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10 Things Not to Say to your Childless Friends

http://shine.yahoo.com/channel/parenting/10-things-not-to-say-to-your-childfree-friends-2595394/

Parenting can have a huge impact on friendships. But you can maintain your bond -- with some insight into the childfree point of view.

By Jillian Mackenzie

My boyfriend and I don't know yet if we're going to have children -- but over the last few years, the majority of our friends have taken the plunge. During that time, I've learned a few things about how to keep friendships strong when you don't have parenthood in common. Here are 10 things not to say to your friends who don't have children.

1. "When will you finally have kids?"
Once you have offspring, you want your friends to share the experience. But please don't loudly ask this question across the table at Thanksgiving dinner or at a baby shower. Although many people are happy to be childfree or waiting, the situation may be more complicated. A friend could be facing infertility, in the agonizing position of having a spouse who doesn't want children, or otherwise in a complex struggle over the issue. Bring it up privately with close friends, or wait for them to share with you.

2. "We always wanted to have a family."
If you use the expression "have a family" to mean "have children," you inadvertently send a message that people without kids are... family-less. Family comes in many forms: significant others, parents, siblings, nieces, nephews, cousins, neighbors -- happily, the list goes on!

3. "I only invited other parents."
Having children is the norm, and people who are childfree can sometimes feel isolated or excluded. So invite us to birthday parties! Sure, there are some people who just don't like kids and have no desire to spend an afternoon surrounded by them. They can decline the invitation, and the rest of us will cheer when the birthday boy takes his first bite of cupcake.

4. "Are you hung-over?"
If you had kids when you were on the younger side, you may have transitioned abruptly from staying out bar-hopping to night feedings and Yo Gabba Gabba -- and years later, you may assume that we're still acting like our crazy twentysomething selves. But just because we don't have kids doesn't mean we aren't growing up.

5. "You're so lucky you get to sleep in/shop/travel."
We understand that you give up a lot to be the amazing parent you are -- and we do appreciate our extra cash and free time, and god, yes, the sleep. But too many offhand comments like this make us feel like you assume the reason we don't have children is that we're lazy, selfish, or shallow. The decision is never that simple.

6. "This must be birth control for you."
Parents often make this joke when their kid is being loud or persistent, and we understand it's because you're worried the situation is bugging the hell out of everyone around you. Don't stress -- a good friend understands that your kid is going to have a meltdown once in a while. We can take it. And, of course, a crying toddler is not actually a tipping point in our decision to have kids. We're not that shortsighted.

7. "Your dog/cat/parakeet is your baby."
Pets are a huge part of many people's lives, whether or not those people have children. But it feels like a consolation prize when you put it like this. That said, ask about my cat; I'm happy to pull up my latest photo of her adorableness.

8. "I can't die; I'm a mom."
During a recent brief terrorism scare in New York City, a friend said to me, "I have to get out -- I can't die; I'm a mom." We know you have someone depending on you in an unprecedented way, but there are people who love and depend on us, too.

9. "I'm sorry it's taken forever for me to call/email/text you back."
Don't start every correspondence with an apology. Your life is insane and letting us know you want to make time for us is appreciated. But don't stress so much: My life is busy too, and more often than not, I didn't even notice a lag.

10. "You wouldn't understand."
We know there are many things about parenting you will turn to your mom friends to talk about. And, honestly, with anyone other than a close friend, that's probably best -- I lose interest fast when someone I don't know well talks too much about their kids. But when we're real friends, don't let our relationship fade because you're afraid of boring us with parenting stuff. Just like we used to listen to you talk about your ex, we want to hear about what's important in your life now. And we hope you'll do the same for us.

Romney-Portman 2012 ORGAN DONOR: DEAL WITH IT. :-) :-)
«134

Re: 10 Things Not to Say to your Childless Friends

  • a big fat YES to 5 and 10

    5.  The clerk of the courtroom I'm working in does this.  I have a nice reusable coffee cup or nicer shoes, or whatever it is and she's all "you can tell YOU don't have kids".   uh, yeaaahhhh....

    10.  I hear this from my brother and cousin all.the.time.  allthetime.  It makes me FURIOUS.

    image
    You know how we do
  • Since most of the regulars on this board seem to be having children or already do, I thought you might want a lurkers opinion. 

