Had my first baby at 27 and immediately felt the natural urge to put him above my career, even working from home with him a majority of his life. I’m due with my second just before I turn 30 and we’ve spent the last 2 years setting up our finances so I can stay home. I work in a high achieving industry and I know zero moms who are happy they are at work instead of being with their kids.
@amandaschoeneman723211 ай бұрын
I had my second 9 months ago and I was wishing and still wish I wouldn’t have had to go back to work. I want to stay home with my kids and be a housewife. I’ve only recently thought that I don’t want to climb the corporate ladder. That’s not the path I want my life to take.
@Harminder_Saini11 ай бұрын
Me and my wife got married last year at 20. We are both in university but are almost done and plan on having a kid soon.
@britneyt925311 ай бұрын
Just curious, do you wish you didn’t work in a high achieving career then? I just graduated college and started at a high achieving job. It’s a blessing ofcourse financially and starting off, but I also want to structure my life in a way that in the future, I’m able to have time for family and not be so work dependent. It also worries me because even though I just started, I want my potential partner to make more than me and be the provider, but that means that many guys right now are not a compatible since many guys around my age don’t work such a well to do job, atleast right now.
@longpenis702111 ай бұрын
I think its something to do with people realizing that nobody actually wants to work 12 hours ago for a company that hates you and will do everything in their power to pay you less.
@CaribooMalt11 ай бұрын
Queen
@benpoe433511 ай бұрын
As an old fart, I feel for youngsters today because relationships have been made too complicated and face to face conversations seem rare.
@saskiasofia11 ай бұрын
as a youngster, i concur. it seems that most now only want to hook up or “casually date” people. finding someone who wants to commit long term nowadays is like looking for a needle in a haystack.
@JohnAnderson-ev3lp11 ай бұрын
Women reap what they sow.
@stonedcyclist639211 ай бұрын
Good point.
@j.w.m.41511 ай бұрын
As a 40-something rapidly approaching Old Fartdom, and looking at the plights of my grown and teenage children and their peers, I concur.
@tracym895211 ай бұрын
Turning 31 and these girl bosses would have to hit me in the head with a stick to get my attention at this point
@BrieMomOf411 ай бұрын
I absolutely love this! I got bullied growing up for saying I wanted to be a stay at home mom. I am now 23, married to the love of my life, stay home with my two wonderful kids, am pregnant with our third child, and absolutely loving my life! Update to add!!! We just found out at our 20 week ultrasound, we’re having twins!!!
@SuicideboysGrey5911 ай бұрын
23?! Damn 😂 I’m 25 (female) and no kids. Still working on doing what I wanna do with my life, gonna leave the Army soon after 4 years active.. new chapters and none involve no kids anytime soon.
@BrieMomOf411 ай бұрын
@@SuicideboysGrey59 that’s awesome that you are doing what you wanna do with your life but like I said in my comment, this is what I wanna do with my life
@SuicideboysGrey5911 ай бұрын
@@BrieMomOf4 never said it’s bad just mind blowing for me is all. Personally I consider 23 young.. like just having dropped the teen off your legal age or being able to count the years back you graduated HS on one hand young. Different strokes for different folks is all.
@iisunzo11 ай бұрын
@@SuicideboysGrey59it’s cus she couldn’t keep her legs closed before she could legally drink.
@BrieMomOf410 ай бұрын
@@iisunzo I was married for over a year before I had my first child. Just because people choose a different life than you think they should, does not mean it’s the wrong choice. You are disgusting!
@eyeh8u111 ай бұрын
I'm a man. I remember when I hit 30 I freaked out for like 10 seconds because I was never married and had no kids. I wasn't "focused" on my career. I just worked. A lot. Had no choice. I'm a man. We don't get the privilege of choice between work and family. Whether we have a family or not, we work.
@alejandrosunshadow60418 ай бұрын
Yeah, the same here. I had my kid with 34, not by choice, but because in my country and generation it was imposible getting a stable income before... i had to work travelling a lot between my 25-32, so i could only spent a few days a month with my girlfriend, now my wife. I would have liked to have my kid before, but I'm pretty happy nowadays
@gray_mara8 ай бұрын
Sure, because an unmarried 30 year old woman has soooooo much more choice than an unmarried 30 year old man. You're not a victim here. Quit whining.
@CarolPayne-t1o4 ай бұрын
My story is very similar to yours only I am a woman. Had to work 60 to 100 hours a week just to survive.
@shgi17323 ай бұрын
@eyeh8ul I'd just like to point out that "the privilege of choice between work and family" is not female privilege; it's rich privilege. There are mothers that work because they can't afford not to.
@GiveMeABreakNow3 ай бұрын
A hardworking man is what a family needs! Sounds like you will make a great father! If my parents waited to have enough money they would have never had kids, and used to tell me that a lot.
@ShootingStarStudio11 ай бұрын
If I’ve said it once, I’ve said it a million times: there is nothing unfeminist about the girl who chooses the ball gown and the prince; there is everything unfeminist about those who shame her for her choices.
@brusso45611 ай бұрын
to be a real woman is about choosing life. Feminism is a Death Cult. watch all those videos of women celebrating having multiple abortions.
@FallingAsh11 ай бұрын
Yes this!!! I am so thankful for the feminist movement that gives women the freedom to choose their happiness I am 100% behind women who choose to be moms and housewives or tradwives. Feminism should not be about women being better or superior to men or being singlemindedly focused on career. It should be about having options, choosing your own path to happiness!
@Antaeus_Library11 ай бұрын
So true. I want people to understand that being a girl boss is just one type of way to be a woman, and it's not the only way. If you want to be a traditional housewife, go ahead as long as you weren't pressured to be so. Unfortunately the first boyfriend in the Business Inside article did pressure her to do housewife tasks that she didn't want to do and they even agreed on that before hand.
@laylajones185111 ай бұрын
well said
@Furylamb11 ай бұрын
100%
@rhythmsynthesis11 ай бұрын
My mom was pregnant with me at 30 (I was born in ‘84). She worked for a doctor. When she told him she was pregnant and will need to take her leave, he said “well, what are you going to do about it?” and then essentially demanded her to get an abortion to keep her job. She quit, that very same day.
@nicholauscrawford790311 ай бұрын
Bad "doctor".
@stonedcyclist639211 ай бұрын
That's disgusting!
@rodriguezk9611 ай бұрын
Danm that's sick
@jonw373811 ай бұрын
I smell a law suit or at least reporting it to the Employment Commission (it was under the control of the Honorable Ronald Reagan, so it might have helped her).
@chuckb562511 ай бұрын
Great mom!
@fivemjs11 ай бұрын
Got married at 21. Had my kids at 23, 26, and 29. Now I’m 46 and my oldest is 22 and youngest is 16. I’m still young and have tons of time in the future just me and my hubby. Y’all can have your careers and be the boss babe. I stayed home and raised my family. Absolutely never had any regrets.
@ispep888211 ай бұрын
THIS! THIS SO MUCH!!! If women truly want to "have it all" this is the way to do it. Find a good man, help him build while you raise your family together. In your 40s you can have that career and work for 20-25 years if you want to. Why can't ya'll just do it this way?
@kayleemcginnis11 ай бұрын
Yes this! I got married at 18 and had kids at 19, 21, 23, and 25! My hubby and I are excited to enjoy our life together once our babies are out of the house and we can go on vacations and stuff in our forties and beyond.
