Join John Adams Mon and Wed nights 7:30 EST for Live Webcasts!
And check out Five Reasons why you should attend a FREE AFA Seminar!
Share This Page
View Active Topics View Your Posts Latest 100 Topics Elegance Theme Dark Theme
And check out Five Reasons why you should attend a FREE AFA Seminar!
Share This Page
View Active Topics View Your Posts Latest 100 Topics Elegance Theme Dark Theme
Having children

Meet Loads of Foreign Women in Person! Join Our Happier Abroad ROMANCE TOURS to Many Overseas Countries!
Meet Foreign Women Now! Post your FREE profile on Happier Abroad Personals and start receiving messages from gorgeous Foreign Women today!
-
- Elite Upper Class Poster
- Posts: 6278
- Joined: April 28th, 2013, 7:00 am
-
- Freshman Poster
- Posts: 151
- Joined: November 26th, 2013, 9:42 pm
- Location: California
I have no children but would like to have a family some day. Of course I can't do this without finding a wife. If I could afford a large family I would try having children well outside the standard replacement level rate. I would aim to have four or six children, but more realistically I think I'll have to settle for two.
I've never been in a relationship long enough to seriously consider actually having kids as my longest relationship was just over 1 year and that was when I was in uni. I've also never made enough money to ensure any children I might have a secure future. I really don't even want kids now but a part of me thinks if I pass up a chance to if I'm ever ready and have the chance, I'll end up regretting it when I'm 60.
- starchild5
- Veteran Poster
- Posts: 2165
- Joined: December 20th, 2013, 2:32 am
No children, but want them (more than a wife actually).
I haven't gone abroad yet for women (will make my first trip in 2 weeks), but if I find foreign women to be as bad as some guys say on here, then I may just do the surrogacy thing and be a single dad of one child.
Of course, this is years down the road. I wouldn't even consider doing that unless I was pushing 40 with absolutely no female prospects (I'm 27 now).
I haven't gone abroad yet for women (will make my first trip in 2 weeks), but if I find foreign women to be as bad as some guys say on here, then I may just do the surrogacy thing and be a single dad of one child.
Of course, this is years down the road. I wouldn't even consider doing that unless I was pushing 40 with absolutely no female prospects (I'm 27 now).
Re: Having children
I don't have any children and am glad I never had any. I've seen many of my friends bankrupted through overindulging their children and being overly extravagant raising them (they wanted their children to have things they never had.) I know many aging retired parents children (now adults themselves) living with them (aka boomerang kids) and draining their retirement assets.MarcosZeitola wrote:I am married and a father, a very family oriented person. Other men, less so. It very much depends on the issue. At a family gathering today I was told of a 73 year old Western man who lives in my grandparents' town, who married a twenty-something Filipina and just had their second child... he went from unhappy at home to happy-at-home by going abroad first.
My dream has always been to settle down with a good woman and raise a large family. It's my pleasure that I am now in the position to do so, having found the right woman. I know of myself, fschmidt, OutWest, Winston and a few others here who had children with non-Western women. I got a bit curious... how many of you guys have children, how many of you want them? Or the opposite?
I know an American who is 76 years old, married to a Filipina 30 years his junior and have been married for 25 years. He also has three children age 18, 21 and 25. Not only is he supporting his wife's family in the Philippines, but also paying for his children's college education. He admits to once having a lot of money when first married, but is now cash poor and assets completely drained and living in a heavily mortgaged house to pay for the kids' education. Don't think he's truly happy.
Good luck. Hope you raise them properly and set realistic bounderies; don't handicap your children's lives by making it too easy for them. Make them earn their allowance and when they want a car or go to college, make them pay for it; you're only obligated to support them until they reach age 18. After that, they are ADULTS and should be supporting themselves thereafter and earning a living.
