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a good reason to get pregnant?

Madam Hedgehog's picture

i am writing this on my kindle so please excuse any errors.

dh has wanted us to get pregnant for a long time but i have not even considered it until recently. it took me four years to realize im going to spend the next decade at home raising his kids. so i figured i mite as well have my own kid at home as well. i am 27. i am not getting younger. i do want to have my lown at some point. but i feel like this is faulty logic and i am just trying to mske myself ok with a situation that makes me feel used.

how am i supposed to see this mess?

Comments

AliceP's picture

Just have one, it might help bring some understanding as to why BM does some of the things she does that I think you are too critical about, babies help you clarify priorities, going from one to two kids is hard but going from 2 to 3 and 4 is a cinch cause you have helpers, I think it'll be good for you to have your own little piece of you.

Madam Hedgehog's picture

this is generally what i am hearing. alot of the time i just don't know how to feel about all the time i spend with the skids. while i'm there and they're there and we're all together it feels good and i feel like i'm literally THISCLOSE to being a parent a damned good one.

every time they leave, i feel like i've lost days of my life to an investment that the kids will NEVER BE ABLE TO CONSCIOUSLY ACKNOWLEDGE. it's not even their fault. they want to think their mom is raising them--they need to think that--and therefore all the hours and days that i put into the relationship is more like some sort of circus act that will disappear from history the second it's over.

i know that sounds selfish and horrible, but almost no one would volunteer to be a parent to kids who would never remember them or the time they spent together. being a parent is suppose to be building a relationship. who would give up great portions of their life for a relationship that can never exist, and that must be forgotten.

i see it every weekend the skids spend with their BM. they leave telling me they love me and that they will miss me and they can't wait to come back. when they get back, it's almost as if they've forgotten who i am, and more importantly, our relationship.

so, while on one side i love the kids and feel great spending time with them--and there's no way i'll volunteer to do anything else with that time--i guess i feel that i'd feel less confused and upset about it afterward if i had a kid at home who i could build a real relationship with. so, even if the skids come back and act like we didn't have that great game of hide and seek, my kid would not forget and would remember and my relationship would be better with her/him because of that time we spent together.

Whateva's picture

Thank you Happy as Hell!!! I read these similar blogs and wonder what planet I am on. "Having 2,3 or 4 is easy because you have helpers"..seriously???? wow

Madam Hedgehog's picture

that's sort of how i think about it. i have to share the skids with BM every day. everything i do with them has some sort of blow-back from her. but if i had my own, i would not have to worry about constantly stepping on some other parent's toes. i could just be a parent and just enjoy teaching and taking care of another person. and that's really what i want.

Notastatistic's picture

Is this kind of a joke? wow...

Oh and RUNNNNN! You're making a huge mistake.

Madam Hedgehog's picture

no. not a joke. i am married to an awesome guy who is a great father. i have always wanted my own, but i always thought i would become independently wealthy and not be a step mom and not be married to someone who had their own already.

as a result, when i became a step i sort of tossed my fantasies out the window.

however, recently i've realized that i am going to be at home raising kids 50% of the time anyway, so what's the point of denying myself the ability to have my own just because this situation is not ideal?

i guess i had an "idea" stuck in my head, and sort of threw away the whole concept of kids when that ideal was no longer possible.

i kept trying to think of other things that i could put myself into when Dh's kids got old enough to be in school most of the time.

but recently i have thought that maybe i should make use of all this "kid-raising" time and try to have one of my own.

when DH and i got together, i was the typical kid-centric adult who believed anything and everything should be sacrificed for the kids who ALREADY existed (his). i thought it would be too traumatic for me to have kids too. i thought all our money and effort and time should be poured exclusively into the skids because they were already here and already confused and neglected by their bm.

i guess after 4 years the sacrificing is less like sacrifcing and more like routine kid stuff, and it's occurred to me that it might not be the end of the world for anyone if Dh and i had our own as well.