@jess5330011 ай бұрын
Married at 22 and first one on the way at 25. I'm glad we are growing our family in our 20s so we can enjoy our age when our children are grown
@kayleemcginnis11 ай бұрын
@@jess53300 you're gonna love being a mom ❤️ remember to give yourself grace and remember that the housework can wait til you're done cuddling your little one.
@fivemjs11 ай бұрын
@@jess53300 it’s the best. And I had energy to raise them. I can’t fathom chasing little kids at my current age of 46. I can handle grand babies when they come but I get to give them BACK! Lol
@chrisdavis839910 ай бұрын
Our ‘culture’ didn’t tell women to do this….other women told them to do this.
@parrotshootist30046 ай бұрын
Of an other culture. After blurring the lines, so theres no way to see it.
@macxavier1684 ай бұрын
So women aren't part of the culture, then?
@parrotshootist30044 ай бұрын
@@macxavier168 not when its almost entirely limited to them alone no. Why should innocent people by the billions be smeared?
@macxavier1684 ай бұрын
@parrotshootist3004 this comment assumes that only women are feminists. There are male feminists too. And if you're assuming men also aren't part of the culture, I don't think you know what culture actually means.
@parrotshootist30044 ай бұрын
@@macxavier168 try reading my comment again and take your words out of my mouth. Good faith just impossible for you ?
@brittanydavenport870211 ай бұрын
I was on track for a pretty significant job with a significant degree and I had a professional in that field say “your downfall is going to be that you’re going to care too much about your family. It’s hard to have both.” So I quit. I didn’t get the degree I was supposed to have. I married my amazing boyfriend. I have two amazing kids. I don’t have a significant job outside of my home but I fully believe I am more fulfilled now than I would’ve been with the job I was headed towards. I had SO MANY people tell me I was going to regret this. I had so many people tell me that I needed to be more than just a mom. I needed to do something more important. But like…why? More important to who? This family, my husband, and my kids are the most important thing in my life. A job could never make me feel the way this family makes me feel. I love taking care of my babies and loving my husband. It’s an amazing life and I know I wouldn’t have had this if I had headed down the path I was headed towards.
@wandertree11 ай бұрын
I have a similar story. My gifts and abilities have been used fully in my home making and child rearing and partnership with my husband. I hate how young women have been lied to!
@NorseMan63311 ай бұрын
Great story Brittany ! And the correct decision on your part as well ! Peace !
@music952111 ай бұрын
It makes me so sad that our culture has pushed the idea that "just" being a mom is not enough when being a mom (especially a good mom) is the most important thing a woman can be.
@NiceyP012311 ай бұрын
Also feeling fulfilled as a housewife. We finally hit the financial stability to start trying for our first at 27 🥰🙏🏽 Hubby worked hard, and I'm so proud to be his wife 🤩
@DanielaWilliams-qk5xg11 ай бұрын
❤
@Chilltechvibes11 ай бұрын
Even as a man I was lied to. I heard that having kids was the death of your own life. And to live for experience in all media. Now I am an old dad. I am 38 years old with a 4 year old and a 1 year old. I wish I had these kids earlier. Now I have to wonder if I will even live long enough to see my own grandkids. Family is everything.
@nogames898211 ай бұрын
You are not old. You will live long enough to see your grandkids. Don't worry.
@ClarkAve32111 ай бұрын
@@nogames8982lol I was thinking the same thing.
@serkg467211 ай бұрын
Do your best to stay healthy. Of course, our focus is always our family, but we should also take good care of ourselves. that's not just for us, but also for our love ones.
@Amandaaaaaa12311 ай бұрын
38 is not old😂 even at 60 you can have kids but stay fit and motivated. Many younger men are unfit and have health issues like a 60 year old.
@athomewiththemrs941011 ай бұрын
You are not old. My dad had me at 41 and I’m his oldest (I’m 27). My youngest sibling is 17. My dad is still able to do lots of things, and be a wonderful part in our lives.
@holleyjay112211 ай бұрын
Me, a millennial homeschool mom who married an amazing man and left the workforce over a decade ago, smiling because everyone is finally understanding how amazing my life is instead of judging me for it. 😊
@JT-9111 ай бұрын
feminists will still judge you for it.
@thedealmama307011 ай бұрын
same, although as another commenter said some people will still judge and am ok with this, I never chose this life for other peoples approval.
@malificajones767411 ай бұрын
Well done you. Being a parent is a wonderful experience. I feel sorry for women indoctrinated by feminism into chasing careers. They are wasting their lives on a job that won't give them fulfilment or any sense of achievement, but will bring them crippling loneliness and misery.
@rathelmmc319411 ай бұрын
Everyone has to pick their sacrifices. People are just realizing your sacrifices aren't as bad as the ones they made.
@pmac764111 ай бұрын
The problem is that the feminists don't actually want you to be happy or make your own choices, unless they approve of those choices and it somehow devalues men.
@LivingQuiteSimply10 ай бұрын
I’m thankful for my Mom who told me as a teen that she regretted not being home with my brothers and I. That made such an impact on me, and I knew from that conversation that I would stay home with my children. My husband and I were the first to get married from our friends group (21). We had 4 children by the time we were 28. We couldn’t be happier with the decisions we made to marry and have children early, or to live a traditional lifestyle (my husband works, me at home raising and homeschooling our children). I have several friends from college who still aren’t married or at least decided to delay children and then it became harder to get pregnant, and they just don’t seem happy or fulfilled. I feel sad for them. But I remember conversations in college when I said I planned to be a stay at home, homeschooling mom, and my friends mocked me. I’m not really having the last laugh, because I genuinely feel bad for what they’re missing out on. As a side note, having children as young as we did, we will have an empty nest by 50, and can travel and do those things that won’t friends focused on in their 20’s and 30’s.
@aethefledladyofmercia957211 ай бұрын
My mom worked as a nanny for 1% girl bosses in Manhattan in the 80s. The families she served were so miserable it turned her off the whole idea of feminism forever and she passed it on to all of us.
@brusso45611 ай бұрын
Feminism - why be a slave to a man who is obligated to care for you, cloth you, shelter you, feed you, and protect you. instead be a slave to a soulless corporation who's only obligation is to pay you and can fire you on a whim.
@specialk412511 ай бұрын
So these were families where women were the main breadwinners and top 1% earners?
@aethefledladyofmercia957211 ай бұрын
@@specialk4125 I can't remember exactly, but they were rich and high-ranking in their respective careers.
@marianne38028 ай бұрын
I don’t think misery has anything to do with feminism or demographics. It sounds like those “girl boss” women did everything society told them to-have kids, careers, be in the top 1%-and they were still seemingly unhappy. It must be something wrong with them internally, not externally.
@ShaferHart8 ай бұрын
@@specialk4125yeah more details are needed. Chances are the women were stay at home mothers _with nannies_ and still miserable lol.
@jennifertwede714211 ай бұрын
I celebrated my 50th birthday and 30th anniversary last year. I was (pre) girl boss, was studying to become a sports medicine doctor, thought about maybe having a few kids in my 30’s. I couldn’t be happier that I married at (almost) 20, and was pregnant with our first miracle 5 months later, and was a stay at home mom ever since. No success in life matters if you fail in the home.
