Jump to content

Recommended Posts

and to be honest, it's usually the mum who organises the childcare, makes the packed lunches, takes the day off when child is sick, buys their clothes, cooks their food, sews their buttons on, washes their pants, tidies their room, comforts them when they fall over, takes them to the park, I could go on........
In the early days it seems that a father's (or partner's) job is to support the mother, who really, really needs it. So they're essential there. Later on, as the child grows, they come into their own. I take my hat off to single mothers, I really don't know how they do it.

Your point is?


It?s usually the dad who doesn?t stop working full time, fixes things when they break, looks after the garden, take the kids to sports matches and practice, supports the mum emotionally, makes sure the motorcars are in running order, accepts his responsibilities without complaint...


EDTI: to point out that this was in reply to Asset not Moos who jumped the queue.

MelbourneGr Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Life after 30 would be boring without kids. At

> least when you have kids you got something to

> live/work for. Being with someone for 40 years

> with nothing to pass on or leave sounds tragic.



It sounds like heaven on earth.


Imagine all that time to do WHATEVER you want, see the places you want, do the things you want, start the businesses you want, have the money to do what you want, have the SLEEP you want (and everything else!), spend the time with friend's kids and give them back as much as you want, do the jobs, go for the promotions you want and according to all this studies, be proportionately happier because of it.


That sounds as far from tragic as I can imagine.

MelbourneGr Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Life after 30 would be boring without kids. At

> least when you have kids you got something to

> live/work for. Being with someone for 40 years

> with nothing to pass on or leave sounds tragic.


Goodness that sounds sanctimonious - and what about people who CAN'T have children - you've basically damned them for a physical fault.


Anyway only boring people got bored with life...............

This is the problem, people who don't want kids don't get what all the fuss is about. People who have kids just don't understand how someone could not want it. I want kids, but I know I am going to have to make changes to my lifestyle, and I admit I'm not entirely happy about it!

Some people just simply cannot accept that others are different to them - not wrong just different. This is percieved as being a criticism of them and their choice so they go on the attack.


Some of my friends are parents, some are child free - all have lives that they are happy with. Why can't people accept that we are simply not all the same. I like my friends' children (in very small doeses), they have times when they wish they didn't have kids and had our freedom. We respect each others lifestyles and are not so insecure that we see differences as being rights and wrongs.

MelbourneGr Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Life after 30 would be boring without kids. At

> least when you have kids you got something to

> live/work for. Being with someone for 40 years

> with nothing to pass on or leave sounds tragic.


How the fuck would you know?

Jah Lush Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Not at all. I just think that is a very naive and

> presumptious attitude to take. Personally I can't

> think of anything more boring than being stuck

> with someone for 40 years. Kid or no kids. Variety

> is the spice of life.



It depends who.




I can think of nothing better.


(if Mr VBC sees this, he's gonna run a mile!) :-$

Jah Lush Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I find that reply rather amusing considering your

> Oscar Wilde quote at the end of your posts. It

> takes all sorts. None of us are the same. We all

> want different things. We're all individuals.



Who says a relationship has to be "consistent"?


Things are always changing and developing - that's the fun of it all. Even the difficult parts.


I have friends who, week in week out, get drunk, chat up a girl/boy take then home and then start all over again next week. Now where's the imagination in that? But if they are having fun - good for them.


Each to their own. I don't think is matters what you do, kids, kid-free, relationship, relationship-free, just don't resort to the humdrum or the consistent. Life is far to special and precious for that. And far to subjective for any of us to say what consists of a "good and fulfilling" life and that somebody else's life choices is/isn't fulfilling.

MelbourneGr wrote:

Life after 30 would be boring without kids. Being with someone for 40 years with nothing to pass on or leave sounds tragic.



Yeah that might be the case for some.....but couldn't they just 'cheat a little' like the rest of us, to cheer up a dull day?

I'm happy to report that (despite being with saddled with said millstones.. er. I mean children..) we still manage to eat out, go clubbing, watch films, go to the (bloody) theatre, attend music festivals, act irresponsibly, go to parties and stay up all night and still get up later than most the next day.

In fact, we do 100% of the enjoyable things we did before - albeit less, plus another 200% enjoyable things we never did before.


So stick that in your childless pipes and smoke it.

Yeah, go *Bob*. We're struggling! But still hope to get there...


I know this is really incendiary, and I'm honestly not saying it to offend, but I'm not sure about the term 'child-free' as distinct from 'child-less'. It just seems to me that in every other context one uses 'free' to suggest that the thing absent is undesirable (fat-free, disease-free..) while 'less' just means not there (strapless). However, I'll happily accept 'child-free' if you can think of an equivalent, non-pejorative 'free' term, perhaps I'm just being unimaginative.


(did I make any sense there?)

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • The tenant's business has already failed. If the landlord doesn't accept it, they can have a vacant property, stand in the queue of creditors, and get paid little or nothing. It's a gamble that the restructuring will work and the tenant will start paying rent again. Commercial properties are often hard to let. 🤷
    • An inquiry will put a huge amount of time and resource into looking at what happened in the past and why it happened and who was responsible and, in a year or two maybe more, a report will be produced and actions may or may not be taken, some of those responsible for bad decisions will already have resigned and moved on.   Given that we now already understand some of the issues that allowed this awful behaviour to continue unchallenged, my concern is less about whether there is an inquiry to examine what happened in the past but about what is being done right now to protect girls and young women from predatory and exploitative men in whatever race or identity they come in. Inquiries examine the past but don't necessarily solve problems and they certainly don't come up with conclusions quickly which is why they can often feel hollow.  I'd rather see perpetrators and those that let the perpetrators act with impunity, actually being prosecuted and an inquiry won't do that.  I suspect that's why some MPs voted against an inquiry. But do feel free to give me examples of inquiries that really made a difference and actually changed things in a timely and effective way.      
    • In recent consultation on further ED CPZ the majority of respondents were against. Fully appreciate you may not live on a road proposed for CPZ. If you are close to that area it is likely you will be affected by parking displacement if the CPZ goes in. I was just curious what James Barber's position on this is? Perhaps he'll come on here and let us know. He was always really good at visiting the forum.
    • huh  angry not at AII i think its  awsome to name n shame them  . as for me being right wing im very proud of it . does that mke yyou mad n get your BIood presure riseing?  sureIy you dont support chiId grooming or do you  ? i mean tommy robinson did teII you This was happening many yeras ago and of course there reaction was the same as yours .IabIed right wing and racist. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...