by WildRose » Thu 17 Jan 2008, 18:25:23
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I do have a bone to pick with a culture that treats people as if they were luxeries to be attained or disposed of, this does not mean that I cannot understand that, at certain times of life, one cannot be thankful that they do not yet have the responsibility for children, or, for that matter, aging parents or that such emotions are not the right attitude to have.
Just a few thoughts, wisconsin_cur. Most people today, particularly in large cities, do not live "in community" the way our ancestors did, or the way those in small towns or farming communities still do. If they did, certain responsibilities, such as aging parents, a very sick spouse, troubled teens, etc. would be significantly easier to bear, in my opinion. Families are separated by distance, across the country but also as islands unto themselves in sprawling suburbs. That physical separation is complicated by other factors: mom and dad both work, often long hours, kids are home alone too much and no one knows their neighbors. Many of us are just not "set up" to cope with an elderly or sick family member the way it was done before, when people weren't so isolated and could rely on help and meals, etc. from their neighbors. Another fact is that most of this type of help traditionally was done by the women in the community, organizing support for neighbors going through a hard time, and now most women work outside the home and balance the responsibilities of their immediate families with work, extended family, the so-called "sandwich generation".
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I'm married, 29 years this spring (33 years with the same guy, counting our dating years). It's been good, can't imagine being without him. We had some tough times, though, when money was really tight, but the worst time was when my husband was critically ill. He was only 30 at the time, our firstborn was just 2 years old. Hubby had a series of operations, lost a lot of weight, but gradually built his strength up again and is now quite healthy. I grew up quite a bit during that period in our marriage. Everyone's okay now, our daughter is an adult and we have two sons as well, and although it's a lot of work, family life is a great joy. I can appreciate that marriage and kids is not for everyone, though.