Yeah, I've heard that on some childfree forums I've skimmed.....childless sounds more like "I want kids, can't have em" or that one is missing out on kids. Childfree is a better term for those who chose not to have kids, but meh.....whatever anyone calls it....I ain't havin' kids
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Childfree, Childless, etc.
Collapse
X
-
parental leave never affected me in any manner-however because I don't have custody of my son-guess who got to work EVERY DAMN HOLIDAY! Apparently I don't have a family-I should tell my mom and sister that-
At the call center we had 4 hour shifts we had to sign up for on holidays-I don't drive and the buses don't run on holidays after a certain time(usually 6pm-I lived 20 miles across town most of them lived within 2 miles)-so due to transportation issues I HAD to work one of the morning shifts or pay $100 for a cab there and back(total pay for that day was $78-for time and a half). It never failed I would get signed up for a morning shift and a parent would whine to a manager and I got bumped to the night shift-when I couldn't get there. Fortunately the operations manager would change it back-but I'd get cussed up one side and down the other by whatever parent had wanted my shift -so "they could spend time with their children" And obviously I didn't understand how important it was to them as I was just a selfish, child-hating, heartless, b*tch.
Even better was NYE-i had paid $200 for tickets to an exclusive party for myself and my husband-I got scheduled to work(after requesting and being approved for vacation 4 months in advance), because all the parents had hired babysitters and wanted to go out and party and I "didn't understand how important it was to them to have time away from their children"
Heck all of them whined during "shift bid"* because they had daycare issues(my employer actually compiled and handed out a list of daycares that were open second and third shift, had openings, and took state/county assistance) and claimed the parents should get first shift only while the rest of us should be forced to work nights(night shift was very slow-and ended an hour after the buses stopped running)-they even tried a "walkout"-and were told if they didn't get back to work they were all fired-one of them made the mistake of talking about doing it in front of me-I was a lower-level manager at the time-the higher ups were notified of the plan-as I was quite attached to having a job and their little "stunt" could have cost us all our jobs.
*shift bid-your call stats for previous 3 months are tallied(call time, hold time, after call,schedule adherence,attendance-etc) you are given a number to bid for available shifts-first numbers(better stats) get first bid. And guess which people had the lowest stats? I was #1 out of over 700 employees.
I have no problems with anyone as long as they don't expect special treatment-and one of our managers-single mom with 4 kids-would lay into anyone that attempted to pull the "but I have chiiiiildreeeennnn!" card-she was both a damn good parent and an excellent worker/manager-and she worked whatever shift she was needed on without complaint.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Boozy View PostCongratulations on your very recent wedding!
The call center I used to work for was really good about being impartial when it came to things like holiday shifts and shift changes. It was always first come, first serve, with no consideration for circumstances outside of the job (like what an employee's family structure looked like.) If someone was working an afternoon shift and wanted to work an earlier shift, they could put in a request for it. If a first shift spot opened up, the person who put their shift request in first got first dibs. I did interviewing and I got a lot of people who would come in and say "Oh, I have to work 8-4 because my kids are in daycare and it closes at 4:30 so I can't work evenings." I'd tell them, "Then I'm afraid this position is not for you." and that was that.
Once we hired a single mother who wanted a morning shift but took an evening shift since that's all we had open. A few weeks after we hired her, we had a first shift spot open up, but she didn't get it, because there were other (more senior) agents who had been on the wait-list for a first shift position since before she was even hired. She got PISSED and told the manager right out, "It isn't FAIR to see these other people getting MY shift!" Yeah, she thought it was HER shift, and her whole reason for wanting first shift was because of her kids. I get that it's frustrating and that parents would prefer to work mornings but it doesn't always work that way! That woman didn't make it much longer within our company before she got let go for a variety of reasons.
Comment
-
I can completely understand if someone has to rush to the doc to take kiddo in....hell,we all have emergencies, but giving someone a preferred shift or vacation based on your family life is just wrong.
Oh, and on emergencies.....I want the some consideration if I have to rush one of my cats in!!
Comment
-
Plus, some people have a very skewed idea on what constitutes an emergency. Rushing little Suzie to the emergency room cuz she fell and cut her head = emergency. Rushing little Suzie to cheerleading practice = not an emergency. -.-
Can't forget to mention Ms "But my kids are sickkk!", who's kids mysteriously got ill every Friday, meaning that their mother had to take every weekend off. She didn't get away with that for long, and then she whined, "But you're discriminating against mothers!" Since the manager who told her off was also a mother, that didn't go down too well. XD"Oh wow, I can't believe how stupid I used to be and you still are."