purpledaisies's picture

I think that if you want a kid and your relationship with your dh is solid then have a kid! You want kids right? Then have one. Smile

Madam Hedgehog's picture

before the step situation, i literally thot it would be that simple. and maybe it should be. i guess i put myself into the all-sacrifcing step parent role for too long, thinking that everything should go into the skids and their lives.

but i do want my own. i'd adopt the skids in a heartbeat if BM disappeared, but that hasn't happened and probably won't.

the skids accidentally call me mom sometimes, and while i feel worried for them because I know BM would wig out if she heard it, the accident feels nice and i often fantasize about what it would be like to just hear it and not feel conflicted about it.

i just think about what it might be like to be grading a paper and have a kid walk into the room, call me mom, and to not worry about what some other crazy woman will do to the kid for calling me that. i love the idea of being able to simply say "yes, kiddo?" and then take care of whatever it is without worrying about another pissed off crazy parent involved.

and i call the skids "kiddo" all the time. i take care of them all the time. but BM is always at the back of my mind, and she is always part of the skids' thought process. i am not their mom, and they realize they've screwed up somehow when they call me mom.

and it really sucks.

Madam Hedgehog's picture

the skids' reactions and the inlaws reactions are my primary concern. well . . . next to the complete and utter chaos BM will not doubt create.

i guess i worry that this is an unfair situation to bring a child into.

having unstable half brothers who constantly switch between loving stepmom and hating her.

having inlaws who don't care about the kid because they're obsessed with DH's exwife.

having a DH who will probably--not for sure--overcompensate for half brothers because their life sucks and they don't have two parents in one household.

having 100% less than two half brothers because their rich mom is hiding her money and bleeding DH dry every chance she gets.

i don't know. i just worry that it's not fair to the kid that we would have. and i don't know how--if the kid ever asked--i would explain the situation in a way that made sense.

Madam Hedgehog's picture

i am getting to the overriding point, but on another level i am terrified i won't be able to forgive myself. my own family situation was really screwed up, and i am overwhelmingly worried that i will end up like mom . . . struggling to explain why/how to justify bring a kid into a bad situation.

purpledaisies's picture

Hon if you wait for the ideal situation then you will never have a kid b/c there is no such thing.

Madam Hedgehog's picture

that is what both my parents (in their sixties and waited until after 35 to even get started) said to me.

my mom, especially, seems to really regret waiting to have my brother and me. she almost tied both times and had insane health issues afterwards.

i feel like i will have to feel guilty if i don't wait for the perfect-perfect situation tho.

doll faced sm's picture

I almost died w/ both my pregnancies, too . . . one when I was a young 20 something and the 2nd in my early 30's. Risks may increase a bit with age, but there is never a guarantee one way or the other. And while my younger 20 something body was able to better handle the physical strain, my older, wiser, more established 30 something self was confident enough to tell people to bugger off if I wasn't able to meet their demands and had much better health care.

All I mean to say really is that it's all a matter of perspective. Don't let yourself be bullied either by life circumstances or by horror stories into what you don't want or a time line that you're not ok with. When you just know in your gut that it's time and that you're ready, go for it.

purpledaisies's picture

I have to say that in some ways I wish I had waited til I graduated college but looking back I don;t think I would have ever went all the way through with college. Now that they are almost adults I am glad I didn't wait. I can enjoy my later years and still be young enough to enjoy them. And now that I am older and more established with my dh we both are grounded with money and our future I know what I want in life and can enjoy it and the bar scene is not it. LOL I mean that is what most young people do and say they missed out on by having kids too young.

So my point is that I am very glad and happy i had my kids when I did which was in high school. Now however I have always been a mom and grew up very fast. And don't get me wrong it was not that easy but I think that since I did it the way i did it I raised my kids to be very strong and independent so they can do anything they want. I was too young to really baby my kids and I think that made them better people.

My point is you never know what life has in store for you and you can't not do something you really want just b/c you keep playing the what if game.