    As a person that has chosen not to have children the only one that bothers me is number 1 if they know I have already made the choice to not have kids. As a person period number 8 bothers me. Really, who says that?

    On my list of things I don't want to hear:

    1. "You would make great parents". Ummm.... I don't like kids, and I am pretty sure I would make a sucky parent based on every contact I have ever had with a child since I was 13.

    2. "Your kids would be so smart" (I'm an engineer, my husband is a physicist). So I should have kids on the off chance that they might be some super genius? Beautiful people have ugly kids all the time. End of story.

    3. "Having kids is the greatest thing that has ever happened to me".  Good for you. Spending three weeks in Africa is the greatest thing that has ever happened to me. And I plan on doing trips like that for the rest of my life. 

  • Starting with the title of the post, don't call them childless.  Childfree is better :)
    image
  • imageJulieFe:


    1. "When will you finally have kids?"
    Bring it up privately with close friends, or wait for them to share with you.

    Absolutely wait for them to share.  Because its not your business at all. 

    4. "Are you hung-over?"
    If you had kids when you were on the younger side, you may have transitioned abruptly from staying out bar-hopping to night feedings and Yo Gabba Gabba -- and years later, you may assume that we're still acting like our crazy twentysomething selves. But just because we don't have kids doesn't mean we aren't growing up.

    Uhhhh.....keep checking.  Especially if you call before noon on Sunday.  I just broke my parents of calling early, don't take up their mantle.  


    5. "You're so lucky you get to sleep in/shop/travel."
    But too many offhand comments like this make us feel like you assume the reason we don't have children is that we're lazy, selfish, or shallow.

    Why would I assume my friends think this of me? 

    6. "This must be birth control for you."
    And, of course, a crying toddler is not actually a tipping point in our decision to have kids. We're not that shortsighted.

    What's shortsighted about it?  One particularly egregious dinner at Friendly's and that's all she wrote. 


    7. "Your dog/cat/parakeet is your baby."
    But it feels like a consolation prize when you put it like this.

    No, it just makes you sound crazy. Which I'm not.  

    8. "I can't die; I'm a mom."
    Didn't you see Speed?  Come on.


    10. "You wouldn't understand."
    Just like we used to listen to you talk about your ex, we want to hear about what's important in your life now.

    Want?  Let's go with 'willing'.  

    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • #3-really? I wouldn't think that anyone without kids would want to go to, say, a 3 year olds birthday party. And, #9- I started correspondence with an apology before I had a baby. Sometimes it is hard to get back to people. Especially when I was in grad school, teaching, and babysitting on weekends. That isn't exclusive tonparents.
  • My thoughts:


    1. "When will you finally have kids?"
    Awful. Shut up already, MIL.

    2. "We always wanted to have a family."
    I do consider H and I a family, but I understand the different semantics of that word so it doesn't offend me.

    3. "I only invited other parents."
    It depends. Random playdates? No, I don't want to be invited. A birthday party for a friend's kid? I'd love to be there. Thankfully my friends aren't douches when it comes to this.

    4. "Are you hung-over?"
    No one has ever asked me this unless they were out with me the night before.

    5. "You're so lucky you get to sleep in/shop/travel."
    This doesn't offend me. It makes me happy, actually.

    6. "This must be birth control for you."
    This joke is kind of trite but it doesn't offend me. Sometimes it's true.

    7. "Your dog/cat/parakeet is your baby."
    I don't have pets, so N/A.

    8. "I can't die; I'm a mom."
    Incredibly offensive. People say this shits?

    9. "I'm sorry it's taken forever for me to call/email/text you back."
    I say this sometimes and I don't have kids, so can't say I'm offended.

    10. "You wouldn't understand."
    They are probably right, but this would still depend on what exactly they think I wouldn't understand.

  • I think "you wouldn't understand" is an obnoxious thing to say to anyone, period, regardless of whether you're referring to children or anything else.

    Well, unless you're trying to, say, talk to your husband about how much menstrual cramps suck, in which case "you wouldn't understand" is probably appropriate. 

    image
  • #7 is true for us.  Our dog is our baby.  :-)
    Romney-Portman 2012 ORGAN DONOR: DEAL WITH IT. :-) :-)
  • What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous
  • imagegmginny:
    What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous

    Hell, I'd much rather be around my animal than any of the kids I'm around in a day.