Comment
-
On another note. Some parents seem to think that because they have kids they are better at nonrelated thngs. The were these black single mohers on the amazing race (describing to help people remember them) and every single challenge they would to each other say things like: come on *name* you gave birth you can climb that cliff, if you can give birth you can assemble that windmill, you gave birth therefore you can speak japanese, you gave birth therefore you can perform neurosurgery, you gave birth which means you can defuse a nuclear bomb, leap a tall building in a single bound, more powerful than a locomotive and so on.
I was really glad when they lost.
Comment
-
Originally posted by guywithashovel View PostThere seems to be this sentiment among many of these people that they are doing something new and trend-setting that no one else has ever done before. In other words, many of them appear to think that willfully living your life as a childless married couple is something that people just started doing within the last ten years, when in fact, people have been doing it ever since contraception was invented.
I have no children, by very deliberate choice, so I feel "childless" isn't the most accurate term to describe me, as it has connotations of those who want them but can't have them. "Childfree" is more accurate, but somewhat awkward in conversation, so I usually go with "don't have 'em, don't want 'em."
And I envy those of you who have worked in environments where parents have received no special privileges simply due to being parents. I've had more than one job where people were allowed to leave early, come in late, take time off, spend entire shifts on the phone on personal business- all acceptable as long as it was in relation to their children somehow, and all without having to use any kind of "time" (vacation, personal, sick, etc.). Managers with children were far more lenient with parents, people without kids had their vacation days declined because people "with families" needed holidays off more, etc. Again, I'm not saying this happens everywhere, but I have witnessed it firsthand, more than once, in jobs that I've had, so it is my experience that parents receive preference simply for being parents.
And that's foremost among the reasons why I'm defensive about my choice. That and being called selfish, immature, soulless (no, really), not a "real" woman, being told I'll change my mind, that my marriage is a sham unless children result from it, that my opinions on things not even remotely child-related aren't valid because I'm not a parent, etc. It's been pointed out that people don't think people who choose to have kids are subjected to this sort of thing, but again- I've gotten it firsthand. It could be a function of my geography, social circle, peer group, career industry, whatever. But it does exist, and it's annoying as all hell.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Lace Neil Singer View PostCan't forget to mention Ms "But my kids are sickkk!", who's kids mysteriously got ill every Friday, meaning that their mother had to take every weekend off. She didn't get away with that for long, and then she whined, "But you're discriminating against mothers!" Since the manager who told her off was also a mother, that didn't go down too well. XD
Since she was hourly, the only person she was really hurting...was herself. Still, it did piss off the rest of us, who got stuck doing her work.
Comment
-
While the childfree by choice issue is an interesting one, and one which has certainly been discussed numerous times, especially on this forum, I think many of the people who commented missed the actual point of this thread.
Once again, it became an analysis and debate about the childfree issue, pros and cons, and even more condemnation of parents getting perks or using their children for perks, when in actual fact, I believe the point of this thread was that the OP has an issue with people who think their decision not to have children is trendy and novel, even though people have been doing it for years.
I come from a big Catholic family, and a large, predominately Catholic community, where anything less than 5 kids was a novelty.
People who didn't have children didn't do so by choice, but because they were infertile, or so it was thought.
I am thinking a few of them probably made a decision not to have children, but it was easier to let people think it was because they couldn't have them, rather than try to defend their choice not to have them.Point to Ponder:
Is it considered irony when someone on an internet forum makes a post that can be considered to look like it was written by a 3rd grade dropout, and they are poking fun of the fact that another person couldn't spell?
Comment
-
Mm-hmm. In my hometown, I am a novelty. Why? I'm in my mid-twenties, single, no children, and I'm a woman getting a post-graduate education AND I actually moved the hell out of there.
The more routine trend is: get married right after high school, go to college, maybe graduate, if you do, it has to be early education. Teach school, have kids. Heaven forbid you actually move out of the area.
Seriously, there is apparently a rumor going around down there that I must be a lesbian, since I haven't got married yet or had any kids.
Comment
-
I don't have any children and don't particularly want any either. One of the reasons I stoppped being a substitute teacher was the fact that I didn't want to go to prison for throttling the little darlings. That's also why I've chosen not to pursue a career in teaching. If dealing with kids for a few hours a day got on my nerves, I shudder to think how annoying I'd find my own. Much safer for everyone if I just don't have any.
That being said, I don't think of myself as being childless or childfree when I think of it at all. I get the occasional 'do you have any kids?' from coworkers. When I say 'no', they usually just say something like 'that's nice' or change the subject. I've never had anyone make a big deal about it.
I do get the 'when are you going to give us grandkids?' speech from the parents sometimes. I shut my dad up about it though when I told him I'd give him grandkids when he paid the adoption fees. (Hubby is infertile so even if I did want kids I couldn't have them. Guess it's just as well that I don't want them).
Comment
-
As I have thought more about this, I have realized that I have been considering this based on my own experiences. I probably shouldn't have jumped to the conclusion that because something is a certain way for me, then that's the way it probably is for everyone. Sorry.