@-l1ly-11 ай бұрын
Congratulations! This is awesome. My boyfriend and I and are planning to get married soon and I’m so excited to have kids. I think about it everyday! I’m 18 and am thankful I’ve learned from other peoples mistakes. It’s a blessing to get married and have kids young. God bless you and your family ❤
@kugelschreiber567811 ай бұрын
My mom did the same. She ended her education with 2 masters. The brightest woman I've ever met to this day, and I've worked in the financial district here in NYC where some of my peers were women. Mom chose to settle down WHILE she was getting her first masters, and had my brother first before she graduated. Her and my father had the most beautiful 20 yrs together until cancer took her. She redpilled me and my brother, and this was WAY before that space even existed. She warned me to NEVER choose a "career woman", and to be careful with settling down as the courts are against me. You and my mother made the right (and excellent) choice. It's no surprise that you're happy, and I hope that trend continues for you! God bless to you and your beautiful family, ma'am.
@jennifertwede714211 ай бұрын
@@-l1ly- Wow, congratulations to you as well! You have your goals aligned with what really makes one experience true joy, and I can’t wait for your upcoming adventures. May God bless you and your future union with much joy❤️
@jennifertwede714211 ай бұрын
@@kugelschreiber5678 First of all, my condolences on the passing of what sounds like an exceptional, brilliant woman. It sounds like she instilled in you the greatest importance in life, and may you be blessed to have a happy one in all your future endeavors ☺️
@kugelschreiber567811 ай бұрын
@@jennifertwede7142 thank you ma'am. You are very kind and I really appreciate it. Mama did instill some of THE best values in her kids. My brother and I look around and see how miserable the world is, and further thank our mother and father for the way they raised us. Mothers like you and mine are a genuine gift from kid. Us kids couldn't have been any luckier 😇. God bless you and yours!
@LeahDussault11 ай бұрын
When I was 21 and engaged I ran into my elementary school principal, he asked me what career I was pursuing and I told him "I'm just working until I have kids." He said "What a waste of your potential." 10 years and 2 kids later, I'm so thankful I am a stay-at-home mom and not a pharmacy technician
@Spartos8311 ай бұрын
What changed in 10 years to make the choice?
@wessyde9111 ай бұрын
@Spartos83 she had her kids.
@jeremycarl240110 ай бұрын
@@Spartos83 She made the same choice, only worked until she had kids.
@Spartos8310 ай бұрын
@@jeremycarl2401 Wow you know her more than she knows herself? I have never seen a stranger speaking about another stranger and knowing them more than they know themselves.
@guitarwill10 ай бұрын
Complete waste of your personal potential what if Einstein or someone like that decided to be selfish and have kids and not pursue what they were great at and their world changing views and ideas…don’t flatter yourself you could have fucking done both
@acchanvillard10 ай бұрын
I started to realize all the BS behind the doctrine a few months before I turned 27. Now I'm 29, and I will only accept facts when in debate. I still can't believe I didn't wake up sooner: I would've had so many - and interesting - conversations with people, some of whom I felt the need to apologize to the last few years (I was passionate, yet infuriating). I received nothing but love, except for those who still believe this is the way to go. Those stopped talking to me, so I guess I still win. And part of this transformation was because of voices like yours, Brett. I guess all I'm saying is thank you. Best wishes from Argentina.
@Rando85311 ай бұрын
I had this awakening at 26 and felt so behind. I’m so grateful that the man I was already with wanted traditional marriage, faith and kids and we’re working towards all 3
@alejandropacheco783211 ай бұрын
You were lucky... the ticking of the clock doesn't run at the same pace for men and women
@Lilmisrubicon11 ай бұрын
I just retired beginning of January and I couldn’t be happier. My quality of life is so much better as well as my daughter is thriving. (She’s 17months) I don’t have to worry about babysitting and my husband is happy with home cooked meals. Ladies wake up! Prioritize your family don’t listen to society. I’m now 34 trying to have a second child. Praying to God he has that planned for us.
@wandertree11 ай бұрын
Wonderful! There is nothing better than caring for a home and children. What a privilege that has long-lasting rewards.
@dominishawagner207011 ай бұрын
May God bless you and your family!
@megankissinger826911 ай бұрын
Waking up isn't going to make the man's paycheck any bigger. Many men prefer their wives to work.
@pmorgan77711 ай бұрын
@lilmisrubicon Ahem! Ma'am, how'd you retire at 34?! #Goals
@aw3dwafda95011 ай бұрын
Love your story Ma’am. God bless.
@Jane_199411 ай бұрын
I went to a women in engineering event and when I saw how unhappy the speakers were, that really just affirmed to me where my priorities should stay. I'm not going to stop pursuing my education, but I'm not going to compromise my long-term goals of being a wife and mom for the sake of my career.
@cavaleirosemlicenca389411 ай бұрын
Don't put me off, I'd like to date a girl who likes exact science, because I'm an engineer. I would like to pass these skills on to my children early 🤣🤣
@EtoCobra11 ай бұрын
Engineering is depressing for both men and women. Unless they are work-oriented people. @@cavaleirosemlicenca3894 I have friends who prefer a shared profession in a partner, but about something entirely different on the table?
@mariamotilal706811 ай бұрын
I'm an engineer and a wife and mother
@Muninn80111 ай бұрын
Just make sure you don't go into debt for your education. I got an engineering degree for 60k debt. Now I'm a stay at home mom and my debt is a burden for my husband (thankfully he's very successful so we'll be fine, but I wish we didn't have that hanging over our heads).
@Chestnut_da_cat11 ай бұрын
I feel the same way. I’m 18 and studying to be an aerospace engineer. I value my education and feel a need to have a career in what I love. However, I deeply desire to be married young and raise children and to put my family first.
@avalerionbass10 ай бұрын
As a single man in my late 30s, i saw SOOO many women that were both desperately clinging on to their feminist "i hate men" principles, yet also DESPERATELY scrambling against the ticking clock to build a family and find a husband IMMEDIATELY. Their desperation is SCARY to deal with because their life plans become 100% YOUR responsibility as a man, and theres this feeling that you wont even get the chance to just enjoy each other's presence before you become entrenched in the responsibility of marriage and kids
@ShaferHart8 ай бұрын
Your second paragraph is me in my early 30s. Unfortunately I had to stop dating women my age (single and without kids) because they become way too desperate when they suddenly realize time's not on their side anymore. It's not a stereotype, women are not good at hiding or dealing with that kind of primal desperation. However, I won't change my time line of getting to know someone just because they suddenly realized they didn't respect theirs. Society loves to shame men for dating "younger" but actually sometimes we simply don't want to "hold up" the 34 yo woman with no kids from finding a man that's as desperate as her to have a family. You don't get to put that pressure on me _on the first date_ after you spent more than 3 decades not caring about it.
@neruba21738 ай бұрын
I've been tasting that desperation for years in my late 30's in the dating market. I just gave up, I always felt like they were not even there for me, I felt like I was their last chance so they would settle down out of resignation. Im looking at younger women now and I dont give a shit about what society thinks of me.
@ashfordj818 ай бұрын
Those are the types of women who marry a clueless guy and divorce him after they get their kids or after finding they can't have kids. He's just a means to an end and he has no clue.
