You also tend to get treated worse by healthcare professionals as well.
I had dd1 just after I turned 19. She wasn’t planned but my now DH and I made the choice to keep her and I would have said we have been good parents. DDs have certainly turned out very well and we are all very close.
anyway, As we had one we decided we may as well have another and complete our family young. I came off the pill but nothing happened and I only actually had one period in about 9 months. So I went to the doctors to see what was going on. Explained we were wanting to try for a second etc etc. I was 21 at the time. The doctor, a woman who looked to be on her late 50s gave me the most patronising look and said “why do you want another one dear, isn’t having one hard enough for you?” I honestly didn’t know what to say to her. I tried to explain but she was so rude, condescending and dismissive that I just left. Awful woman. Still makes me mad now. I wouldn’t have been treated like that if I had been 35!
As it was a few months later I got pregnant with dd2 despite not having another period. With things the way they were and my very erratic periods I may not have even been able to have children naturally if I had waited until I was older. I haven’t always been the most on it with contraception and I have never got pregnant again.
im blessed to have my dds and I am actually very glad I had them young. I don’t know if we would have the same relationship we do have if I had been older. With my family history of health problems i think my cut off would have been around the 35-37 mark for a last baby. But people have different lives, histories and family health.
I do think younger parents get more judgment and worse comments though. If you haven’t been a young parent you won’t get it, but you always feel like you have something to prove, like the assumption is that you won’t be a good parent and you have to fight to prove that you are. There used to be an older mum at school who used to talk to me slowly when we first met, just in case I violent understand her if she spoke at a normal rate, you know, being a young parents equals being thick. She did stop once we spent time on the PtA together and she realised I wasn’t actually an idiot, but it’s the assumption. It’s something you won’t experience as an older parent.