this post was submitted on 12 Feb 2024
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childfree

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I'm in my early thirties and adamantly childfree. I'm lucky enough to be in a long-term relationship with someone who brought up her desire to be childfree on more or less our first date. But I am not having too much luck with my friends from childhood and university - they all seem to be wanting kids, and learning of their pregnancies leaves me with a feeling of sadness. I don't hate kids and think no one should have them, and I am happy for them if they truly wanted this, but I also know what them having kids will mean - we are essentially putting our friendship on hiatus, and I still don't know whether waiting 10 years for the kids to be a bit more independent and not requiring as much attention will mean I suddenly have friends again, but somehow I very much doubt it. And I also don't want 10 years without other friends than my girlfriend. She is in very much the same situation, and while we are good at making the best out of not having kids and stressing about having them, we both would want to be able to hang out with good friends once in a while, both common between us, but also some that are exclusive to each of us.

My assumption is that this is quite common - so I am hoping someone would like to share some success stories in turning this situation around. :)

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[–] willya@lemmyf.uk 41 points 10 months ago (33 children)

If you’re a good enough friend you’d practically develop an uncle like role to your friend’s kids. I think you’re thinking too hard about it.

[–] richieadler@lemmy.myserv.one -1 points 10 months ago (22 children)

If you’re a good enough friend you’d practically develop an uncle like role to your friend’s kids.

Why do you assume that this is good, desirable, or a condition to continue a friendship?

[–] Fondots@lemmy.world 8 points 10 months ago (14 children)

I don't like kids, I have a few friends with kids, some of them really like me, if it were up to me I'd prefer if the kids they didn't even know I exist.

That said, I value my friendships with their parents. Having a good relationship ship with their kids means my friends get to stay in my life. If I don't have a decent relationship their kids, that limits how much I can see with my friends, and if I'm particularly rude, antagonistic, etc. toward them they may choose to cut me out of their lives entirely. It's a matter of whether you like your friends more than you dislike kids.

If your dislike of kids outweighs how much you value your friendship, I think that can be a valid position to have, but it should probably also raise some questions about whether you value your relationship with your friends enough for it to be worth continuing, and/or whether you have some unresolved issues with kids that you may need to address.

If I never had to see my friends' kids again, that wouldn't bother me one bit. If I didn't get to see my friends for years, that would bother me, and for now at least, my friends and their kids are going to be a package deal, so in my case it's an easy cost/benefit analysis. I value my friends more than I dislike their kids, so I'll tolerate their little crotch-goblins.

[–] TyroTheFox@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I think this makes sense. Firstly, respect your friends have children. Then, decide how to interact with them now that its what is happening.

If you want a regular, often relationship, having the ability to talk with the whole household on some level just seems sensible. They live there too; the kids are a person even if not a fully experienced one. Being an Uncle or an Aunt can be fun, or just be civil and honest. Ask stuff, field questions and above all don't be a dick.

The alternative is just to catch your friends when they're free. This might be rare or very occasional. That sucks but its their right to raise a family. The kids are dependant on your friends and your friends need to make sure they're OK. It requires patience and understanding. Possibly a little ingenuity.

In my experience, many parents will enjoy some time away from their kids every so often. If they want it, they'll find a way. And older kids will enjoy sometime where their parents aren't hovering over them. Either a weekly event or occasional times out might be possible to be carved out.

From my own Mother's words: your entire world shifts to revolve around your kids when they arrive. I would say you'd need to understand that and act appropriately.

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