IDLEchild
Well-Known Member
Gonz said:You'll realize how empty & meaningless life was without them.
Maybe so but this realization may only occur from the fact that the general youthful indiscretions have been cleared out of the way.
It seems meaningless because you've done it and been through it all...or most of it. If someone decides to jump into marriage without being the wildchild they wanted to be then marriage for them feels like a constraint, a bondage into something far less comfortable which seeps deeper into their skin as days go by.
Not everyone feels the need to commit, for some the ritualistic measures don't serve as any need of closure, they only act as an hinderence. In BoP's case; her decision to be in a relationship she is, is her form of sanctity, and sanity. What is she gets married and has kids and all that jazz and realizes that what she had before wasn't meaningless? It was more than what she has now.
To you it is meaningless now because for you the consistency and security of love appeals to you more than the spontaniety and passion of it (not to say you aren't passionate about your family)...but this is not for us all.
I am pretty sure BoP already realizes the intensity of a long lasting love without being totally immersed in the whole aspect of marriage and without having kids she never really wanted.
So in conclusion: You and her both realize the importance of a consistent relationship and long lasting one...yet you wanted the extra responsibility of a child and she didn't.....does that make her youthful life any less meaningless?
I understand where you are coming from and I must agree...a lot of times I was a nay sayer of a lot of things I partake in and (or) support now, so the whole notion"Don't knock untill you've tried it" is very true but for me Tonsky said it best
having kids is a purely personal thing. i can say that while i may assume a couple would want kids i sure don't hold it against them in the slightest.
(not to say you're holding it against her)
BoP said:And that is exactly the patronising crap I don't need
I don't think he was being patronising at all. He speaks from a cthartic point of view...I bet when the newborn kid that you helped produce grabs your finger for the first time with his tiny fist it is an awe inspiring experience. He speaks from that POV and I'll agree with him here...I can already imagine that it would all be meaningless drivel compared to that child...
...but then again...I want to have kids, someday.