I’m in my early thirties and adamantly childfree. I’m lucky enough to be in a long-term relationship with someone who brought up her desire to be childfree on more or less our first date. But I am not having too much luck with my friends from childhood and university - they all seem to be wanting kids, and learning of their pregnancies leaves me with a feeling of sadness. I don’t hate kids and think no one should have them, and I am happy for them if they truly wanted this, but I also know what them having kids will mean - we are essentially putting our friendship on hiatus, and I still don’t know whether waiting 10 years for the kids to be a bit more independent and not requiring as much attention will mean I suddenly have friends again, but somehow I very much doubt it. And I also don’t want 10 years without other friends than my girlfriend. She is in very much the same situation, and while we are good at making the best out of not having kids and stressing about having them, we both would want to be able to hang out with good friends once in a while, both common between us, but also some that are exclusive to each of us.

My assumption is that this is quite common - so I am hoping someone would like to share some success stories in turning this situation around. :)

  • willya@lemmyf.uk
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    10 months ago

    If you’re a good enough friend you’d practically develop an uncle like role to your friend’s kids. I think you’re thinking too hard about it.

    • fartsparkles@sh.itjust.works
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      10 months ago

      Indeed. Your friends will hopefully have family or other friends who can be on sitter duty. What’s important is you don’t disappear just because they’ve got kids.

      Stick the kids birthdays in your calendar. Set reminders. Get the kids gifts. Be that uncle.

      Across my family and friend group, I’m an uncle to 10 kids and I’m all of their favourite as I’m the cool uncle (it’s amazing what Lego can do for favour).

      And with that, I still see my friends all the time. We don’t get blackout drunk but I see that as an age thing rather than because they’ve got kids. And because the kids know me, my partner and I are invited over to everyone’s places regularly; kids are in bed by 7 and then we get to hang for the evening.

      Additionally, if you want to be the best friend you can, when a friend has just had a kid, pop over with some cooked meals (some ready and some for the freezer), being disposable cutlery and plates, and some empty trash bags, and feed your friends. Bundle the trash into the bags and take it with you. You have no idea how much a meal and no waking up after will mean to two very tired friends.

      I do it every time. I aim for around a week of meals if I can (chili, curry, soup, all freezes well and easy to make loads of).

      There will be a day when the kids are self sufficient and your friends will be wanting to be far more social again but if you can’t be a friend in the mean time, they won’t be knocking on your door afterwards.

      Being child free is a personal choice. It’s also a choice to support those who want to have children. In my opinion, it’s the best of all worlds. I have my friends, I have no kids, but I also have a positive impact on my friends’ kids’ lives (coding, maths, science, music). It’s pretty nice.

      One of those kids bought my partner and I massive German beer glasses (my partner is German) and we drink out of them daily. Kid used their own pocket money too. It’s a nice feeling knowing my world and friend group continues to grow as I age, rather than shrink.

      • solbear@slrpnk.netOP
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        10 months ago

        Thanks for sharing your experience. It seems you have found a sweet spot that works well for your life, and you sound like a good friend. I get the impression that you enjoy a kid’s company far more than I do, though. I generally get exhausted around them and the stressful lives their parents lead, and I don’t actually want to be a part of this. Which is a me-problem, I know. I fully agree with you when you say that they will probably not be knocking on my door when they are ready to be social again, but it sounds like a very one-sided effort to maintain a friendship in the meantime. My friends mostly move out of the city back to where they grew up as well, so just popping over with a meal is not always possible. I have myself moved elsewhere for work now, partly because the number of friends still staying in the city I lived in before had greatly diminished.

        I used to go on mountain hikes with my best friend from my childhood once a year (we’ve already lived in different cities for a long time, so we haven’t really been hanging out for many years), but he’s awaiting twins anytime now, so it’s going to be at least some years before it will be possible for him to even consider spending any vacation days on such a trip. I used to have yearly cabin trips with friends from university until they got all got kids approximately at the same time (during COVID). They now go on kid-friendly family vacations together. I used to frequent restaurants with a fellow foodie. We sometimes still do, but it’s gone from maybe once a month to once every two years. It is these kinds of relationships that I miss.

        • fartsparkles@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          Everyone has a different feeling towards kids and you’re in no way required or in the wrong to not be interested in being around them. And you’re right, it can be one sided, but I have noticed the friends I made an effort with have been far more social (especially once the kids are two or so) than those I didn’t make an effort with.

          It might be worth going out of your way and looking for friends who are child-free, and if you can’t find the place or space, maybe be the one to make it.

          I’ve friends in my town who are child-free through choice and I have friends nearby who are child-free due to being unable to conceive and not wanting to adopt. I’ve also plenty of LGBTQ+ friends who the vast majority are also child-free and want to stay that way. They’re out there. But it might mean you need to come to terms with letting your oldest friendships fade while you seek out new ones.