    (Sorry, but you sound like a dipshi- with a comment like that out of the blue.)

    Eh, nevermind.

    Romney-Portman 2012 ORGAN DONOR: DEAL WITH IT. :-) :-)
  • imageJulieFe:

    imagegmginny:
    What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous

    Hell, I'd much rather be around my animal than any of the kids I'm around in a day.

    (Sorry, but you sound like a dipshi- with a comment like that out of the blue.)

    Eh, nevermind.

    JulieFe I definately agree with your assessment, definately a dipshi

    The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.
  • Some people's children are my birth control.

    Uploaded from the Photobucket iPhone App

  • imagemaggie78:
    imageJulieFe:

    imagegmginny:
    What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous

    Hell, I'd much rather be around my animal than any of the kids I'm around in a day.

    (Sorry, but you sound like a dipshi- with a comment like that out of the blue.)

    Eh, nevermind.

    JulieFe I definately agree with your assessment, definately a dipshi

    Thanks for the backup; I just felt it was very condescending.  Yeah, I'm just lesser loving an animal. 

    Romney-Portman 2012 ORGAN DONOR: DEAL WITH IT. :-) :-)
  • imageJulieFe:
    imagemaggie78:
    imageJulieFe:

    imagegmginny:
    What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous

    Hell, I'd much rather be around my animal than any of the kids I'm around in a day.

    (Sorry, but you sound like a dipshi- with a comment like that out of the blue.)

    Eh, nevermind.

    JulieFe I definately agree with your assessment, definately a dipshi

    Thanks for the backup; I just felt it was very condescending.  Yeah, I'm just lesser loving an animal. 

    woops... didn't read the responses before replying.  Wasn't directed at you... you aren't lesser because you love an animal.  But it still isn't the same.  It's like someone asking... are you married, and me saying no, but I have a brother.  Sure I can love my brother but it's not the same as being married.

  • Some of these are obnoxious on the flip side too. Don't tell me you know what it's like to have a newborn because your dog requires a lot of attention. Don't tell me my kid is birth control. But yeah, most of these are common sense. I do stress a put the birthday thing. I don't want my non parent friends to feel like I dragged them in to crapllike that.
  • i don't see how #5 is offensive.  you DO get to sleep in and i AM jealous.  it's not any deeper than that.  really.
    proof that i make babies. jack, grace, and ben, in no particular order
    imageimageimage
  • OK, fine, I'll dissect one by one.


    1. "When will you finally have kids?"

    Yeah, that pisses me off.  Thankfully, no one has really ever said it to me

     in the agonizing position of having a spouse who doesn't want children,

    This is as obnoxious as the first point.  Sometimes both spouses don't want children.  It's obnoxious to ask, not just b/c people can't, but b/c you come across as claiming our decision is incorrect.

    2. "We always wanted to have a family."
    Good for you.  I have one with H (and my parents and my friends and my dog)

    3. "I only invited other parents."

    Cool, thanks.  I really don't want to be at a kiddie party.  I will, however, be irritated if it's a family event, and I'm excluded b/c you don't think I have a familiy.

    4. "Are you hung-over?"

    Yeah I probably am.  Why so jealouse?  I'm not always hungover, but I do enjoy drinking a bottle of wine (or a shared one) at night on occasion.  


    5. "You're so lucky you get to sleep in/shop/travel."

    No, I don't shitty friends.  So, yes, I'm lucky.  I like sleep.  I love travel.  My friends don't think I'm shallow b/c of this, but thanks for teaching me that what they really mean when they say they're jealous of my latest trip is that they're judging me.

    6. "This must be birth control for you."

    Yes it is.  Thank you.

    7. "Your dog/cat/parakeet is your baby."

    Once again, yes.  So?

    8. "I can't die; I'm a mom."

    I can't imagine anyone saying this b/c I don't hang out with azzholes.

    9. "I'm sorry it's taken forever for me to call/email/text you back."

    Meh, this one depends.  The childfree have lives too, so I'm offended if you think your life is the only one that can be busy.  But, if you're just apologetic, why would I be offended?

    10. "You wouldn't understand."

    I couldn't possibly understand anything concerning kids.  I've never dealt with being tired and busy, and I've never dealt with a rough patch in my marriage.  You're right.  Yeah, this is the biggest offensive one on here. 

    image
  • imagegmginny:
    What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous

    Seriously?? You might be overthinking this JUST a bit. And I say that as a parent with annoying relatives who refer to the dog as their baby (and their parents talk about the "granddog").

