My husband and I have been talking about TTC this summer, as we both would love to start a family. We have been married for a year and love the idea of having a baby around. My DH says he wants one and he's ready. However, now I am second guessing as a group of my close girlfriends told me they don't believe my husband is really ready to have one. They don't think he's ready to give up his Saturday night hanging out with our group of friends and having a beer or two.
I feel dumb being so conflicted about this, but how can I tell if my husband is really ready for a baby?
Re: How to tell if husband is ready for baby?
BFP 2/19/15 • MMC found at 9 wks • D&E at 11 wks (age 36)
BFP 8/29/15 • CP (age 37)
TTC#2 since May 2017
BFP 10/18/17 • MMC found at 8 wks • Misoprostal at 10.5 wks (age 39)
BFP 2/16/18 • CP (age 39)
BFP 4/13/18 • CP (age 39)
BFP 5/07/18 • MMC found at 10.5 wks • D&E at 11.5 wks • Testing showed it was a girl with Trisomy 22. (age 39/40)
9/5/18 Diagnosed with diminished ovarian reserve (4-5 follicles, one ovary had none and was very atrophied)
RE says the low egg count is likely causing my recurrent pregnancy loss. Less eggs results in more aneuploidy.
BFP 9/24/18 • CP (age 40)
IMO, if your friends think they know your DH better than you do, that's a problem. They also might be saying it from a selfish part of themselves. They might be afraid to "lose" you and your Saturday nights. Having a baby doesn't ground you for life, you just have to balance home/social life more.
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Fur babies: Yeti (cat)
#1 Boy E 9/30/17
#2 Girl A 7/27/2020
#3 ?? ? est. 1/5/2025
I think I am overly nervous to try for our first baby!
Sit down and talk to your DH about how both of you will balance baby and family time with social friends time. What do you find to be a realistic amount of outside the home time and what he feels would be right.
He will need 'me' time, as you will. But he might already know and expect it to be once in while while baby is a baby, or he might think weekly will still be acceptable.
You never know until you ask.
You don't exactly run to them bragging about all the amazing sex you're having, all his over-the-top sweet gestures, the gifts he spoils you with, or when he comes home early just to spend time with you.
Your friends have their own ups and downs in their relationships, and it's insensitive to rub your good times in their faces, especially when they're down. Meanwhile, everyone can relate to a DH acting a little selfish, silly, immature, or clueless sometimes... so sometimes those are the easiest stories to relate and bond over. Your friends get a skewed picture of your marriage.
In the end, deciding to add to your family is a decision between you and your husband, only you two have the full picture. Also, like @daniedevotion said, having kids is not the end of the world. Great couples learn to balance their "me time", "us time", and "family time".
LFAF Summer 2016 Awards:
2010: Infertility
October 2015: missed miscarriage #2 at 11 weeks (trisomy 22)
You didn't marry your friends.
LFAF February Siggy Challenge - "Favorite TV/Movie Couple"
DD: 10/17/13
TTC#2 Actively: 10/14, NTNP: 01/14
Left-Sided Hydrosalpinx (cause: genetic abnormality, TREATED 11/16)
http://www.fertilityfriend.com/home/396b04
Edited because words.