Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Are they ready to have a baby?

- Carolyn Hax

Carolyn Hax is away. The following first appeared Dec. 10. 2006.

Dear Carolyn: How do you know when you’re ready to have a baby? I’m 28, he’s 29; we’ve been happily married for over five years, we own a home and we both have good, secure jobs that we’ve been in for several years now. I am willing to stay home with the baby, at least for a year or so, and we’re financially secure enough that I can be a stay-at-home mom for as long as I want to be. It seems like everything that should be in place is there.

So, should I be waiting for a lightning bolt, for some sort of earth-shaking epiphany, or is this as ready as anyone ever gets?

– Thinking of Throwing Out My BirthContr­ol Pills

Thinking of Throwing Out My BirthContr­ol Pills: That’s as ready as anyone gets on paper. Which is perfect, for a paper baby. To be ready for the real thing, it’s harder to say what it takes; children introduce so many variables that the notions you bring to parenthood rarely, if ever, seem to survive the process intact.

In fact, if I could do it without diminishin­g the importance of at least stable finances, I’d argue that humility belongs higher on your checklist than a flush bank account. There is, however, one omission from your list that I would call glaring. Love. Not that you don’t have it, just that you don’t specifically mention it – when ideally your home, in its existing condition, is spilling over with so much love that you need a whole other being around to absorb it.

I mean love for life and for each other, but obviously you should both love children, too, even if (given your childlessn­ess) that feeling is still untested. Animals or causes or needy fellow adults are also honorable, legitimate, even heroic places to channel spillover love.

I’ll repeat this till I’m blue: If nothing else, make sure you would be grateful to have the parents you’re about to become.

Dear Carolyn: I am 49, divorced twice and have been seeing a guy for the last three months. Although I really like him, I don’t feel “that way” about him and am pretty sure I never will. I’m not sure if I will ever feel “that way” about anyone again.

Is it OK to keep seeing someone you enjoy and respect as a person but see no long-term future with? I have not dated anyone else since we met and I’m pretty sure he hasn’t, either. But we have not had the “Are we exclusive?” chat. – Is It Wrong?

Is It Wrong?: No, it’s not wrong, it’s

OK.

In fact, I think it’s wrong to think that every relationsh­ip has to have a conveyor belt to the Great Whatever – and that your only choices are to stay on or to jump off if you have a different destinatio­n in mind.

Sometimes, people provide for each other, for a limited time, some pleasant companions­hip. Sometimes that’s just fine.

What isn’t fine is misleading people. If you’re writing because you suspect he has bigger ideas, then you need to make your intentions clear. No rationaliz­ing around it. Otherwise, a pleasant evening to you both.

 ??  ?? Ask Carolyn
Ask Carolyn

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