@InfallibleDogbert7 ай бұрын
It's amazing that some of the women I've known for years, married and divorced, no stable incomes, unstable parents, partying and being jackases into their 30s, find out I've got a decent job and all of a sudden want to hang out/catch up blah blah blah. Oh where were they when I lost my job during COVID lockdowns? Or spent years studying to get a useful degree, or suffering through jobs in awful conditions for a line on a resume. Nowhere. This culture has taught them to take shortcuts at all times, and I'd rather stand and watch their 3rd wave bullshit burn them than offer an olive branch built on my sacrifices.
@ashfordj817 ай бұрын
@@InfallibleDogbert It's easy enough to do when you know if you did offer an olive branch, they'd burn your tree down.
@simplyrelevantlife836211 ай бұрын
I was married at 20 to the love of my life and I just turned 40. We’ll be celebrating 20 years this summer. We waited a few years to have kids, but I was still in my mid-twenties when we started our family. Best decision ever! Of course we had to work through a lot of immaturity and baggage (we both came from broken/divorced households.) But by the grace and help of the Lord and a little bit of grit, we pulled through and it’s been a wonderful adventure. I love him more now than in the beginning. We’re still young, our kids are in high school and junior high and there’s so much more to look forward to! If you can help it, start your family and essentially your life, as soon as you can. Don’t rush, don’t make foolish decisions in urgency or fear, but don’t resist the invitation to life and love and family when presented to you in exchange for the false success of a career that will only last so long. Family lasts forever ❤
@edenelston766811 ай бұрын
Nailed it.❤
@mleobviously11 ай бұрын
It's lovely that your marriage lasted 20 years, but how many others didn't? Marriage at a young age is one of the strongest predictors of divorce. There is just so much maturing and identity-creation that occurs in your 20's, and the children of "older" parents tend to have better behavioral and academic outcomes. Your story is wonderful and inspiring, but that doesn't mean advice like "start your family and essentially your life, as soon as you can" is good advice. It's ok to focus first on education/personal growth, career, travel, friendships, and finances. Those things add a richness to your life. You'll have experiences, wisdom, empathy, and more perspectives to offer your husband and kids. Just my two cents.
@simplyrelevantlife836211 ай бұрын
@mleobviously I understand what you’re saying :) But if you continue to read what I wrote in it’s entirety, you’d see that I also added to not rush or make foolish decisions out of fear, but to also not resist the offer when and if it comes, in exchange for a career. In other words, if life and love are presented to you and it’s the right thing, don’t put it off because you think a career will be more important than starting a family. Being married as young as I was, I can absolutely see both sides of the benefit to getting married young and also the benefit to waiting until you’re older if that’s what you have to do. I changed tremendously in my 20’s and felt more like an adult in my 30’s. But the opportunity to start my life young was presented to me and it was a very good decision that I didn’t push away because I thought a career would be more fulfilling than starting a family. And I certainly didn’t look to others to validate what they viewed as a successful life. And my husband and I are truly a miracle. With us both coming from divorced parents, and my side actually being a generational pattern of divorce (grandparents as well). Young people don’t have to fall into statistics just because “society” states that getting married young has a higher rate of failure. We made a decision that went against the grain with great success (and a lot of hard work and grit) and I want to encourage those who would actually be encouraged by it. If it doesn’t encourage you or speak to you, then that’s ok 😊 I joined the conversation with some experience under my belt of making choices that essentially go against the narrative of the feminist movement.
@Sopg94910 ай бұрын
Lovely, thank you :)
@steveneumann3211 ай бұрын
As a 33 year old married father of 4 it’s so sad to see women-and men-fall for this trap. Literally yesterday I made up with my 5 year old that when he starts growing facial hair we are going to grow huge mustaches and call ourselves “the mustache men”. I wouldn’t give any of this up for NOTHING. please. It ain’t easy. Sometimes these loonies are annoying as anything but they’re mine and I couldn’t be happier.
@monkey620711 ай бұрын
I'm in my 20s and literally still have a twelve year old brother who says things like this all the time. I also have six other younger siblings. I just want a break. Not everyone's situations are the same, some things you could never understand, so it's really not one shoe fits all.
@ColtonKile11 ай бұрын
@@monkey6207kids and siblings is in no way the same thing. Goofy
@monkey620711 ай бұрын
I guess I'm just saying that, "kids say funny stuff, who knew" doesn't mean God put everyone in the same position. I am glad if having kids gave some people a new perspective and it was good for them. Some people just already knew that and still feel called to to other stuff that gives them meaning. But people on this thread act like it's the only thing anyone should ever do.
@billyoung811811 ай бұрын
Been married more than 3 decades. No kids, by choice. Both my wife and I have genetic conditions (different ones) that can be passed on. This was a decision we made together, knowing that any child we had would very much likely have one (or both) of these genetic issues. I have no regrets. Not judging parents - you do you. I'm happy for you! But I am also thankful for my decision. I do love kids, but am glad I never had any biological children of my own.
@KyleT199011 ай бұрын
Same man. Kids are the best. My 3 year old son always tell me he can’t wait to get big and strong and be able to go to work with me and go to the gym with me, and help me with projects around the house. That level of admiration is just irreplaceable. Being someone’s hero and role model and raising a tiny version of yourself is one of the greatest pleasures in life.
@verbena20811 ай бұрын
The worst thing about this shift to feminism is that we've dismantled a lot of the ways that people meet and form bonds. As a single man I have no idea where to go to meet women other than bars and churches. Couples don't just form out of nothing. They begin with two single people meeting up and forming first a friendship then later love. We need to start creating the conditions under which relationships are formed and opening up ways to socialize would be a very good start.
@Undo74311 ай бұрын
I dont know where to go In general anymore, women have made all excuses to not give me a chance, and now I'm just supposed to forgive them? Don't work that way, watch their actions not their words.
@kylesuarez554011 ай бұрын
@mikem8523 100% correct. Women are always thinking about themselves and what they want. But they don't realize how many men along the way. Have been damaged goods just to be a piece of a pedestal that they stand on as they put down all men. And never take accountability. There are so many men out there that suffer and are really trying to find love. When women are really out there, just to get. They're rocks off and a bunch of free meals or just to get a bunch of free meals and fake that they want the guy. Then like this woman ruined her marriage and a guy's life just to divorce him and break His heart and now she wants the exact same thing she had that she threw in the trash. Women don't realize, but they're p*ss Poor decisions affect the men in their life as well, And as men hold each other to a higher standard. Which is why we don't have a safety net if we screw our lives up
@Xander1Sheridan11 ай бұрын
this is the problem, women screwed the entire planet up and want men to not mock and ridicule them for it. Women have been denigrating men for 50 years, we have every right to make fun of women forever.
@kathleenking4711 ай бұрын
People used to go dancing, in ballroom type ways.. Or decent movies Also, before 1970, many stores were closed on sundays
@verbena20811 ай бұрын
@@kathleenking47 Exactly, people used to understand that recreation was not only how you recharged for work, but how you met new people.
@leroyj362711 ай бұрын
This is EXCELLENT messaging! I say that as a father and a grandfather. THANK YOU for your positive contributions to our society!
@saskiasofia11 ай бұрын
i’m only 20 and although i’m putting a lot of effort into figuring out my career as of now, finding a husband and having children is still my top priority in life. i’m so grateful i realised that early on and didn’t have to wait till my 30s for the sad epiphany.
@MikeTheD11 ай бұрын
Only date with that in mind. This casual scene can screw up even guys. Every time it's less special. People are lying who say otherwise. Just because it was more exhilarating later isn't the same thing. Drugs are exhilarating, and people love them
@watman511 ай бұрын
Marriage is a young person's game the older you get male or female the more stuff gets in your way. Marry young grow together.
