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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think this country's future looks bleak due to the attitude towards having children

319 replies

KookyExpert · 08/03/2024 12:27

I have observed a very hostile attitude towards people with children especially on MN. Whenever anyone posts anything about struggling financially due to childcare etc, there are lots of people commenting on how having a family and children are lifestyle choice.
As the saying goes it takes a village to raise a child, there are no villages these days and most families have both parents working which makes the role of parenting even harder in the current times.
Not just that, there are many family friendly organisations but in reality if someone has a young child and when parents have to take time off work to look after sick children, there are so many people moaning about it.
UK reported its lowest birth rate in the last 2 decades and it's relying on migrants to fill the jobs. With the hostile attitude and crippling childcare costs, I think this country's future looks bleak and the shortage for many occupations will only get bigger with increased reliance on migrants to fill those jobs if people keep choosing to have no children.
I expect people to have bit more sympathy for parents with children and less hostility to create a better future for everyone.

OP posts:
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5
Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 12:34

dimllaishebiaith · 12/03/2024 12:14

I don't even understand the point you are trying to make here but again you seem to be assuming motives on my part in the same way you were assuming motives on the original poster you were responding to

I'm not deflecting, I'm responding. But by all means if you aren't interested in a conversation about this that's fine.

So you've derived from my post that I'm referring to you. Being honest about your reasons or offering up explanations for not having children are in lots of cases really just ways to belittle Mothers. Stop being disingenuous, I didn't choose a life of drudgery because my tiny little uneducated brain did not have any capacity to predict the impact on me as a woman.

fitzwilliamdarcy · 12/03/2024 12:36

Being honest about your reasons or offering up explanations for not having children are in lots of cases really just ways to belittle Mothers.

So are parents who complain about the drudgery of parenting belittling mothers as well, or...?

RhubarbGingerJam · 12/03/2024 12:39

I don't think anyone should be made to feel they should have to have kids.

However as there are implications to falling birth rate and aging population - politically it is probably worth looking at financial blocks to those who want kids and feel economically can't have them currently and in immediate future. Though TBH there would likely still be a drop just may be more of a slump than a cliff.

Some of the implications of aging population like later and later retirement aren't great - it was 71 was being put of there for state retirement ages recently- or immigration to bolster worker numbers pro and cons there- higher taxes and lower state services. Personally I expect all of the above will be used.

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 12:40

fitzwilliamdarcy · 12/03/2024 12:36

Being honest about your reasons or offering up explanations for not having children are in lots of cases really just ways to belittle Mothers.

So are parents who complain about the drudgery of parenting belittling mothers as well, or...?

Saying you don't want a life of drudgery is very different to their are parts I find are just drudgery as a Mum.

CagneyAndLazy · 12/03/2024 12:40

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 11:59

How do you think that has arisen, the policies that have been in place for the last 14 years but also wealth distribution changes since the 1980s have maybe had something to do with that. Do you really that these 'statistics' are not dynamic do you think that this will never change? Even if you don't your argument falls down as a family of 4 is still paying in more to the system than you over their life time!

In addition is the infrastructure maintenance irrelevant then?

What on earth are you talking about.

If a family of 4 each contribute less than they take out over their life time - and statistics say that they probably will - then whether there's 1, 4 or 12 of them they are taking money out, or putting it in.

I will leave this now as I'm not going to be dragged and further down an illogical, mathematically unsound, rabbit hole of an argument.

fitzwilliamdarcy · 12/03/2024 12:42

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 12:40

Saying you don't want a life of drudgery is very different to their are parts I find are just drudgery as a Mum.

What if a mum refers to her life as one of drudgery? It's hardly uncommon on MN to see posts like that. Is she belittling mothers?

InterIgnis · 12/03/2024 13:08

To me, parenthood is entirely unappealing. So are many other things that others enjoy and find meaningful. Equally there’s plenty of things that I like that others will balk at. Someone not seeing the appeal of something doesn’t denigrate those that do.

KarmaCaramello · 12/03/2024 13:19

YANBU. Just look at the vitriolic threads on here about pregnant women or women with buggies who have the nerve to invade public spaces.

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:22

fitzwilliamdarcy · 12/03/2024 12:42

What if a mum refers to her life as one of drudgery? It's hardly uncommon on MN to see posts like that. Is she belittling mothers?

