Monday, November 1, 2010

A Tale Of Two Choices


*From the '08 archives as I try to catch up wid some things, and find they run faster than I do*
It was the best of choices, it was the worst of choices. -- Chucky Dickens
A friend of mine related to me that a former coworker of hers was once introduced to the downside of choices: married for over a year at that time, his wife was badgering him for a new house AND a baby, at a time when a new house was becoming a a chancey thing (at the early start of the sub-prime bubble).
Choices. Even with the scenario presented, he still has a choice. In the adult world, choices are SOP. Whatever your wont, choices must be reckoned with. Even with the best of procrastinators, they must be made.
For example, I have over the years, had the choice a few times of bachelorhood versus married life. That I am still a bachelor is largely by my choice, with one big (and for me, disappointing) exception. And that was her choice, previously discussed (Feb '08, The One That Got Away).
Anyway, in my personal opinion, somewhere in history, bachelors got a bad rap and are terribly underrated for their intelligence. Of course, I'll admit that bachelordom is a long way from perfect, since my kitchen isn't self-cleaning (or self-cooking), and all the studies I read tell me that I'll live 5-15 years less as a bachelor, than as a married guy.
I find myself wondering about the validity of that, after the opening anecdote, but I digress.
Married life is not just a choice: it's a life-long series of them, one that might start as simply a night in the backseat of a Dodge with a six pack and no protection before thinking with blood flow to the wrong head, or after months or years of careful deliberation over lots of movies and cheeseburgers. Either way, you knew that once the "I do"s were done, there were a plethora of things that went into traditional marriage, including (but not limited to) a house, kids, pets, a mortgage or two, braces, Play Stations, college, cars, future weddings, future alimony, future child support, etc.
Many of these choices are mutually agreed to without a lawyer, unlike our poor chap at the beginning of this missive.
At any rate, were I personally faced with the choice -- not quite as unilateral as the one aforementioned -- of starting out with a house OR a baby, I would use a system that was taught to me long ago, on choice pros and cons, that would (hopefully) lead me to an informed, logically arrived-at answer. For better or worse -- you be the judge -- here's what I came up with:
First of all, having a child is relatively easy. Much easier than high school biology class inferred, it seems. I can't tell you how many times I've been part of a conversation that went something like this:
Married person w/kids: Do you have kids?
Me: No.
Married person w/kids: Do you want mine?
Try getting a home loan that easily. And that's only the beginning:
-- a house purchase, after weeks/months of paperwork, etc., is consummated with a closing that can be scheduled (generally) to the convenience of the buyer. After approximately 9 months, a baby arrives when he/she is good and ready, convenience be damned.
-- You know (generally) what the house will cost you over 30 years; you can only guesstimate what a child will cost, and whether that cost goes well beyond their 18th, 21st, 22nd, 30th (or more) birthday...
-- A house never requires a feeding at 2am; then again, a baby, even with suspect plumbing, won't be near as catastrophic as a sprung water line in the upstairs bathroom.
-- You won't have to scrape down and repaint the kids every few years; then again, your house won't outgrow it's current fad fashions in months, requiring a full wardrobe replacement.
-- Your house won't get colic, nor will your kids get squirrels in the attic (maybe in other ways, but that's for later).
-- You'll never get a note or phonecall from the principal to come discuss something your house did in school; nor will you get to celebrate an A-filled report card with it.
-- You don't have to sweat teaching your house to drive; nor can you foist off errands you don't want to do yourself, on it.
-- Expanding your kids is another choice and can be fun (especially for the guy); from conception to paying the final bill, expanding your house can be worse than the movie The Money Pit.
-- You can work with your house to control energy costs; getting your kids to understand the concept of "on-off" won't be so easy.
-- Pest control is pretty straightforward for a house; it's much harder if you have a teenage daughter...
-- While your home acquires equity -- assuming the economy is good and your choice of neighborhood was as well -- you'll never get to enjoy watching your house learn to ride a bike, hit a homerun at Little League, win a spelling bee, or ever get glitzed up for prom.
-- You can read to your kids, or you can read to your house; your house won't ask any of those endless "but WHY?" questions, but who'll want to hear about you reading to a house that doesn't ask any parent-tickling "but WHY?" questions...
-- A house can never grace you with grandkids that you can spoil and send back to your kids (aka, grandparental revenge).
-- And lastly, you can love your house; but you really can't hug it. Not if you don't want your neighbors talking...
Choices. If you're living your life to the fullest, you're making them, and accepting all the pros, cons and personal responsibility and accountability that goes with the making of choices in an adult world. In a free society, that's as it should be.
As for the poor dude that got this dissertation started, I have no idea how his particular scenario turned out, as my friend no longer works where he does. Speaking therefore for me and my choices, well...bachelordom has had both pluses and minuses. Leading the minuses are my alleged lost years in longevity and that I won't be watching my pet rock get a diploma.

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8 Comments:

Blogger ANNA-LYS said...

I expected pink feather here, today ;-) ... not a loooong serious post.
Have to get back on the content. Meanwhile - have a lovely weekend!!!

05 September, 2008 13:00  
Blogger Zip n Tizzy said...

You may not have kids, but you have done your homework.

06 September, 2008 09:50  
Blogger Right Truth said...

Excellent comparison. For many, they give no thought to having a child. They want a "baby", but they don't think any further than the cute little bundle of joy, smelling like baby powder and gurgling and cooing.

That only lasts for a few days, then the sleepless nights, dirty diapers, vomiting, and the bills start becoming a reality.

Having a child is a lifelong commitment, unlike dating, marriage (divorce is pretty quick and easy for most people these days), jobs, homes, ... A child is FOREVER. That's whether they are good, rotten, whatever, they are still your responsibility.

For many having a child is like a possession. I've seen many poor people continue to have kids when they can't afford them, especially when they are on government assistance and don't HAVE to foot the bills. Why? Because children are the only thing that is really THEIRS.

Very sad situations.

Debbie Hamilton
Right Truth

07 September, 2008 10:33  
Blogger Little Lamb said...

but us single people don't have to worry about anyone cheating on us.

07 September, 2008 21:27  
Blogger Herb said...

An excellent post. Life is full of choices all the time.

08 September, 2008 04:58  
Blogger Jack K. said...

I was reminded of this take on choice.

Choices are interesting. Even not choosing is a choice.

Choosing to put in the link or not? Hmmmm.

10 September, 2008 05:41  
Blogger Jenny said...

Well, but then, Seymour has street smarts. No ivy league school awards those, at any price.

As for kids versus home-ownership, all I can say is that my kids really come through on Mother's Day (and my birthday). My house? It just sits here every single solitary day of the year, waiting for ME to pay attention to IT.

Houses. Kids. Can't live with 'em, can't live without 'em.

01 November, 2010 11:02  
Blogger Right Truth said...

"Do you have kid? Do you want mine?" ha

Debbie

01 November, 2010 11:18  

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