@TheBlackGentlemanGeek11 ай бұрын
Good. You're on a good track. Having a career isn't a bad thing. The bad thing is when women put their career and "sexual liberation" as their top priorities and supress their natural inclination for having a man and children because of feminism illusion, which is programmed into dormant low IQ women at university and by MSM. They made it hard for men to commit to good women because many of them are chameleons. We're now very hesitant about women. But I'm glad you kept your brain clean. And keep your legs closed for your husband only and no one else; your value will be kept that way. Chastity and peace are very important to men, as ambition and ability to provide are very important to women.
@pawelzietek11 ай бұрын
You do not know yet if it's something you can be grateful for to be honest. You will know it in 10-20 years. For every woman that I know that now is unhappy in her 30s due to choosing a career pursuit, I know 2 that are frustrated cause they chose family over career and now close to their 40s they feel that sure they have children but they feel they have achieved nothing in life. And for every man that is unhappy in his 40s for choosing staying in work until 9PM over seeing his children I know of 2 unhappy cause they were not focused enough on choosing the right professional path. Being an adult is a hard shit filled of "hindsight is 20/20¨ situations. Brett describes it as if it was black or white. Meanwhile, people can be extremely unhappy regardless of the choices earlier in life. The thing is that it is way more nuanced than that and looking at the nuclear family model with a rose-tinted glasses is as foolish as trying to be a strong independent woman no matter what.
@DarkAbyss911 ай бұрын
@maddiec6186 sound like a win for the women in that scenario. If you're a guy and won't marry a women because they earn more then they probably aren't a man you would want anyway
@Aliceee-z4y11 ай бұрын
This is totally me. Got my masters degree by 23, entered corporate world, got married at 25 and had my son at 28. I’m 31 and pregnant with our second and I don’t care to climb the corporate ladder anymore. Just want to raise my babies. But we can’t financially justify me quitting. I feel so lied to. I wish more people were expressing the importance of being a mom and wife and home maker. Might have taken a different path in life. I’m just grateful I do have my babies now. Genuinely jealous of all the SAHMs.
@Amandaaaaaa12311 ай бұрын
I am 23 this year I plan on getting my Master's too, because I hate corporate work, and I want a flexible research job that can make me work from home (I work in tech). I have not met any man that can provide for me as I stay home and work from home so I am proceeding with my degree while I look for one😂
@rebeka14511 ай бұрын
@Amanda-wb6vb I was robbed of my 20ties, and I grew to reject men for dissapointing me and hurting me, so im 30 now I work but I look for a husband with whom I can just be at home, I wanna make flower buqets and eat good foor and sleep long I dont need no corporate ladder and I hate it takes so much from your life and others are so proud of it
@planetChristie11 ай бұрын
You can become a stay at home mom. Ask your husband to set up a plan and increase his earnings. He definitely can do things to increase his salary. It’s not fair for you to do both home managing and working.
@teresawilson476111 ай бұрын
We were in the same boat, but we made major changes to our financial choices, which was hard at first, but I asked myself, if I were to die a year from today. Would it have been a more fulfilling year if I stayed home and made those memories with my kids, or more fulfilling to have made more money. Thats when the decision I needed to make really hit me.
@Amandaaaaaa12311 ай бұрын
@@rebeka145 praying for you... Do you have any solid plans so far for the lifestyle change? I barely go out of my home and see the same people everyday. No luck so far🤣
@dondonsq12311 ай бұрын
Brett this needs to go viral. Everything you and these ladies said is so true. As a woman in my 50’s I too experienced the is it too late regret but was very lucky to find the right man and have 2 amazing children within 3 years as I turned 40. Women, if you find a good man in your 20’s hold on to him tight, because there isn’t an endless supply of them and loneliness is painful, no matter how many designer handbags you own.
@Sica21011 ай бұрын
Last line of your comment is _SO_ *_TRUE!_* Loneliness can become its own boss in your life. No matter how wealthy.
@kathycoleman464811 ай бұрын
When she had someone who loved her Back when she was younger She wonders if she held out A little bit too long. Back then there were so many But now there just aren't any And she thinks all the good ones are gone. Pam Tillis.
@alexia355211 ай бұрын
And having "high standards" for how you are treated is actually just having "standards." Disrespect or dismissiveness or control or "well he's only a LITTLE misogynistic and it's only sometimes" isn't acceptable. You're worth more than that. Men get called "good men" all the time just because they hold down a job and aren't violent degenerates. But do they treat you as an equal human being? If yes, THEN they're a good man, and those exist! Heck, even my sister is married to a lovely one =)
@elianagreen11 ай бұрын
I did this and have ZERO regrets. Like Brett said, when you have the right partner you find even deeper success everywhere else!
@kelf11411 ай бұрын
I'd rather have a messy house filled with love than a "showpiece" filled with designer furniture.
@JamoRox7510 ай бұрын
You cannot tell me there were NO opposing views offered to these women. There were. They ignored them
@donttalktome23169 ай бұрын
What are the opposing views?
@limeOjello9 ай бұрын
I’m their same age. We were raised by hippie, bra-burning feminists from the 60s. Our moms, teachers, television, etc. And there was no internet, just Teen Vogue. The overall narrative was “You’re a failure if you don’t become a boss babe”. The SAHM was mocked as a caricature of pathetic womanhood. Have some compassion, for God’s sake.
@chanelbaby5559 ай бұрын
There wasn't many opposing views out like that lol
@limeOjello9 ай бұрын
@@DeafFrog-ks7bg Okay, as a woman, let me give you a litany of shitty things men have done to me. Or not. Because individuals aren’t their group.
@Yoroiful9 ай бұрын
@@limeOjello Do all dogs bark? Yes, all dogs bark. Do all fish swim? Yes, yes they do. Don't give us this silly "individuals aren't their group" argument when so many women work like a hivemind. Wearing the same clothes, speaking the same language, hanging out with likeminded friends, consuming the same garbage. Besides, we're talking about a very specific type of woman, so it IS a group of women, and there's no reason to seperate them into individuals because they all do the same things.
@thephotoshopper590811 ай бұрын
I have a feeling that Gen Z (or at least a significant portion of Gen Z) are going to be more conservative than millennials. I’m Gen Z myself and I am a very traditional, Christian guy. I think a lot of my peers are waking up.
@Adam-hs9ft11 ай бұрын
As a 19 year old, I can confirm
@peachimugi11 ай бұрын
23 yo here, and same. Coming back to Christ helped me immensely.
@ethanfritz960311 ай бұрын
21 and I’m in the same place, I’d say this generation will be a momentum shift.
@sakurauchiha0311 ай бұрын
I don't see it
@peachimugi11 ай бұрын
@@sakurauchiha03 A ton of Gen Z is still very afraid to speak out. Many (if not most) lie about their beliefs publicly for fear of the internet mob
@MotherBear81111 ай бұрын
Being a stay at home wife and mother is the best thing I could have ever done. I am thankful for my husband every single day for encouraging me to do this. As the husband is the head of the house, the wife is the heart of the home. Without her, the home is cold is dead. Set the world on fire ladies by loving your husbands and children at home ❤️❤️
@Courtneyemily9111 ай бұрын
Couldn’t have said this better. ❤
@mithicash144411 ай бұрын
I love that phrase, "Men are the head of the household, while women are the heart of the household"
@cocolove991611 ай бұрын
@@mithicash1444 same it sounds beautiful and this is what my bf and i want in the feature.