I have never seen a post from a Mother that declares their 'whole' life to have been a life of drudgery so to be clear this would have to be an older Mother with adult children that has stated their whole lived life as a Mother has been one of drudgery. Suggesting your life as it is presently, with little DC, is one of drudgery is not the same as someone without children asserting that the whole life of a Mother is one of drudgery. Equally, it is more insulting as you are declaring this as a truth but actually it's based upon zero experience of such a life!

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:31

InterIgnis · 12/03/2024 13:08

To me, parenthood is entirely unappealing. So are many other things that others enjoy and find meaningful. Equally there’s plenty of things that I like that others will balk at. Someone not seeing the appeal of something doesn’t denigrate those that do.

For a start a child is not a 'thing' they are human beings with thoughts, feelings and rights, just like you. Having children is not a hobbie, this is the issue I have with the wording and terminology as this isn't just a general discussion forum, it is particularly insensitive to comment on children and a life with them as 'drudgery' or whatever other terms with negative connotations on a forum for parents! Lifestyle choice terminology dehumanises children.

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:37

CagneyAndLazy · 12/03/2024 12:40

What on earth are you talking about.

If a family of 4 each contribute less than they take out over their life time - and statistics say that they probably will - then whether there's 1, 4 or 12 of them they are taking money out, or putting it in.

I will leave this now as I'm not going to be dragged and further down an illogical, mathematically unsound, rabbit hole of an argument.

More like you will leave it as you don't have the economic insight to argue your point.

What statistics are you referring to when you state a family of is likely to take more out than the contribute, what stats demonstrate this. You are being completely illogical a family of four 'will' contribute more in total than one person. Equally, are these figures set in stone with changes in economic and political policies will these statistics not alter. Read around the subject of wealth distribution over the last 40 years and you may understand more why we are in this position and that these statistics are changeable, depending on how the country is run.

BeachBeerBbq · 12/03/2024 13:38

Picking up on "thing" in that post is ridiculous. It's very clear poster wasn't calling kifs a thing 🙄 Even as ESL I get that because there was simply no calling kids "things" so that interpretation wasn't possible.

Many, many parents here use the term "drudgery" for their day to day lives.

InterIgnis · 12/03/2024 13:41

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:31

For a start a child is not a 'thing' they are human beings with thoughts, feelings and rights, just like you. Having children is not a hobbie, this is the issue I have with the wording and terminology as this isn't just a general discussion forum, it is particularly insensitive to comment on children and a life with them as 'drudgery' or whatever other terms with negative connotations on a forum for parents! Lifestyle choice terminology dehumanises children.

Well, putting aside the minor point that I didn’t in fact call kids ‘things’, - animal, vegetable or mineral: unappealing is unappealing. You can take issue with the terminology as much as you like, that’s a you problem.

and of course it’s a lifestyle choice. Calling something that isn’t commentary on the importance, of lack thereof, of making any one choice, it’s recognising that it is indeed a choice. That you think the term fails to endow the action with the gravitas and reverence you think it should be considered with is once again a you problem.

ComtesseDeSpair · 12/03/2024 13:42

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:31

For a start a child is not a 'thing' they are human beings with thoughts, feelings and rights, just like you. Having children is not a hobbie, this is the issue I have with the wording and terminology as this isn't just a general discussion forum, it is particularly insensitive to comment on children and a life with them as 'drudgery' or whatever other terms with negative connotations on a forum for parents! Lifestyle choice terminology dehumanises children.

I think you’re bogging yourself down unnecessarily in semantics. “Lifestyle choice” isn’t a phrase with negative connotations. Choosing to have no children is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to have and stop at one child only is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to have six children is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to send your children to boarding school is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to home educate then all whilst living in a yurt is a lifestyle choice. They are all choices which affect our respective lifestyles, therefore they are lifestyle choices. All of the people who made each of those choices will have different views about why their choice is the best one, and likely different views about why any of the other choices are sensible or madness or absolutely beyond comprehension. Sometimes they’ll voice them. If you’re happy with and confident in the lifestyle choice you made, it’s by the by.

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:46

BeachBeerBbq · 12/03/2024 13:38

Picking up on "thing" in that post is ridiculous. It's very clear poster wasn't calling kifs a thing 🙄 Even as ESL I get that because there was simply no calling kids "things" so that interpretation wasn't possible.

