Two is enough for us. Even if we were younger there would only be two. But that, imo, is personal preference just like whether to have a child in the first place.
It can be at times. Telling one child you can't attend their concert because you're at another's function. Telling one gamer he can't get the latest game because his brother wants one too and you can't afford two etc. We find compromises and make as many exceptions as we can but it doesn't compare to how much better it would be if it were only one of them. I feel like I don't give enough because I can't give all 3 equal yet enough of anything.This sounds kind of... cold... but I'm sure it was not meant that way.
Best thing was this:http://bronzybabe.tumblr.com/post/46373539773/gay-marriage this individuals exists. That is it.
Yeah, it is the kind of thing... did she lived in a cave her entire life and only recently got an internet connection??Best thing was this:
ADDITION to all of you friendly rebloggers who’ve enjoyed caps-locked swearing in response to me while failing to a make a point and suggesting “marriage existed long before your f***ing made up deity”: It didn’t. People would cohabitate, make life-long commitments, and have families but it wasn’t until the 12th Century that Roman Catholic theologians and writers defined a marriage. It was defined as: a sacrament, a sacred ceremony tied to experiencing God’s presence.
China had marriages around 400-500 B.C.Is all I am saying.
It can be at times. Telling one child you can't attend their concert because you're at another's function. Telling one gamer he can't get the latest game because his brother wants one too and you can't afford two etc. We find compromises and make as many exceptions as we can but it doesn't compare to how much better it would be if it were only one of them. I feel like I don't give enough because I can't give all 3 equal yet enough of anything.
No, they've each said it at one time or another. It hurt like nothing else ever has. The fact that at any time, one of them feels like I don't care as much about them as I do another is the emotional pain equivilent of having hot razors run across my heart. Having to pick and choose between them for attention/time/finances is almost as bad.You're too hard on yourself.
No, they've each said it at one time or another. It hurt like nothing else ever has. The fact that at any time, one of them feels like I don't care as much about them as I do another is the emotional pain equivilent of having hot razors run across my heart. Having to pick and choose between them for attention/time/finances is almost as bad.
Shit, I forgot about that thread.THERAPY.
C'mon people, we can't let these forum memes sit idle!
Except that you would only have one of your three awesome kids.It still doesn't change the fact that with one child it would be easier and more beneficial to all involved.
Also, be aware that you aren't alone in feeling this way. I have felt that pain, simply not to the degree you describe, and I know many other good fathers who have expressed similar feelings, doubts, and regrets, but they, like you, still get up every morning and work hard to be there in so many ways for their kids. You're doing well.
And visiting in person makes it hella easier to get a head start on having ALL THE BABIESSpecifically I learned that it was cheaper to drive to my girlfriend's house (20 miles away @ $1.20 per gallon) and visit for two hours than it was to call her for two hours (stupid local-long-distance price gouging of the 90's at $$$$ per minute).
That right there is the crux. Having to compromise isn't something you'd have to do with one. That's all I'm saying. I have no doubts that raising a single child has it's pratfalls and issues and regrets, I just personally feel I'd have been able to deal with those vs the ones I have with multiple children.Well, to me it seems to be an issue of high expectations and a misunderstanding of fairness on the part of your children (or, perhaps, in yourself or your spouse). You may not be in a position to do everything at once, or provide everything they want, but you are in a position to compromise fairly.
That right there is the crux. Having to compromise isn't something you'd have to do with one. That's all I'm saying. I have no doubts that raising a single child has it's pratfalls and issues and regrets, I just personally feel I'd have been able to deal with those vs the ones I have with multiple children.
I also have been preparing them for life through shared chores, responbilities that affect not only themselves but the rest. I never complained life was bad or my children live horrible lives, it was a simple statement that I tell all perspective parents: If I had one child, I'd have been able to give them more one-on-one attention and been able to do things I can't with multiple children. Just something simple like going to the movies or restaurant is a huge difference between one child and three. Let alone a big family vacation.
I understand the way you feel, in a way. My parents were in that kind of position. I went to "rich kid" schools, and I often noticed that I didn't have as many things or as big an allowance as my friends (and I had to work for my money by doing chores--which is how I thought all allowances were supposed to work!). My parents nipped any brattiness in the bud, cutting off all privileges if they ever got a tiny whiff of entitlement. Whining was met with, "Well, if that's the way you handle 'no,' I guess you need to hear it more often!"Here's a parenting conundrum I have. I make a lot of money--I'm not going to deny it. I do well. But I grew up poor. I had next to nothing. I know I'm looking back with rose-tinted glasses, but I see my childhood as happier and less materialistic than my kids. I try not to overindulge them (I'm a cheapskate, too), but despite that, they seem to have developed this taste for "stuff". I discuss, I lecture, but it doesn't help all that much. They see their friends and the privileges they get (I dislike living in a neighborhood that corresponds to my tax bracket for exactly this reason, but wife trump card), and anything we withhold from them isn't fair. I can blow that off, I can discuss it, but it's a pretty big wall sometimes. It feels dirty to me this desire. I know part of it is their youth, but I feel like I need to intervene now.
...And now you're in Hawaii.[DOUBLEPOST=1364434603][/DOUBLEPOST]And [user]LittleSin[/user] - you can only do so much. Show him love and discipline and right and wrong, and hope for the best.I didn't get an allowance. I got a list of chores and a speech about how I had a roof over my head, food on the table, and clothes on my back.
That's thanks to the US Navy though. I didn't work toward living in HI, I married into it....And now you're in Hawaii.