• @untorquer
    link
    193 months ago

    In my mid 30’s. Find myself thinking the same. Also when I’m feeling great it’s “there’s no way i could be enjoying this if i had to worry about kids”

    • @grasshopper_mouse
      link
      133 months ago

      Yup, exactly. It just seems like there’s no time to relax when you have kids, you always have to be “on”.

      I used to take a bus home from work, and a woman that lived in my apartment took the same bus, so we always ended up walking into the building together. I’ll never forget that EVERY time when she opened her apartment door, you could hear two little kids yell “MOMMY!” the second that door was opened. Maybe some people love that, but to me it always filled me with a sense of dread and exhaustion. Here was this woman who just spent a full day at work and now she has to come home and essentially start her second job of being with her kids, who of course want all her attention. I felt horrible for her, and it wasn’t like she was skipping home all happy to see them, either.

      • @untorquer
        link
        123 months ago

        Some people like it, which I’m happy for, they’re the ones who should have children. But it’s not for everyone and it shouldn’t be stigmatized. I will happily pay taxes to fund kinder care and school. I see the value in society for kids. Just not in my own home.

      • @untorquer
        link
        23 months ago

        Shit that’s how you grammar!?

          • @untorquer
            link
            33 months ago

            Ok. I’m still going to omit it in the future.

            • @apostrofail
              link
              -13 months ago

              Omitting is fine… just a bit ambiguous. It’s the apostrophe misuse that matters :)