@Mo0kie11 ай бұрын
Sad that you don't see much of this. I work in an industry where I go into a lot of homes, and see a lot of people. This is rare, unfortunately. All the best to you and yours! Good people like you guys are the ones that make me wanna keep working!
@alexia355211 ай бұрын
No hate, I feel like it's valid to say that partners are co-heads of the household. They're your partner, not your boss, right? An unequal relationship sounds like hell. Would a man find it acceptable for his wife to be "the head of the household"? Then why do we have to? A kind and engaged partner and parent is absolutely a heart of the household and it's a beautiful thing to have
@SparkTheGenius11 ай бұрын
I’m 51 and never got married or had kids, because I thought I was supposed to focus on getting rich and famous. Now I’m broke, unknown, and alone. So there you go!
@KIMIxMELLO10 ай бұрын
42 broke unknown alone single.. its not choice for me, but i just realy couldnt find someone for me. xD
@philipwhitcomb535810 ай бұрын
When did you come to the full realization about how things weren't working out the way you thought they would in terms of reexamining your priorities in life? I'm genuinely curious to hear more.
@yourboystealth10 ай бұрын
@@KIMIxMELLOI want you to know that Jesus is there for you, he sees you, and he loves you anyways and you have much to look forward to after you leave this world if you trust in him
@mizravenkustoms10 ай бұрын
47 broke alone but thankfully I have two kids - sons 23 and 24.
@juliusrendon593610 ай бұрын
Put your life to Jesus. ❤ He will renew you. And gives you purpose
@tuttuttut775810 ай бұрын
40, and never wanted a family and I still don’t. Not career focused either though. I have a very happy social life, many friends, jobs' fine etc.. Thing is, people are wired differently. There is no 1 solution for all. Everybody needs to stop listening to society or what’s the norm. You do you
@LillieWilliam7 ай бұрын
Beautifully said some girls/guys don’t want relationships/ their own family for their own reasons. Nothing wrong with having kid nothing wrong with not wanting kids
@GoldenLily-r7p5 ай бұрын
Wait a few more years when you see everyone around you with their families and you go home alone to an empty house .
@C87-q9j3 ай бұрын
I agree completely, after all America is "land of the free", supposedly at least. I find it ironic that Brett preaches this yet would be considered a "gorl boss" in many ways. Anyway she's coming up to 6 months married now, let's see if she practices what she preaches - there should be a pregnancy announcement soon, and then she should be quitting the DW to stay at home.
@tuttuttut77583 ай бұрын
@@GoldenLily-r7p Lol, I already have an empty house. I also have plenty of friends not wanting children or actually really disliking them. Then, I do have friends with kids. I still see them. Its absolutely fine. And guess what. I actually have many interests so Im never bored and sometimes I prefer to go holidaying alone. So I can meet other people and do my own thing and sometimes I do want go with friends. Why is that so difficult to comprehend?
@kutie21611 ай бұрын
I’m a 26 yo married stay at home mom. We don’t have a house yet and we make sacrifices to make it work but we couldn’t be happier. Our son is 5.5 months old and just got his first tooth! I couldn’t imagine missing these days and moments with him for a day job. My husband works so hard to provide for us and I’m very grateful.
@germanshepherddogs11 ай бұрын
Yeah, but...your husband misses those days. Your child's father wont be there for those special moments if he's working all the time to provide for you guys.
@iamjogun11 ай бұрын
Yeah yall want to have kids at 20-25 and be a stay at home mom all you want but in todays eco you'll be dead broke unless your SO makes 6 figures or you live with parents.
@kafka49411 ай бұрын
I’m a 27yo sahm and my husband and I just bought our first house! It will happen for you too 😊
@kafka49411 ай бұрын
@@germanshepherddogssounds better than both parents missing out yeah?
@tatianasouza236111 ай бұрын
@@germanshepherddogsthat is how it should be dear. Real men enjoy being a provider.
@TheParasoulja11 ай бұрын
" It's not their fault, fault. The culture told them to do it!" Could you imagine if men got this same kind of grace?
@EricMoore79011 ай бұрын
Nothing is their fault.
@natoslayer290711 ай бұрын
Honestly family is overrated too. Career is definitely overrated. But both are sources of more misery than happiness if you care too much about them.
@Deliar1211 ай бұрын
@@natoslayer2907 It's the same thing as the trend followers. If you're an easy on the brains and like a sheep that goes after the new and popular thing? Yea, feminism, girl-boss, Cardashians and all that crap. But smart people choose that to do with their lifes without that shit. Wanna have a baby? Ok. Wanna be child-free? Ok. No culture can tell YOU what to do if you don't CHOOSE to.
@alfonsorafael00711 ай бұрын
nope, family brings fulfillment@@natoslayer2907 otherwise we wouldnt exist
@monkey620711 ай бұрын
Yeah it's really nice how, as a woman, nothing is my fault. Everyday people are just letting me get away with anything. It's a good thing all women are exactly the same with this magic privelege.
@pint_pipe_cross11 ай бұрын
I’m 26 and a stay-at-home mom of two (soon to be three). I unexpectedly fell pregnant with my first when I was in occupational therapy school. I was encouraged to stick with it, as my father lost his father at a young age and was raised in poverty because his mother had no career skills. I graduated (on time) and I have my license, which I’m so grateful to have, but I’m glad I had my first when I did. I realized the “grind” lifestyle of juggling work and kids wasn’t for me or my family. I felt like I never saw my husband or baby and it hurt my marriage a lot for the time being. I’m grateful to have a husband who supports me being at home and the work I do raising our children; I know lots of women can’t say the same.
@1Peasant11 ай бұрын
Awww❤
@pint_pipe_cross11 ай бұрын
@Kwildcat13oh absolutely 😅 But for context, I was told by my doctor that I would have a hard time conceiving due to a medication I was taking at the time. On top of other preventative measures we were taking, we thought odds would be pretty low! Turns out, doctors can be wrong. 😂
@mariothane875410 ай бұрын
My sister just had her daughter at 38. It was a struggle, but it’s possible. Stay strong. Don’t give up.
@elizabethannedavis517611 ай бұрын
My husband and I have been together since I was 18 and he was 22. So 22 years. We have 3 kids. I got sick a few years ago, and my husband didn't hesitate to make sure I could stay home and focus on getting better going through cancer treatments and spending time with my kids. I'm so blessed. I am sad for these woman, I pray that they find their family. The strength is in that partnership and commitment that creates FAMILY. FAMILY OVER EVERYTHING. ❤❤❤ MUCH LOVE BRETT AND BLESSING AND PRAYERS FOR YOUR MARRIAGE AND FUTURE FAMILY. ❤❤❤
@Julia36D10 ай бұрын
I’m really happy you beat cancer ❤. Hope you stay healthy and happy for many, many more years. Please don’t feel sad for anyone else. Would you like it if I said I feel sad for you because you stay at home? I work because I don’t want to stay at home, but family is my priority and they come above all else. This naturally means I have less time for girlfriends and book clubs and other things that just take a back seat, which is fine by me. By the way I am not a feminist nor do I think women need to choose between the two, you can do both. This entire debate is ridiculous. Stop judging people for their choices or providing faux pity. I sincerely hope anyone who has an issue with women working never goes to a female doctor as that would just make you a hypocrite.