Many, many parents here use the term "drudgery" for their day to day lives.

Edited

Sorry, I really don't understand your first paragraph and abbreviations.

Where did I say that some posters don't refer to drudgery? That is not the same at all as asserting a life of a Mother is drudgery as you would need to have lived a life that you can reflect upon, from the birth of your children to adulthood and declare your 'whole' life to be one of drudgery due to being a Mother. Equally, how do you know your life would be all drudgery as a Mother, what are you basing that on?

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:58

ComtesseDeSpair · 12/03/2024 13:42

I think you’re bogging yourself down unnecessarily in semantics. “Lifestyle choice” isn’t a phrase with negative connotations. Choosing to have no children is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to have and stop at one child only is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to have six children is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to send your children to boarding school is a lifestyle choice. Choosing to home educate then all whilst living in a yurt is a lifestyle choice. They are all choices which affect our respective lifestyles, therefore they are lifestyle choices. All of the people who made each of those choices will have different views about why their choice is the best one, and likely different views about why any of the other choices are sensible or madness or absolutely beyond comprehension. Sometimes they’ll voice them. If you’re happy with and confident in the lifestyle choice you made, it’s by the by.

Edited

I disagree with you and it's not an argument in semantics, it is fundamentally incorrect, there is no misinterpretation of meaning. 'Lifestyle' suggests that they are personal and private choices that only impact your way of living, whereas actually having children has implications for society and parents are making a contribution to society bringing those 'lifestyle' choices up!

fitzwilliamdarcy · 12/03/2024 13:58

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:22

I have never seen a post from a Mother that declares their 'whole' life to have been a life of drudgery so to be clear this would have to be an older Mother with adult children that has stated their whole lived life as a Mother has been one of drudgery. Suggesting your life as it is presently, with little DC, is one of drudgery is not the same as someone without children asserting that the whole life of a Mother is one of drudgery. Equally, it is more insulting as you are declaring this as a truth but actually it's based upon zero experience of such a life!

I think you are massively over-thinking one poster's comment, honestly. You've done the same thing with the overreaction to "things".

I don't think that poster was talking about the whole life of a mother. It's perfectly valid to observe that life with children can look like hard, dull work. That may not be the truth for all mums, and it may not be what in fact the speaker's life would be like if they had children, but it's not remotely uncommon for parents of particularly young children to describe the early years as drudgery.

The fact that childfree people pick up on that and use that to inform their decision not to have children isn't some kind of hostile insult to mums. It's just a reflection of the lived experience of parents as some of them describe it, and a degree of imagination as to what life with children might be like for us.

It's quite clear that you're unprepared to tolerate anyone without kids speaking about parenting, or mums, or children, in anything other than a positive, reverential manner. I don't think MN is the place to be for that kind of environment (if indeed it ever was).

Coatsoff42 · 12/03/2024 14:06

It’s hard work bringing up children, it’s worth doing well, then they go on and support society and become balanced compasionate contributing adults.

the attitude it’s a choice implies perhaps we could all choose not to have children, stop complaining and taking up the summer holidays, and then we will all be happy and pay the same amount of tax.

clearly that’s not true, and there will be no one to look after us when we are old. Even if I didn’t have children, I need someone else’s children to look after me (dr, nurse builder, plumber, electrician, gardener, butcher, baker etc etc)

it is a choice, but in my opinion its also a choice that recognises that if you don’t have your own children, as a society you are duty bound to bring up all of the children well.

ComtesseDeSpair · 12/03/2024 14:08

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 13:58

I disagree with you and it's not an argument in semantics, it is fundamentally incorrect, there is no misinterpretation of meaning. 'Lifestyle' suggests that they are personal and private choices that only impact your way of living, whereas actually having children has implications for society and parents are making a contribution to society bringing those 'lifestyle' choices up!

Most personal and private choices also have implications for wider society. Your diet, fitness levels, whether you choose to own a car or not, the size of house you live in, how much you give to charity, where you shop. All affect the global climate, your burden on the NHS, land usage, town planning, the impact on other humans living elsewhere in the world. They’re all still lifestyle choices, just as choosing whether to have children or not have children or how many children to have are lifestyle choices.

