Stamford Advocate

Parents are at impasse on family size

- Amy Dickinson Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068. e-mail: askamy@tribune.com

Dear Amy: My husband and I have two children — a girl and boy. They are 3 and 4 years old.

I would like to have a third child, but my husband does not want to. He has a demanding job and so has limited time for hobbies, spending time with our children, and seeing his friends. He is a wonderful father and a hard worker, so I completely understand his concerns.

I have always wanted to have a bigger family. I feel incomplete with two children. Sure, the early years are busy, but kids grow up. He sees this current phase of our lives as restrictin­g, whereas I see it as a busy season in life that will pass. I would be incredibly sad to stop growing our family now.

The last time we talked, he said he could maybe see us having another child in a couple of years. We’re in our mid-30s, so we don’t really have a lot of time to wait. I don’t want to have a baby past 35.

We’re at a standstill. I’m not going to pressure him; I want to make a decision we will both be happy with. It seems like what usually happens is the person who doesn’t want another kid trumps the other. It feels a bit unfair, but I know you can’t make someone want another child.

How do we figure this out? If we don’t have more, how do I get over this?

Wanting More

Dear Wanting More: Parenting as you see it — a few years of craziness followed by calm, freedom, and financial stability — isn’t how many of us experience it.

As the mother and stepmother to five daughters, I’m here to tell you that the many phases of a typical family’s life blend and morph, one into another.

The reason the person who wants fewer children might prevail is because parents who are feeling overwhelme­d, pressured or powerless tend to find ways to exit, either actually (by leaving) or virtually (through neglect).

In order to be in a family with you, your husband must now tolerate some things that seem to really bother him: the lack of freedom and time.

In order to be in a family with him, you might need to learn to tolerate that ache you feel for more children.

In the absence of a happy compromise, you could work on your own personal capacity to be happy, anyway.

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