it can be very healing to have children. It&#x27;s an opportunity to do better than my parents. That&#x27;s valuable, for sure.<p>And then I think of the state of the world. Awful. I wouldn&#x27;t want to bring children into this. I&#x27;d even probably say to my own mother &#x27;don&#x27;t bother&#x27; if she&#x27;d come to consult me about whether to have me first. But then I spoke to my granddad, who was a teenager during the 2nd world war. He is also probably mildly autistic. He said it was the best thing he ever did. Had multiple kids.<p>If I look at my wife&#x27;s family, they are all happy, successful, harmonious people (now). I look at my wife&#x27;s parents and think &quot;what a blessing&quot;. The richness of life they get to experience is just magical. If I could somehow guarantee that it&#x27;d go that way for me as well, then I&#x27;d have kids already.<p>But there are no guarantees, just uncertainty. Uncertainty of the &quot;life changes forever, irrevocably&quot; kind. That is brutal and scary.<p>The last time I made a similar decision was when starting a business. I knew I went down a road that would require stability and dedication. I&#x27;m a volatile person who quickly gets bored of things and wants to move on to other things.<p>Thanks to my wife I&#x27;ve done a bunch of things I never thought I&#x27;d do, because they require dedication and consistency. Something I don&#x27;t really have. Renovating houses, starting businesses. I surprised myself with what I was capable of. All thanks to my wife.<p>I also think it&#x27;s basically a crime to not let her raise a human being. I am certain anyone raised by her would be a net positive to society.<p>But then there&#x27;s me and my issues. I don&#x27;t know how I&#x27;ll deal with it. I don&#x27;t know what will happen. There&#x27;s a chance I can&#x27;t do it. And what then? Divorce? Repeat the cycle of putting children into the world and abandoning them, like my parents did, because they also couldn&#x27;t handle it?<p>They were very young and had no money or support. Their relationship was also broken. My wife and I are &#x27;old&#x27; and we have money and we have been an unbeatable team for well over a decade. We also have support. Grand-parents are basically next door and dying to help with raising a kid. So we are in a privileged position.<p>But my fear of taking this step is not going away. And I won&#x27;t know what it&#x27;ll be like. Parents look so tired. Many of my friends are parents. They all seem to offer the same advice &quot;it&#x27;s hell on earth, I hate every moment of it, it&#x27;s the best thing I&#x27;ve ever done&quot;.<p>Awesome. What am I supposed to do with that? It&#x27;s useless advice. It seems nobody can really tell you whether to do it or not.<p>Any people here who were equally fearful and then did it, NOT regretting it? And I mean truly. I don&#x27;t want to hear the &quot;I love my kids&quot;-mantra. It&#x27;s an automated thing everyone has to say. I mean truly.
    • Balgair53 minutes ago
      Having kids is like eating a mango.<p>You can talk to the foremost mango growers on cultivating mango trees and learn everything there is to know about making mangoes. You can consult with the best chefs about how to make the best mango dishes and desserts and learn the absolute best way to prepare and eat mangoes. You can learn from the masters of how to paint a mango so lifelike that you&#x27;d think the painting was real. Etc. You can learn and truly master everything surrounding the act of eating a mango.<p>But until you sink your teeth into a mango and actually eat it, you&#x27;ve <i>no</i> idea what you&#x27;re talking about.<p>So, until you actually have the kid, all this worrying is for naught.<p>You will be just fine, the kid will be just fine (they have their own agency too, you know), the world will keep turning and you have the agency to put a person in it and teach them what they need to know.<p>The real question is if you want to eat a mango or not.
  • b0rtb0rt2 hours ago
    having kids and raising them unlocks completely new human skill trees that were previously hidden from you<p>people who choose to be child free are not complete human beings
    • mchaver51 minutes ago
      &gt; people who choose to be child free are not complete human beings<p>Hmm, this seems pretty condescending, but hopefully it is just in jest.<p>With four kids I understand there is a unique set of skills and emotions that come along with it and I am personally grateful for, but there are also a lot skills and emotions you won&#x27;t have and experience if you never go to war, never become a leader, never experience losing a parent when you are young, never win a gold medal in a team sport, never live in a different culture, never volunteer, etc. It seems short sighted to claim someone is an incomplete person if they can&#x27;t experience one of those things, because likely no single person can.<p>There is a great tapestry of human experience and we can only experience most of it second or third hand (and probably not even that in most cases).
      • bdangubic36 minutes ago
        I think having kids connects you to humanity in a deeply personal way and connection to humanity is at the higher level than anecdotal example of various human experiences we’ll never experience first hand.
    • witx10 minutes ago
      What a sad and egotistical thing to say.
    • polothesecond9 minutes ago
      &gt; having kids and raising them unlocks completely new human skill trees that were previously hidden from you<p>Holy mother of autism. “my life is like a video game”. Please tell me you don’t have kids. They’re doomed if so.
    • dominotw1 hour ago
      what a silly definition of complete :)
  • dominotw2 hours ago
    I am am so scared of losing my job in tech due to ai and not being able to support my family.
    • vardump2 hours ago
      Take a deep breath and just learn whatever you need to learn. AI or otherwise.<p>You&#x27;ll be fine. Being responsible for someone else gives you quite a bit of boost.
      • sjkoelle10 minutes ago
        lets be real we are gonna lose our jobs to these kids
  • mkapoor262 hours ago
    How come this article by PG is trending today?
    • fusslo2 hours ago
      there was a twitter exchange (I don&#x27;t have a link) where someone said the YC mindset is to not have kids and PG replied with this essay
  • knorker46 minutes ago
    It&#x27;s a well written post, but this:<p>&gt; The fact is, most of the freedom I had before kids, I never used.<p>That just seems like close to the definition of freedom. I have the freedom to go outside right now and eat dirt. I&#x27;ve never used it.<p>If you didn&#x27;t do something then I guess you didn&#x27;t want to, more than the things you did choose to do instead.<p>The only way you&#x27;d have enough life to do &quot;most&quot; of the things you&#x27;d be free to do, is if you&#x27;re not free to do but a tiny thing.<p>&gt; See what I did there?<p>Yup. Made no sense at all, is what. A UAE passport makes you free to visit 181 countries either visa free or visa-on-arrival. It&#x27;s still freedom even if you don&#x27;t take the time to visit all 181 countries.<p>It&#x27;s not even an interesting paradox. It&#x27;s just an obvious part of freedom.<p>Most people don&#x27;t visit more than 35 countries. An Afghanistan passport gives you access to 35 countries.
  • bethekidyouwant1 hour ago
    “most of the freedom I had before kids, I never used. I paid for it in loneliness, but I never used it.”<p>I will add to this that the first five years are tough, but it is great after that
  • aogaili1 hour ago
    he is coping so hard
  • throwaway1324482 hours ago
    &gt; And while having kids may be warping my present judgement, it hasn&#x27;t overwritten my memory. I remember perfectly well what life was like before.<p>It&#x27;s funny that he actually believes this.
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