          It could be as easy as going out and doing the things you enjoying and finding people your age there (or prehaps a little older since if they’re child-free and doing those things, or have kids but still do them, that’ll gel better with you).

          Really appreciate the honest and open discussion with you in this thread. I hope you’re able to find your people and to live the life you want for yourself and your partner.

        • ChillPenguin@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I have a friend who has one kid and another on the way. At this point for traveling. He worked out a deal with his wife that he can travel on a big trip once a year until the kids get older. Before he had kids we would typically go on large backpacking trips multiple times a year.

          I’ve noticed so far that it’s mainly scheduling. If you can get something written into their calendar. Then the kids don’t need to come along. Depending on the parents of course. In my experience if I can talk to my friend and sit down and pick a date and get onto the calendar. Then he can typically go on more smaller trips. Allowing him and his wife to plan for grandparents to come and support while he’s gone.

          But if the parents aren’t into that. There’s nothing you can really do.

      • RichieAdler 🇦🇷@lemmy.myserv.one
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        10 months ago

        Being child free is a personal choice. It’s also a choice to support those who want to have children. In my opinion, it’s the best of all worlds.

        It’s highly subjective. For me, what you describe is the stuff of nightmares.

        • willya@lemmyf.uk
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          10 months ago

          Right, nothing I said should be taken as gospel. In my opinion it’s just what naturally happens with good friends. There’s no way around it. The kids end up getting to know you. I have zero clue as to what you’re so offended about. I honestly doubt you have any friends anyway and are just arguing to be arguing.

          • RichieAdler 🇦🇷@lemmy.myserv.one
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            10 months ago

            I have zero clue as to what you’re so offended about.

            People like you, actually.

            So childfree people should mark in their calendars the crotch goblins’ birthdays and buy presents for them? Become “uncles”? That kind of commitment to children is what we’re avoiding, for crying out loud.

            And, despite your ill will, my friends are many, and most of them are childfree or have grown children, and our shared activities are, excluding very rare occasions, devoid of infants.

    • solbear@slrpnk.netOP
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      10 months ago

      That uncle role is not something I am looking for, though. I am after adult relationships, and it is the loss of these I am saddened about. For the record, I do not blame neither the parents or especially their kids for this change. They do not owe me a continued adult relationship for our entire lives. It is completely up to them to pursue this life, and as I said, I am happy for them as long as this is what they really wanted, and I agree that their kids should be their priorities once they have had them. But so far, in my experience, the kind of relationship becomes completely different. For instance, my girlfriend and I were invited over for dinner to one of my close friends from my twenties, his wife and their two kids. After we left, we were both left with a feeling that we hadn’t talked with them at all - we were interrupted constantly by their kids seeking their parents attention. Some parents handle this better - I know others who are better at setting boundaries for their kids and teaching them to not interrupt and wait for their turn, but the interactions with them are still very different - their lives almost entirely revolves around their kids. I was once involuntarily part of a conversation regarding the color and viscosity of kid’s shit.

      When I reread my original post, I realize it could be interpreted like I want to somehow get things back to how they were before. I know they won’t be, and it’s not what I meant. I was simply after real stories (i.e. not imagined solutions) of how people in a similar situation, having experienced a similar loss of close friendships, ended up with either new, great friends with a similar outlook on life or anything else that improved that part of their life.

      • EssentialCoffee
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        10 months ago

        I’m sorry to tell you, the real solutions to keeping friends after they have kids are what you’ve said you don’t want. So, for you, it looks like you’ve already decided you don’t want to be friends with people who have kids. That leaves you with a much smaller pool of people and in an age bracket where it’s much more difficult to meet people.

        Maybe try finding hobbies that don’t have kids in them.

    • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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      10 months ago

      My dad best friend and his wife are child free. When my dad started having kids they continue to see each other regularly but instead of going out to restaurants or bars the friend was “inviting my parents for dinner, in their own home”.

      So he would come home with food, prepare dinner for us. It was a great way of doing it.

    • RichieAdler 🇦🇷@lemmy.myserv.one
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      10 months ago

      If you’re a good enough friend you’d practically develop an uncle like role to your friend’s kids.

      Why do you assume that this is good, desirable, or a condition to continue a friendship?

      • Fondots@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I don’t like kids, I have a few friends with kids, some of them really like me, if it were up to me I’d prefer if the kids they didn’t even know I exist.

        That said, I value my friendships with their parents. Having a good relationship ship with their kids means my friends get to stay in my life. If I don’t have a decent relationship their kids, that limits how much I can see with my friends, and if I’m particularly rude, antagonistic, etc. toward them they may choose to cut me out of their lives entirely. It’s a matter of whether you like your friends more than you dislike kids.