Re: Having children
I have two children and one on the way for number 3. I am quite glad about all of that really...the best thing I ever did. Obviously, not for everyone. For well reasoned causes, some do notMarcosZeitola wrote:I am married and a father, a very family oriented person. Other men, less so. It very much depends on the issue. At a family gathering today I was told of a 73 year old Western man who lives in my grandparents' town, who married a twenty-something Filipina and just had their second child... he went from unhappy at home to happy-at-home by going abroad first.
My dream has always been to settle down with a good woman and raise a large family. It's my pleasure that I am now in the position to do so, having found the right woman. I know of myself, fschmidt, OutWest, Winston and a few others here who had children with non-Western women. I got a bit curious... how many of you guys have children, how many of you want them? Or the opposite?
want kids..others would simply be horrible fathers.
- Contrarian Expatriate
- Elite Upper Class Poster
- Posts: 5415
- Joined: December 2nd, 2009, 9:57 pm
Raising children is overrated. Most do it because that is the chief "accomplishment" they can point to in their lives. However, most parents inappropriately see their children as extensions of themselves instead of individuals.
Raising children is expensive, time-consuming, exhausting, and burdensome. Children need supervision, medical treatment, nurturing, guidance, discipline, and a host of other things. Most people who have children do not have the foresight to see the task at hand. They just see cuddly infants and they hear the family and peer pressure to have kids and they fall in line.
Do not have kids unless you feel a virtual vocation to become a parent, whatever the expense or burden.
Raising children is expensive, time-consuming, exhausting, and burdensome. Children need supervision, medical treatment, nurturing, guidance, discipline, and a host of other things. Most people who have children do not have the foresight to see the task at hand. They just see cuddly infants and they hear the family and peer pressure to have kids and they fall in line.
Do not have kids unless you feel a virtual vocation to become a parent, whatever the expense or burden.
-
- Freshman Poster
- Posts: 46
- Joined: May 27th, 2014, 1:10 pm
-
- Freshman Poster
- Posts: 46
- Joined: May 27th, 2014, 1:10 pm
No I wouldn't look after another persons kids , I don't want children , they annoy me. Im saying if you want kids it would be a good idea instead of people popping out more humans , take care of the ones that have no homes first. People having children with no intention of looking after them are sad.MarcosZeitola wrote:So you'd take care of another man's offspring rather then have your own? How... unusually altruistic of you. Well, whatever floats your boat I suppose. It's definitely a great act of kindness.Manson Maan wrote:There's enough kids in the world that need a good family, id say adopt till they are taken care of first.
I wanted 4 kids, then I had 1 & that dream fizzled away real quick lol I don't think I'll have more, not sure ...
If you want good, intelligent kids with a good temperament you have to be with them always, they're like sponges, everything they see & hear they absorb. Thier life experiences shape them. You end up being the guard & the filter of their existance.
People who have kids & send them to school everyday, don't realise that kids spend most of their time away. They leave at 8am & get back by 4pm, then it's off to bed by 9pm. Who's raising your kids really?
If you want good, intelligent kids with a good temperament you have to be with them always, they're like sponges, everything they see & hear they absorb. Thier life experiences shape them. You end up being the guard & the filter of their existance.
People who have kids & send them to school everyday, don't realise that kids spend most of their time away. They leave at 8am & get back by 4pm, then it's off to bed by 9pm. Who's raising your kids really?
- It's easy to give, when you know what it's like to have nothing. -
- Develop a backbone, not a wishbone. -
- Develop a backbone, not a wishbone. -
Re:
No you don't. A good parent who works a lot beats a bad parent who is there all the time. "The apple doesn't fall far from the tree" isn't conditional. Good people produce good kids, bad people produce bad kids. There's no secret formula to raise good intelligent kids, it's got almost nothing to do with how much time you have to spend with them but rather what example you set for them.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 21 Replies
- 24312 Views
-
Last post by kangarunner
-
- 17 Replies
- 17734 Views
-
Last post by Rockman
-
- 38 Replies
- 18914 Views
-
Last post by Yohan
-
- 0 Replies
- 5041 Views
-
Last post by ladislav
-
- 2 Replies
- 4103 Views
-
Last post by Jester