  • imageIrishBrideND:
    Don't tell me my kid is birth control.
    Oops. I've done this before, but it was in response to SIL volunteering H and I to take care of my colicy 4 month old niece one night (as in, move the pack n play in which she was sleeping to our room). Do I get a pass?
  • imagePublius:
    imageIrishBrideND:
    Don't tell me my kid is birth control.
    Oops. I've done this before, but it was in response to SIL volunteering H and I to take care of my colicy 4 month old niece one night (as in, move the pack n play in which she was sleeping to our room). Do I get a pass?
    Lol, I usually find humor in it. I just had one experience lately, when dd was actually really good, that annoyed me.
  • imagegmginny:
    imageJulieFe:
    imagemaggie78:
    imageJulieFe:

    imagegmginny:
    What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous

    Hell, I'd much rather be around my animal than any of the kids I'm around in a day.

    (Sorry, but you sound like a dipshi- with a comment like that out of the blue.)

    Eh, nevermind.

    JulieFe I definately agree with your assessment, definately a dipshi

    Thanks for the backup; I just felt it was very condescending.  Yeah, I'm just lesser loving an animal. 

    woops... didn't read the responses before replying.  Wasn't directed at you... you aren't lesser because you love an animal.  But it still isn't the same.  It's like someone asking... are you married, and me saying no, but I have a brother.  Sure I can love my brother but it's not the same as being married.

    No prob.  I have a tendency to be a little bit of a jerk when I read things a certain way.  Sometimes my reading comprehension bites, which is ironic considering I teach it.

    I'm ok with you now, but my baby in my avatar isn't.  Heehee.

    Romney-Portman 2012 ORGAN DONOR: DEAL WITH IT. :-) :-)
  • imagelaurenpetro:
    i don't see how #5 is offensive.  you DO get to sleep in and i AM jealous.  it's not any deeper than that.  really.

    really?  you can't see how someone saying that to someone who is trying hard to have kids would be offensive?  Like I wouldn't trade my childfree status for a million sleepless nights?  Maybe I'm just over thinking it, or am just too sensitive.  It's possible. 

    image
    You know how we do
  • imagelaurenpetro:
    i don't see how #5 is offensive.  you DO get to sleep in and i AM jealous.  it's not any deeper than that.  really.

    I agree. As long as someone isn't saying "you're so lucky you don't have kids, you get to sleep in, etc" and you don't harp on it all the time, I don't see a big issue here.

    I've had so many friends go through IF issues that I *think* I'm pretty sensitive about what I say about kids/babies around people who don't have kids. And I'm always bewildered by what they tell me that people say to them.

    For instance, one good friend of mine who got pregnant through IVF has a super religious SIL who is against IF treatment. She (the SIL) asked her how she was supposed to explain to her kids where her nephew came from since he was conceived "unnaturally". People can be such aholes.

  • imageJulieFe:
    imagegmginny:
    imageJulieFe:
    imagemaggie78:
    imageJulieFe:

    imagegmginny:
    What I find even more obnoxious is usually it is the childfree person that refers to a pet as "their baby".  Seriously?  You are equating having an animal to being a parent.  Utterly ridiculous

    Hell, I'd much rather be around my animal than any of the kids I'm around in a day.

    (Sorry, but you sound like a dipshi- with a comment like that out of the blue.)

    Eh, nevermind.

    JulieFe I definately agree with your assessment, definately a dipshi

    Thanks for the backup; I just felt it was very condescending.  Yeah, I'm just lesser loving an animal. 

    woops... didn't read the responses before replying.  Wasn't directed at you... you aren't lesser because you love an animal.  But it still isn't the same.  It's like someone asking... are you married, and me saying no, but I have a brother.  Sure I can love my brother but it's not the same as being married.

    No prob.  I have a tendency to be a little bit of a jerk when I read things a certain way.  Sometimes my reading comprehension bites, which is ironic considering I teach it.

    I'm ok with you now, but my baby in my avatar isn't.  Heehee.

    !!!!IT'S A DOG, NOT A BABY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

     

    just kiddingStick out tongue

  • I think this whole 10 list is dumb.

