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AntiNatalism foid suddenly wants a child at 38 :marseyeggless: :marseywall!:

https://www.insider.com/single-childless-want-husband-family-2023-11

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16989498658496387.webp

With now divorced 2nd husband who's nearly 30 years older :stabler:

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16989498659697764.webp

  • I didn't want kids and didn't think I'd want to get married again after my divorce.

  • But recently I realized I actually do want to build a life --- and a family --- with someone.

  • I'm almost 39, and I'm starting to panic about whether my chance to have a child has passed.

I can still picture it. I was 20, sitting on the kitchen countertop with my legs dangling over the cabinets. He was 21, leaning against the stove of the home he hoped we'd share. We'd been dating for nearly two years and were at a standstill.

I was clinging to my dream of moving five hours away to attend the design program at the Art Institute of Seattle. He wanted a simple life with children and home-cooked meals in the little resort town of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, where we met in sixth grade.

That day in the kitchen, we decided to stay together, and we each gave up something to do that. I would no longer pursue design school and the big-city life I'd always dreamed of, and he'd forgo having children and a wife who prioritized homemaking. I made it clear to him that I did not see motherhood in my future and that he needed to be OK with that. Two years later, we married.

My now ex-husband wanted kids and a stay-at-home wife

My husband thought I'd change, and I thought I could change for him. I told myself that it was silly to go after my dreams and that I should be content in the pretty mountain town where I grew up.

But I grew resentful when he asked where dinner was or complained that his gym clothes hadn't been washed. I did little to hide my disdain for our small-town life. He was a good and hardworking man, but I don't think I made him feel that way.

We were young, foolish, and sweet, thinking our love would allow us to overcome our differences. We were also very wrong.

Shortly after I turned 30, we divorced. We were both tired of sacrificing the things that were important to us for each other.

I didn't think I'd want to get married again or have kids

I told my friends and family I'd never get married again. I needed independence, a fulfilling career, and space to chart my own course, and I didn't think marriage fit into that vision. I was content to look toward a future without a husband, children, or the trappings of a "traditional" life.

I was also in no hurry to get into a serious relationship after my divorce. I was terrified of repeating my mistakes. Nevertheless, months later I stumbled into one that lasted 7 ½ years.

He was significantly older and wasn't interested in marriage or children, and we were focused on our careers. We expected little of each other aside from fidelity. We took trips, drank nice wine, and stayed out late. Without the expectations or duties of a shared mortgage or a family, we simply enjoyed our time together. When we were apart, we did our own things. Those were great, easy years.

It was an incredibly healing relationship, and, ironically, I started to become the woman my ex-husband had wanted. I enjoyed cooking, cleaning, and caring for someone when it was my choice and when it wasn't asked of me. I'd been so preoccupied with preserving my independence and caring for myself that I hadn't realized how much I could enjoy caring for someone else and allowing them to care for me.

I changed my mind about wanting to build a family with someone

I started to think I might want more than an easy, aimless relationship. I realized I might actually want to build a life from the ground up with someone who wanted the same thing. And while I knew that might take more work, it also felt like the type of connection worth pursuing.

I felt restless, and I couldn't ignore that what I wanted had changed. Though we were technically together, we were living our own lives. That was exactly what I had wanted and needed after my divorce, but autonomy was no longer my top priority. It felt like the relationship had run its course. He's a wonderful man, and we're still close, but we'd entered our relationship without intention or a shared vision of our future.

We broke up shortly before my 37th birthday. Over the following year and a half I dated around for the first time in my life. I broke hearts, had my own heart broken, and did in my late 30s what many people do in their 20s. I didn't know it then, but I was learning what I wanted and needed in a relationship. Ultimately, I want to build a life with another person, not simply join theirs when it's convenient.

I began to feel an incredible urgency to find the relationship and stability to see me through the second half of my life. To my amazement, I began seriously thinking about marriage and children --- I hardly recognized myself.

I also began to feel selfish for spending so much time focusing solely on myself. I went from proudly proclaiming I was too self-centered to be bothered with a family to realizing there was more to life than independence and the pleasures of living for oneself. My very existence started to feel shallow and hollow.

I worry I'll end up alone, but I'm still hopeful

Now, months after that realization and at nearly 39, I feel panicked thinking I'll be a single, childless middle-aged woman. I worry that my youthful looks will fade and that I won't be able to attract the man I want to spend the rest of my life with.

If I sound desperate, it's because I honestly do feel a little desperate. At my age, I know that creating life may not be an option for me. And I worry that men who want a family aren't looking for a woman pushing 40. I get it; I'm no longer the ideal candidate for motherhood, and it's a scary truth. But I still hope to find someone who thinks I'm the ideal partner and create our family together.