@Lightflames8510 ай бұрын
Never pitty the stupid they did not deserve any better and we all know we will get our time in the sun if you waist it then that is on you.
@elenasullivan452211 ай бұрын
I'm in college. I've been depressed for years, my worst days are those that I don't spend with my friends that I love. People are important, I can't imagine not being able to live with/around people I love. It's so hard to feel fulfilled when you do everything for yourself, living for others and especially helping raise kids is truly the most fulfilling act I have ever come across.
@Chestnut_da_cat11 ай бұрын
My heart goes out to this woman. I wish I could give her a hug and tell her hope is not lost. My mom had my brother at 39 and me at 41. They were both easy and seamless pregnancies and deliveries. My mom tells me that she loved being pregnant and caring for her babies. She would have had more kids if she was younger. I just want to say that being in the upper 30s does not mean your biological clock has run out yet.
@Erduk11 ай бұрын
Why? These women have caused the destruction of countless men using the family court and she's one of them. Now we're to pity her for being selfish? It wasn't a victimless crime. Feminism isn't victimless!
@nickd229611 ай бұрын
There is a higher risk for disabilities.
@southerngirl407611 ай бұрын
@@nickd2296 But even young moms can have babies with disabilities. There’s a girl on KZbin who had a baby with Down syndrome when she was only 16 years old.
@germanshepherddogs11 ай бұрын
@@Erduk Why are you blaming people for things others have done?
@germanshepherddogs11 ай бұрын
@@nickd2296 Same for older men. Older men can potentially have risks and issues with their sperm too.
@menopillion985310 ай бұрын
9:34: It's called consequences. And shame is a tool.
@Egrace9911 ай бұрын
I’m 24, almost 25 and have 2 babies and my husband and I both work full time. Our kids don’t have to be in daycare because we work for the same employer and they schedule us opposite each other, and let me tell you, it’s killing me inside. The full time is new to me, we’ve got some financial freedom goals we want to meet, and when we do I cannot wait to be home all the time with my babies and have more. I have NEVER condoned the feminist movement. Being a young mom is the best decision I’ve been in my entire life.
@Maddy.nichole11 ай бұрын
As a teenager im glad i saw this video. I feel like ive lost sight of what is important and i simply decided i never wanted to get married some day. This video is truly eye opening. Thank you :)
@ellencox841511 ай бұрын
Give every guy interested an opportunity, but date with a purpose. Date with the question in your mind of "Will this man be a good father? Did he have a good example growing up?". If you ever think, "No." Break up immediately. Do not waste a second with someone who you're not on the same page philosophy wise with money (you don't have to be at this same place financially, but your goals must align), life goals, and religion (if that is something that would be important to you). If you do this, you will waste far less time than these women realizing when they are 30 what they truly want. At 30, you're out of time. You've collected too much damage and you're asking too much of men to invest the time. People will tell you it's hard out here in the dating scene, but these are people who are dating without a purpose so prone to collect serious damage.
@xinpingdonohoe397811 ай бұрын
Society scorns young love, and tries to criminalise it. Of course go at your own pace, don't be pressured into doing things too quickly if you'd be uncomfortable, but it's important that you actually do "go", you know? Dating is an investment. Of the potential people, see which romantic interests would be the best for a family setting. You'll be fine, and your work will pay off in the end when you have a whole family who loves you.
@pll900011 ай бұрын
Big pharma profits from women by selling them birth control in their youth, then fertility treatments when they're older and (finally) want kids. Corporations profit from women joining the workforce in droves because it increases the demand for jobs, gives employers bargaining power, and increases the tax base. Academia profits from women by selling them junk degrees in "gender studies" and "critical race theory". Banks profit from women by giving them college loans (for junk degrees) which they'll be paying interest on over decades, negatively impacting their buying power. Don't get me started on social media. Algorithms have wrecked human interaction. Your generation is subject to propaganda on a scale never seen before.
@Jessibestie-tb9kw11 ай бұрын
I kinda disagree with you on your first sentence, as a teenage girl there are lots of weird predatory guys out there and I wouldn't give every guy a chance especially if you know he is kinda guy who dates to just get sex
@xinpingdonohoe397811 ай бұрын
@@Jessibestie-tb9kw there are predatory guys who go for all ages, and good guys too. Many men's first instinct is sex, and you tell the good ones from the bad by their attitude - good will be happy when you get pregnant, bad will leave. One could even argue that the men who go for older single women are more predatory. Those are the women who have less going for them. They aren't fertile, they generally can't perform familial actions and tasks such as cooking, a life of working has soured their outlooks, and they don't have a long future to improve these facts. They're desperate and lonely, and are less likely to get pregnant. Predatory men see that, and use them as consequence free sex dolls that will almost just roll over and accept it when they're discarded.
@talkntrash11 ай бұрын
20's: idgaf I'll do what I want. 30's: you shouldn't judge my past.
@johnherrick748611 ай бұрын
Our pasts will haunt us.
@Joe-hz1nw11 ай бұрын
By the time most of them learn it’s far too late.
@nicoleterry510511 ай бұрын
Redemption exists.
@Toastergod4411 ай бұрын
hello actions, welcome to consequences
@vicyclopsrho845011 ай бұрын
She didn't want you in her prime, don't save her in her decline. When girl bosses "wake up"; is exactly what "the wall" is referring to.
@stellaDLT11 ай бұрын
I am currently pregnant with my 4th, and I am also an RN. I only work 1 to 2 days a week. Thankful and blessed my husband takes the bulk of the bread winning, im completely okay with it. I love having my 2 shifts a week and being SAHM for the rest of week. Both sides, work and home make me appreciate the other when im gone. I dont feel over worked and when I work, I mkss being home and being a wife and mom.
@stephanievizzi914711 ай бұрын
I worked before getting married and the first year and half of my marriage. I was so depressed. My values weren’t being lived out. I got pregnant with our first baby and my husband saw how unhappy i was. He said “do you wanna stop working?” I nodded. He said “then stop working. We’ll figure it out.” That was 11 years ago and I’ve been able to dedicate myself to raising our kids, taking care of my family and home was always my ultimate dream ❤ I’m so fulfilled
@denisejones186311 ай бұрын
I was a stay at home mother in 1987. I maintained the home, yard, shopped and cooked and did the bills. I took my two girls to school everyday, helped in the classroom and was a girl scout leader. I was told my my husband of 15 years that all I wanted was a meal ticket and he left me for his 23 year old pregnant girlfriend. He threw his family away and destroyed me and his children for his selfish needs. I can only hope stay at home moms will be valued in the future.
@Lawrence_Talbot11 ай бұрын
The problem is that you can say these women are “waking up”, but they seem like the type that if they did settle down, get married, and had kids; they’d get bored a few years in or realize being a mother “isn’t for them” so then you either end up with a resentful parent or just a divorce.
@champ16ns1211 ай бұрын
You call that "cooked"
@balitangkamatis11 ай бұрын
no savin these broads, bruv.
@Ragemonster6942011 ай бұрын
Either that or they just start cheating
@EpoRose111 ай бұрын
@PIayboiCratihow is that a win for “girls?”
@thatexcalifornian612411 ай бұрын
That’s exactly what would happen
@lucasfabisiak958610 ай бұрын
It's unfortunate that by the time most of these women "wake up", it's already too late. They've squandered their best years and won't be able to attract the quality of man they feel entitled to. So, when they eventually settle for someone they consider below their standards, they will become bitter and contemptuous and likely end up cheating or separating or getting divorced.
