Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Christina Jaloway's avatar

Lots of food for thought here I didn’t get married til I was 33, not because I didn’t want to, but because I didn’t meet my husband till I was 32 (and the options I had before then, for many reasons, would not have made good husbands). We have 3 kids and hope for at least one more, but I’m already 40 and chances are we won’t have a huge family. I hope my boys will marry and start having kids much younger than I did, if they are able to! When I meet young couples who say they’re waiting for the “right time” to have kids—one guy recently told me he thinks that he and his wife, who have been married almost a decade, are “finally mature enough” to have kids—I want to say, “but it’s the *having kids* that foments the maturity!” My husband and I were eager to have kids ASAP when we got married due to our ages, but neither of us could have predicted the ways in which having children has shaped us and grown us up, even though we were already very much “adults” when we married.

Expand full comment
Kelly Garrison's avatar

I think the best way to ensure this is to immerse your children in a culture where having a lot of kids is normal/people tend to have kids earlier than average, but not too early. I've talked about my conversion to Catholicism as an adult and the fact I was inspired by attending Catholic school for a few years. Even though my parents weren't religious, living in an Irish Catholic enclave (where my great-grandparents came from their various homelands) is what planted my hopes of having kids on the younger side and having a large family. I think you're already doing that because your parents had so many kids!

Expand full comment
10 more comments...

No posts