I understand the appeal of life without the constraints of marriage or children; for many years I was quite satisfied living that way. I know people can live happy, purpose-driven lives without those things. I just don't believe I'm one of those people anymore. I know now that my purpose lies in having a husband and a family. I'm meant to care for more than myself.

I'm looking for my forever person and hoping he's looking for me, too.

Read the original article on Insider

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incredibly healing relationship

Anytime a foid talks about healing you know shes fricked up to the point no healing will fix her.

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/1698950870983891.webp

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This right here ☝️☝️.

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>biological clock running out

>suddenly terrified of ending up old and alone

:marseymanysuchcases:

I wish I could feel bad for these foids. But they literally asked to have a choice to make these r-slurred decisions.

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It isn't just that, they also shame women who want to have kids in their 20's.

However while they are in their 40's and changing diapers, the foid that had kids in their 20's now have an empty nest and freedom

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I worry that my youthful looks will fade and that I won't be able to attract the man I want to spend the rest of my life with.

Oh honey....

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This foid would rather wait 18 years before admitting her ex was right

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I've said this over and over again -- most women change their minds. That's why doctors should be sued for performing hysterectomies on 20 year old trenders.

Also, people hating on kids and people with kids like these people do are projecting. People who are happy not having kids don't need to scream it online every day like these people. I've always thought these women were jealous of women with happy lives.


Krayon sexually assaulted his sister. https://i.rdrama.net/images/17118241526738973.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/17118241426254768.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/17156480765435808.webp

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>We should sue doctors for that bad decision I made without really thinking about the consequences

Do foids really

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Sorry, also moids that want to be foids and cut off their peepee to only 41% later... those docs should be sued too.


Krayon sexually assaulted his sister. https://i.rdrama.net/images/17118241526738973.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/17118241426254768.webp https://i.rdrama.net/images/17156480765435808.webp

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I'm with the mimic on this one, bravo

:marseymerchant:

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I was had at 33 I turned out okay :marseyretard2:

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:#marseymanysuchcases:

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If I sound desperate, it's because I honestly do feel a little desperate. At my age, I know that creating life may not be an option for me. And I worry that men who want a family aren't looking for a woman pushing 40. I get it; I'm no longer the ideal candidate for motherhood, and it's a scary truth.

You know what? Respect to the foid, at least she understands her situation and isn't man-hating instead of realizing that she put herself in a fricked situation :marseyshrug:

Went into the article ready to :marseysmug2: at her, left feeling a lil bad (but still plenty of :marseysmug2:)

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>now that I'm bored of the peepee carousel, I'm ready to settle down :marseywall:

Every time.

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god darn Im an r-slur but EVERY SOCIETY IN THE WORLD for the past infinity except that last couple hundred years was right

sometimes your main contribution to history is as a warning to others

tick tock baby

however they are also committing a useful service to society by not having children grow up in families where the mothers are unironically of low intellectual capacity, os

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Many such cases, I work in a corporate world and these broads are everywhere, you can see the feminism leave them in real time as reality sinks in :marseywall:

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Idk where to even begin:

*she dated an butthole who wanted a maid

*she's shallow talking about her youthful looks

*omg just adopt a kid you dumb b-word

*before you adopt one though babysit a few people's kids to make sure you really want to ruin your life that way

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YOU KNOW, MAYBE IT'S NOT THE BIRTH CONTROL THAT MAKES ME A RAGING B-WORD, MAYBE IT'S YOUR LYING HORNY BUTT CONSTANTLY TRYING TO JUMP MY SHIT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE FRICKING NIGHT. "BUT I CAN'T SLEEP UNLESS I FRICK YOU!" EVEN IF I BELIEVED THAT FRICKING BULLSHIT, I DON'T GIVE A FRICK. I'LL KNOCK OVER A VET'S OFFICE AND SLIP HORSE TRANQUILIZERS INTO YOUR FRICKING ICED TEA IF THAT'S WHAT IT TAKES TO GET YOU TO LEAVE ME THE FRICK ALONE AND GET SOME FRICKING SHRED OF SLEEP AT NIGHT. LIKE BEING UP EVERY 3 HOURS WHILE THIS KID GRUNTS AND STRAINS TRYING TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO SQUIRT LIQUID SHIT OUT OF HIS BUTT ISN'T EXHAUSTING ENOUGH, YOU EXPECT ME TO PLAY "SEXY SLEEP FAIRY" WITH YOU. GO FIND A FRICKING WHORE, I HOPE YOU GET GONORRHEA AND YOUR PEEPEE FALLS OFF YOU FRICKING SELFISH PRICK.

Snapshots:

met in sixth grade:

did not see motherhood in my future:

we divorced:

He was significantly older:

motherhood:

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