I don't know if anyone else has experienced this, but I just have to rant about it. I worked in a daycare for 5 years (baby room through school-age) and I was also nanny for twins (1 1/2 to 3 yrs old). I feel like I have pretty good experience with kids (I'm also a teacher now). I get so tired of people talking to me like I've never been around a baby or a child in my life. I've experienced a lot while nannying. I was with them from the moment they woke up to when they went to bed and occasionally slept over night. I'm so tired of hearing, "You'll know what I mean when you have your baby." Okay rant over.
Re: "Just because I don't have kids" rant
This! I am a teacher as well. I don't know why women have to be so damn negative. Isn't becoming a mother supposed to be a good thing? Why are they trying to make me dread it?
Exactly! If it was all so horrible, wouldn't they have stopped after one LO?! All of these woman who are blabbing on and on at lunch time making parenting into a horror story all have 2 or more children so I'm guessing the good outweighs the bad and I'm sure we'll all get through it just fine :-)
I agree. I thought it was tough because it was like raising someone else's kids the way they want.
In my bag: Nikon D90; 35mm 1.8, 90mm 2.8 macro (my fave), Lensbaby Composer with macro extensions. BFP after 13 cycles and one ectopic. Lost left tube 5/19/10.
I agree. But I'm tired of hearing about diaper changes, bottle feeding, etc. I've changes some explosions in my time.
The good outweighs the bad, by far...but there is a lot of insanity you experience once you become a parent. It's sort of a natural response when you get together with a bunch of moms to start commiserating on the craziness your kids have thrown at you. It doesn't mean you hate being a parent or don't love them or regret having them, you just have a way of sharing your experiences.
Totally Agree
Guess I'm one of those people who thinks that it is different by a LOT. It bugs me when people say that too, but honestly, as cliche as it is, when you have *your own* kids everything changes.
I truly believe you're right, that it's something you can't understand until you've been there. I still think it's super annoying when people say it. It's like an "I told you so" or something. Just. Shut. Up.
There's nothing in life that you can TRULY understand until you've lived it - no reason to rub that in. Remember when your parents used to say "you'll understand when you grow up" or something similar? Super annoying, teaches nothing, accomplishes nothing.
This exactly! I hate listening to other mothers tell expectant mothers horror stories. Being a mom is hard but it's an awesome and wonderful experience! I love it and I am so excited for everyone of you no matter what number you're on.
And, noone knows everything about children even if they've had seven of their own. Every day is a learning experience.
I don't have as much experience as you, but I was also a nanny (lived in) for a time.
Generally, though, what I like to say is this: "I don't have kids, but I did have parents."
I work in L&D and there are actually a few moms that tell me about all the fun they have with their kids, funny stories, etc... It is refreshing to hear that there are people who love being parents rather than tell you horror stories and how awful it is going to be.
Heather
i agree that it may be different once you have kids of your own, but i also think that not only it is annoying to hear that, but it really may not be that different for people with extensive experience. I have not been around kids that much before i had my first child, and it has been an eye opener for me personally, but i have known people who literally raised their little brothers and sisters and i am sure that they truly know what it is like to be a parent and have kids of their own...
I see what you are saying, but it is still different then raising your sibling or someone else that you love very much - the love is TOTALLY different for your own child. I am talking from a love and dedication perspective, not an experience perspective though, keep that in mind. have a brother and I would take a bullet for him, but I would take TEN for my child.
In my bag: Nikon D90; 35mm 1.8, 90mm 2.8 macro (my fave), Lensbaby Composer with macro extensions. BFP after 13 cycles and one ectopic. Lost left tube 5/19/10.