It's just that overall, the childfree movement sometimes gets to me, even though I am technically one of them. It just seems to me that more than a few of them---though certainly not all of them---try to create this world that is parents vs non-parents. Then again, maybe some of them live in communities or families where they take a lot of grief for their decisions. I think anyone who would call someone souless or immature for not having kids is a jerk. But I also think that those in the childfree community who call parents "breeders" aren't very nice, either.
Comment
-
Originally posted by MaggieTheCat View PostThank you!
The call center I used to work for was really good about being impartial when it came to things like holiday shifts and shift changes. It was always first come, first serve, with no consideration for circumstances outside of the job (like what an employee's family structure looked like.) If someone was working an afternoon shift and wanted to work an earlier shift, they could put in a request for it. If a first shift spot opened up, the person who put their shift request in first got first dibs. I did interviewing and I got a lot of people who would come in and say "Oh, I have to work 8-4 because my kids are in daycare and it closes at 4:30 so I can't work evenings." I'd tell them, "Then I'm afraid this position is not for you." and that was that.
Once we hired a single mother who wanted a morning shift but took an evening shift since that's all we had open. A few weeks after we hired her, we had a first shift spot open up, but she didn't get it, because there were other (more senior) agents who had been on the wait-list for a first shift position since before she was even hired. She got PISSED and told the manager right out, "It isn't FAIR to see these other people getting MY shift!" Yeah, she thought it was HER shift, and her whole reason for wanting first shift was because of her kids. I get that it's frustrating and that parents would prefer to work mornings but it doesn't always work that way! That woman didn't make it much longer within our company before she got let go for a variety of reasons.
If she would discipline her child for that, then she should be asked, "So if you wouldn't tolerate your child behaving that way, why are you behaving that way yourself? Having a child doesn't mean your entitled to behave like a child yourself."
Originally posted by guywithashovel View PostAs I have thought more about this, I have realized that I have been considering this based on my own experiences. I probably shouldn't have jumped to the conclusion that because something is a certain way for me, then that's the way it probably is for everyone. Sorry.
It's just that overall, the childfree movement sometimes gets to me, even though I am technically one of them. It just seems to me that more than a few of them---though certainly not all of them---try to create this world that is parents vs non-parents. Then again, maybe some of them live in communities or families where they take a lot of grief for their decisions. I think anyone who would call someone souless or immature for not having kids is a jerk. But I also think that those in the childfree community who call parents "breeders" aren't very nice, either.
Refusing to acknowledge or validate them, because they don't have a child and must know nothing.
A tribal sense towards other parents, and acting as if non parents aren't a part of the tribe. Extremely immature, like a high school clique.
Behaving in ways that they would discipline their own child for behaving. Such as throwing tantrums when they don't get their way, as in "I have chilllllddrreeen!" when trying to get time off of work.
Also, behaving like small children themselves, and refusing to understand that being a parent means behaving like an adult. That most people aren't going to respond well to being talked down to like a child, or talking to someone who reacts to them like a frightened child when confronted. Such as in, looking at someone with big eyes as if they're a 3 year old about to break into tears. It's not appropriate as an adult, to use the manipulative tactics of a child to get what you want. Especially, if you don't tolerate the same behavior in your own child, because then you are a hypocrite.
Suggesting, they're giving in to their primal urges to breed, is the least of what's wrong with how parents behave. I am trying to be more tolerant of parents, and understanding.
It's funny parents will call those who are childfree selfish, or jerks. Yet parents display such traits much more frequently than people who are childfree. If anything, people who are childfree are frequently told that they must make way for parents and their children, and if they complain in the least that they're not understanding how hard it is to be a parent, and that they have no right to say anything.
Perhaps I don't want to be a parent, because I'd find myself associating, with the current generation of cliqueish parents. High school was bad enough, I don't want to have to return there, with the juvenile regressive behavior that these parents exhibit.
I haven't even started, on how people who are on the Autism spectrum are derided over behaviors they may not be able to control, while parents are given free reign to throw "meltdowns" and behave like children as well as "living in their own world".
Comment
-
Originally posted by violetyoshiI think called parents breeders is nice, considered the other attributes they have shown towards those who are childfree such as:
It's a slur to call any of those groups any of those names, even if some members of those groups fit the stereotypes.
By your logic, it's perfectly acceptable to paint a group (parents) with a slur (breeder) on the grounds that some members of that group exhibit behaviors that others in other groups find reprehensible. So, with your logic, please tell me why any of the other slurs I mentioned above are unacceptable, but breeder is fine?
No, I don't have kids. Never will. But that doesn't change the fact that the behavior you are advocating is wrong. I'm hoping that by having used those words above, I'll help to drive home the point of what you are doing.
Comment
Comment