Most people, parents or not, make a variety of different contributions to society.

InterIgnis · 12/03/2024 14:10

Lifestyle choice: “A choice a person makes about how to live and behave, according to their attitudes, tastes, and values”.

Lifestyle choices primarily impact the lives of the person/people making them. That they can and do also have wider societal ramifications doesn’t somehow make them not lifestyle choices.

dimllaishebiaith · 12/03/2024 14:13

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 12:34

So you've derived from my post that I'm referring to you. Being honest about your reasons or offering up explanations for not having children are in lots of cases really just ways to belittle Mothers. Stop being disingenuous, I didn't choose a life of drudgery because my tiny little uneducated brain did not have any capacity to predict the impact on me as a woman.

I've been very clear that I didn't understand the point you were making so I'm not sure why you are sneering at me deriving something from it

Stop being disingenuous, I didn't choose a life of drudgery because my tiny little uneducated brain did not have any capacity to predict the impact on me as a woman.

Again this is what you have assumed a poster has meant by using the word drudgery she never actually said that

*Being honest about your reasons or offering up explanations for not having children are in lots of cases really just ways to belittle Mothers.(

She was answering a question asked. Why are you moaning someone answered a question instead of why the question was asked

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 14:17

InterIgnis · 12/03/2024 13:41

Well, putting aside the minor point that I didn’t in fact call kids ‘things’, - animal, vegetable or mineral: unappealing is unappealing. You can take issue with the terminology as much as you like, that’s a you problem.

and of course it’s a lifestyle choice. Calling something that isn’t commentary on the importance, of lack thereof, of making any one choice, it’s recognising that it is indeed a choice. That you think the term fails to endow the action with the gravitas and reverence you think it should be considered with is once again a you problem.

Edited

No reverence is required, just a reality check and accuracy, children are not a 'Lifestyle choice'- please see above for explanation!

It's funny how children are 'lifestyle choice' for the purposes of minimising their relevance and the relevance of parents on threads such as this (and on MN of all places) but when children misbehave in public, in schools, in supermarkets etc or even when it is nothing to do with bad behaviour, discussions on education provisions for the workforce of the future or numbers of young people entering the armed forces to defend the country, their impact on society is acknowledged and fretted over. In the case of bad behaviour, parents are taken to task for not controlling these personal choices that apparently have no impact on anyone outside of the family home🙄

InterIgnis · 12/03/2024 14:22

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 14:17

No reverence is required, just a reality check and accuracy, children are not a 'Lifestyle choice'- please see above for explanation!

It's funny how children are 'lifestyle choice' for the purposes of minimising their relevance and the relevance of parents on threads such as this (and on MN of all places) but when children misbehave in public, in schools, in supermarkets etc or even when it is nothing to do with bad behaviour, discussions on education provisions for the workforce of the future or numbers of young people entering the armed forces to defend the country, their impact on society is acknowledged and fretted over. In the case of bad behaviour, parents are taken to task for not controlling these personal choices that apparently have no impact on anyone outside of the family home🙄

Choosing to be a parent or not is making a lifestyle choice. By definition you are making a choice as to what you want from life, and how you want to live it.

We all get to choose what we consider to be important and relevant to our lives. What we don’t get to do is demand that others share our opinions. Well, you can try to demand it I guess, and end up angry on the internet 🫠

TheFancyPoet · 12/03/2024 14:22

so you are a migrant also? Hmmmmmmmmmm

Goldenbear · 12/03/2024 14:31

ComtesseDeSpair · 12/03/2024 14:08

Most personal and private choices also have implications for wider society. Your diet, fitness levels, whether you choose to own a car or not, the size of house you live in, how much you give to charity, where you shop. All affect the global climate, your burden on the NHS, land usage, town planning, the impact on other humans living elsewhere in the world. They’re all still lifestyle choices, just as choosing whether to have children or not have children or how many children to have are lifestyle choices.

Most people, parents or not, make a variety of different contributions to society.

Edited

Are very survival as a species, our economy, our society depends upon some of the population making the choice to be parents and bringing those children up. If you took away all the lifestyle choices you have listed, it would have no great impact on our existence, if people stopped having children, humans would eventually become extinct, in the short term it would be chaos they are not comparable.