        If your dislike of kids outweighs how much you value your friendship, I think that can be a valid position to have, but it should probably also raise some questions about whether you value your relationship with your friends enough for it to be worth continuing, and/or whether you have some unresolved issues with kids that you may need to address.

        If I never had to see my friends’ kids again, that wouldn’t bother me one bit. If I didn’t get to see my friends for years, that would bother me, and for now at least, my friends and their kids are going to be a package deal, so in my case it’s an easy cost/benefit analysis. I value my friends more than I dislike their kids, so I’ll tolerate their little crotch-goblins.

        • TyroTheFox@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I think this makes sense. Firstly, respect your friends have children. Then, decide how to interact with them now that its what is happening.

          If you want a regular, often relationship, having the ability to talk with the whole household on some level just seems sensible. They live there too; the kids are a person even if not a fully experienced one. Being an Uncle or an Aunt can be fun, or just be civil and honest. Ask stuff, field questions and above all don’t be a dick.

          The alternative is just to catch your friends when they’re free. This might be rare or very occasional. That sucks but its their right to raise a family. The kids are dependant on your friends and your friends need to make sure they’re OK. It requires patience and understanding. Possibly a little ingenuity.

          In my experience, many parents will enjoy some time away from their kids every so often. If they want it, they’ll find a way. And older kids will enjoy sometime where their parents aren’t hovering over them. Either a weekly event or occasional times out might be possible to be carved out.

          From my own Mother’s words: your entire world shifts to revolve around your kids when they arrive. I would say you’d need to understand that and act appropriately.

        • RichieAdler 🇦🇷@lemmy.myserv.one
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          10 months ago

          I specifically object to the “becoming an uncle” part. This includes special attention, gifts, considerations well beyond what I’m willing to give even to my own non-immediate family. Visiting my friends and acknowledging, even interacting with the kids superficially, that’s more than OK. But they are not my family and they’ll never be.

          • willya@lemmyf.uk
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            10 months ago

            Sorry I used the word uncle, it was a metaphor and it’s stronger for some people I guess. I have like 9 uncles and don’t talk to any of them.

          • Fondots@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            How they view you and how you view them are not necessarily symetrical. Some of my friends’ kids definitely view me in sort of a familial way, like a favorite uncle, I don’t return that sentiment, but it doesn’t make their view of me any less valid. I’m not giving them any gifts or any more attention than is strictly necessary.

            Many of us do view our close friends as a sort of family, I’m much closer to a lot of my friends than I am to some of my family members, it wouldn’t be wrong to say I think of some of them as sort of extra siblings and favorite cousins. I also have relatives I don’t particularly like and try to avoid, but still have to play nice with at family functions, and the kids kind of fall into that category. They’re sort of like the racist uncle, the spoiled cousin, the bitchy new fiance, or the drugged-out family fuck-up. They’re part of the package deal with the rest of the family, but if they just vanished one day I wouldn’t be too broken up about it.

              • Fondots@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                You don’t have family functions? Or are your family members all outwardly hostile toward each other when you get together?

                  • Fondots@lemmy.world
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                    10 months ago

                    You mentioned in another comment having lots of uncles. Your family never gets together? No holidays, weddings, funerals, birthday parties, family reunions, etc?

                    If that’s the case, I don’t really see your opposition to being an uncle, it apparently comes with no added obligations in your family.

          • EssentialCoffee
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            10 months ago

            I’m wondering what kind of family you have where this is considered a norm.

          • themelm@sh.itjust.works
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            10 months ago

            Some cultures use uncle/aunt pretty freely for any older family friend who was around a lot. I remember my mom was “auntie” to lots of kids when I was younger but there was no obligation or anything its just a term of endearment to a close older woman.

            • RichieAdler 🇦🇷@lemmy.myserv.one
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              10 months ago

              Some cultures use uncle/aunt pretty freely for any older family friend who was around a lot.

              That must be it. Mine is not one of those. I had plenty of real uncles and adding supernumerary ones would have been seen as weird.

          • willya@lemmyf.uk
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            10 months ago

            Well yeah for someone who literally hates kids and wants to cut off their friends because of it. It wasn’t a suggestion. It was what another good friend would naturally do/become to another good friend. It doesn’t come with anything that you need to do. There’s no responsibilities. You’d just be around so often that’s how the kids would begin to look at you.

            • RichieAdler 🇦🇷@lemmy.myserv.one
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              10 months ago

              It was what another good friend would naturally do/become to another good friend.

              So childfree people are by default not good friends?

              You’d just be around so often that’s how the kids would begin to look at you.

              That’s on them. Disabusing them of the notion can be necessary.