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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be so scared about making the wrong decision about having children...

229 replies

scaredycatandconfused · 08/11/2011 14:12

...that I can't make any decision at all. (Name changed, since I'm baring my soul here.)

DH and I are mid/late 30s, and have been together since our early 20s. Through our 20s, neither of us wanted to start a family. I was very unsure about whether I ever wanted to have kids, DH says he always imagined himself with a family but the immediate prospect didn't appeal.

Over the last few years, I've started thinking that having a family might be really nice. I see how happy it makes other people, and I think I'd like to make a little family unit with DH and some children of our own. I have always felt very grounded by being part of my nuclear family (parents and DB) - and I'm sadly aware it's going to shrink and disappear as I get older - my parents are in their 70s, and my brother has his own family (I adore my DNiece and DNephew, and feel very lucky to be a part of their lives - but my brother's family is a little unit of their own now).

BUT, it's a wistful kind of feeling, not the kind of strong, definite desire that other people seem to have. I've never been really sure that it's what I want - I'm a bit of a funny bugger, and can't assume that what other people like will also make me happy. DH's feelings haven't really changed.

So, we've been umm-ing and ah-ing for years, putting off the decision, never deciding against it, but never going ahead. But I'm very aware that the decision is time-limited, and recently started putting on the pressure - not pressure over whether it's a yes or no, but pressure that we have to decide one way or another NOW. I've been saying that I'm pretty sure I would like to have children (honestly without pressuring him!), and DH finally said that we should go ahead then. But he had such an 'I really hate this idea' look! He still doesn't like the idea of never having a family, but finds the thought of the sleepless nights, 24/7 child-care, lack of personal time etc really unappealing - and that would be the immediate reality of starting a family. I'm not (very) worried about him being unsupportive or holding this against me when things are difficult, but it does make me feel even more unsure of myself - the whole responsibility for the decision is lying with me!

Ironically, now that we've made the decision to go ahead, I'm big-time doubting myself again. What if I hate having kids? Will I spend the next 20 years - most of the remainder of my active life - regretting it, and feeling trapped? Will DH hate it, and will that ruin our marriage? Will I end up with a host of permanent health problems from the pregnancy/child-birth (I know the health one is a bit paranoid - but it does happen!). Do I really want the next 20 years to be dedicated to logistics and pickups, cooking and domesticity, worrying about finding the right schools - or will I just get bored ?

BUT, if we don't have children, are we missing out on one of life's most important experiences - which would make us really happy, and give us a focus and connection to the world for the rest of our lives? I'm aware that I lack imagination sometimes, and I often don't recognise things that would make my life better - will all this worry seem ludicrous once we've actually got a real child?

I know that this is obviously a decision for me to make myself, not a load of strangers on the internet :) But I'm hoping for some words of wisdom, or some insight you guys might have: either how your own expectations before having children compared to reality, or else whether you think my ambiguous feelings are normal / an indication that I shouldn't have children. Frankly, I'm despairing - and any advice would be welcome!

Thanks for reading - sorry it's such a long post!

OP posts:
Awayinamangercooper · 11/11/2011 10:21

People who say they "aren't sure" don't mean they are worried that they might lock the children in the cellar, or beat them with sticks, or deprive them of love and affection. Just because you've been panting to breed since the moment you drew breath doesn't mean that there aren't other possible valid and good life-paths to choose from.

This advice "don't go ahead unless you're sure" doesn't make sense in the context of a choice between this perfectly good option and that perfectly good option - it only makes sense to people who think that any woman who's not overbearingly maternal and broody from the word go must be cut from the same cloth as Rose West. I can't believe the OP has had to come back on the thread to reassure us all that if she did have a child, she would provide it with a loving home.

Having doubts about having children doesn't condemn any future children to a lifetime of feeling unloved or unwanted, any more than pre-conception conviction about having children guarantees that your family life will play out like some Walton-esque fantasy.

I don't know yet whether I will have children or not, but god forbid I end up settling for a life of inertia for fear of making the wrong choice.

itsalladirtylie · 11/11/2011 11:21

I think those are very good points awayina

I wonder if there is something unique about the experience of being a parent?
Perhaps it potentially provides a set of experiences, of opportunities for personal development which cant be had from other choices in life?

perhaps this is the root of the often heard insistence that one is 'missing out' by not having children?

I dont know, I'm just speculating..

Personally I think it's a heavy burden to take on.

VioletNotViolent · 11/11/2011 18:56

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Familydilemma · 11/11/2011 19:12

I was never broody before having my own children. The only babies who have ever made me crave another one are my own three dc!

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