    What you should/shouldn't say to someone who is childless totally depends on:

    1) whether or not they are trying to have kids

    2) whether or not they ever want to have kids

    3) what their interests are, period.

    For example, one of my single, childless BFFs had to flat out say she'd like to be invited to the kid birthday parties because heck, it's the only time she'd get to see all the friends in one place at one time.  Now, she isn't single by choice (would like to be married) but she never plans to have kids.  Yet she enjoys seeing her friends' kids and knowing she can leave them at their own house and go home to her wine and R rated movie whenever she wants (3 p.m. when kids are awake, midnight when everyone in a house with kids hopes to be asleep, etc.).

    The sleeping in bit - my single friend who never wants kids IS lucky to get to sleep in and she relishes it and would never trade my waking up at all hours of the night with my kid for random reasons.  My other friend who has gone through I-don't-know-how-many fertility treatments would trade all her hours of shut eye for my sleepless nights if it meant she was a mommy.  And her cat is her baby but she knows full well it isn't a substitute for a human child because she WANTS a human child.  Now.

    And my friends who aren't ready for kids now but want them some day just want people to butt out - they don't want to go to kids parties - they will do that some day.  They do have pets and those pets ARE their babies.  And they want you to treat them as such and recognize that these are the creatures they shower their love upon and they hope you love them too.  And I do call them their babies because once upon a time ago I had a puppy who I loved in so many of the same ways I love my daughter.  Not the same, but an intense deep love for that beloved pet.

    As for the "I can't die."  I hope that is a unity horse.  I think the only time that could be stretched into appropriate is when I was asked if I would skydive any time soon (did it when I was 21) I said I'd want to wait until M was grown because I couldn't do something so risky because in the event that I died doing it I would hate that she was left without a mom because I was thrill seeking.  Doesn't mean anyone else is expendable, but I feel for me personally I'm less expendable than I was at 21 when I didn't have a child and husband depending on me.  Not that I wouldn't be missed then, but the relative risks were a lot smaller then.

    "If you can't say something nice, shut the hell up!"
    - Paula Deen to 104.1 KRBE's Producer Eric 9/17/2011
  • Damn I'm sorry that was so long.
    "If you can't say something nice, shut the hell up!"
    - Paula Deen to 104.1 KRBE's Producer Eric 9/17/2011
  • Also, my cats wake me up every night.  Every.night.  Either they run over us, want to get under the blankets, knock something over, or shriek at the bedroom door. The only uninterrupted sleep I've had for 3 years has required a cat sitter and a hotel room. 

    My nephew?  He sleeps through. 

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  • imagedoctorwho:

    Also, my cats wake me up every night.  Every.night.  Either they run over us, want to get under the blankets, knock something over, or shriek at the bedroom door. The only uninterrupted sleep I've had for 3 years has required a cat sitter and a hotel room. 

    My nephew?  He sleeps through. 

     

    I get it. Trust me. I do. My kid sleeps through the night like a charm now. I grew up with cats that woke me up every single night.

     

    Its still not the same. And even if you think it is, all I'm saying is don't say that to a mom of a newborn who looks like she's going to break. Its not helpful at all, when at your breaking point, to hear "oh yeah, I've been there! My dog woke me up once every night to pee when he was a puppy."

     

  • #3: This is ridiculous. Baby showers aside, and unless we know they're on the baby track in the near future, my friends probably aren't going to get butt hurt if they don't get invited to a one year old's birthday party.

    #10: This is just down right patronizing, like something my mom said to me when I was 13

    imageAlternaTickers - Cool, free Web tickers
  • imagegpointewife:

    imagelaurenpetro:
    i don't see how #5 is offensive.  you DO get to sleep in and i AM jealous.  it's not any deeper than that.  really.

    really?  you can't see how someone saying that to someone who is trying hard to have kids would be offensive?  Like I wouldn't trade my childfree status for a million sleepless nights?  Maybe I'm just over thinking it, or am just too sensitive.  It's possible. 

    i think you're overthinking this one.  it's not "OMG, i would totally trade having babies for sleep!!!!"  it's just, I Am Very Jealous Of You For Getting As Much Sleep As You Want.  you have more opportunities to sleep as much as you need/can and i don't and for that i am jealous.   that's it.

    proof that i make babies. jack, grace, and ben, in no particular order
    imageimageimage
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