@tjhooker8243 ай бұрын
Yup
@tsapenkopolina11 ай бұрын
God bless this girl. I got married at 22 and had my first child at 24. 38 now. Still married to the same man. Two kids. I must admit, at times I felt like a loser comparing myself to all the girl bosses around me… not anymore. My daughters are the biggest blessing of my life! And I plan to build a career once the little one goes to school once she is 4 year old.
@tyronevonchadley11 ай бұрын
Great job
@mimihs42011 ай бұрын
Same here, I married and had my three children at my twenties I enjoyed looking after my babies 🤍now that they grown up and cannot have other babies due to infertility (thank God I had them before ) I can definitely focus on my career
@Jessica_Lash11 ай бұрын
This video is so important. Thank you for sharing all of this with the world, Brett! I am 32 and I have a 1 year old son and am pregnant with my second and family is everything to me. But SO many of my friends (most!) are exactly like these “girl bosses” and I really fear they will get to a point of regret later in life about not having kids when they could. 💔
@luvvsickangel11 ай бұрын
I'm 15, turning 16 this year and I couldn't be happier that I absolutely do NOT have this mindset, I honestly wanted to be a stay at home wife when I get married in the future, I want a family, I want to be **happy**. I'm glad that a lot of these women are finally realizing the mistakes they made and are finally owning up to them, praying for the future generations, it could potentially only get worse from here.
@JohnAnderson-ev3lp11 ай бұрын
There past the point of no return
@ArielGonzalez111 ай бұрын
You are on the right path. Most chicks are at a point of no return and, like the ones in these videos, are trying to run to the backups (but the men are not there anymore in a lot of cases)
@SharpBalisong11 ай бұрын
You're gonna go far, kid.
@goodygroo11 ай бұрын
i am 40, I have a great career, a great husband and children. Please don‘t listen to her..having your own career is crucial to happiness. All you need is a husband who is doing 50 percent of everything and you‘ll be fine.
@luvvsickangel11 ай бұрын
@@goodygroo True, true.. Of course I plan on having my own job, but y'know, being a stay at home wife would always be another option if my partner wanted that as well. I'd probably find ways to make my own money even still like selling things I don't need or whatever but yeah, I definitely plan on having a job otherwise.
@aguyinavan60874 ай бұрын
9:00 The reason there is such an orgy of schadenfreude is because we (men) have been screaming this from the rooftops, with women trashing us. Women have been rejecting good men in exchange for work and it has sucked. What women should be saying is, "I didn't listen, I screwed up my life, younger women, learn from my mistakes." That's it. Take responsibility and pass wisdom on to the younger generation, and enjoy the frustration that men have been feeling when they ignore you like you ignored us.
@tomt966611 ай бұрын
My wife and I's first marriages were not good. I had 2 sons, and she had a son and daughter. She worked during her first marriage and I'm more traditional, but when we met and fell in love, I was willing to consider a more modern marriage. She was 35 and I was 31 and she got pregnant (a miracle actually) we decided to have the child as my wife said at the time we were discussing options, that there was no way that she could get rid of something that came from us. Because she felt safe with me, she was willing to give up her independence and become dependent on me, but I earned those feelings from her by showing her that i wasn't going anywhere and I wanted to build a happy family. She took on the traditional role of stay at home mom and it was difficult at first because she had never done it. It took a while and she struggled hard, because raising a small child is very difficult and takes true dedication to do it well. When it came to making the choice, she could not leave our child and after that point she embraced it and loved every minute of it. She was free to make this decision because I am one of the good men and she felt safe with me, as she should. Being a good man isn't that big of a deal, but men seem to not want to do what is required. I love the responsibility. My career meant nothing more to me than being able to bring home the bacon. I worked 12 to 14 hours a day and when I got home, I was happy to spend time with our now two babies, two girls. If you want it to work, it's simple, very simple. Truly love one another. It is now 36 years later, and I live to make her happy as she lives to make me happy and we have been blissfully in love the entire time. Out of our 6 children all but one is traditional. All three daughters are or have been stay at home moms and are raising their children and anchoring their families with love and devotion. Love really is the answer. Do we need women? Not to live and exist, not really. Do women need men? Not really. Do we need each other to find a happiness that can never be found alone? Yes. Love is truly the only thing worth living for. I worked that hard for my family, why else would I work so hard. My wife gave her all to our family and when you have both partners working together to make their family work, it is truly glorious. Always remember that love is all that matters in life. We now have 22 grandchildren, and it won't be long that we will be having great grandchildren. Thank you for your show.
@ashtonnicholas50678 ай бұрын
This is an absolutely amazing story 🥹❤️ so inspiring
@followsthestars11 ай бұрын
I’m a 40 year old female and I felt this so hard. I spent almost two decades in NYC chasing after a marketing career in Corporate America that will just spit you out as soon as they decide they’re done with you. I never wanted kids, but I always wanted love, and a husband. And now that I’m at 40, I’m craving my own family. I’m sick of focusing on everything/everyone else and working a million hours, to the detriment of my own health. I felt everything Brett said in this video so strongly. My priorities have shifted and I just want a different life. 🙁
@AK-American11 ай бұрын
@@JohnAnderson-ev3lp he cold 😂😂😂
@katiestevenson892011 ай бұрын
It’s not too late to make another life. I will pray for you. Don’t listen to bitterness and anger. God will guide you through. ❤
@mtngrl585911 ай бұрын
@@AK-American He's all by himself, beating his meat to photos of women he'll never meet or is on Only Fans.
@brazzledazzle-o9w11 ай бұрын
@@JohnAnderson-ev3lpshit man who hurt you?
@athinam.459311 ай бұрын
@@JohnAnderson-ev3lp Lol, I hope she'll be miserable all her life.
@MalignDreams11 ай бұрын
I feel the loss too because it still happened to me and I wasn't even like them. I never wanted to be a boss girl, I've always wanted to get married and have a family. I've been trying to get married since I was 17! My mom is VERY much a third wave feminist. She'd literally scream at me about how worthless I am because I wanted to be a stay at home mom. So even though I wanted that life I kept dating men like her, who abused me. But in 2018 I got into therapy and healed myself and by 2023 I'm engaged! We're getting married in 5 months!
@shauhame636411 ай бұрын
Congrats! :D
@athomewiththemrs941011 ай бұрын
Congratulations!!!! So happy for you!!!🥰
@RealElenaDiaz11 ай бұрын
Congrats! Your mom Sounds like my mom. I had to keep mine a bit far from us, she almost destroyed my marriage.
@MalignDreams11 ай бұрын
@@shauhame6364 Aww, thank you so much! Goal is married in a few months, first baby in two years, second shortly after. I'd be happy with two but I think I want three. 🥰
@MalignDreams11 ай бұрын
@@athomewiththemrs9410 Aww! You really are so sweet, I was not expecting this kind of comment when I made my comment. I just hope other girls who have parents like mine and weren't necessarily victim to that kind of culture but still struggle to get married can have hope. I appreciate you so much! It's been a long, hard, road. But I did it and I've never beem happier.
@steffenjensen42210 ай бұрын
My mother kept working when she had me (partly because she had to, my parents didn't habe enough money) but she never prioritized her career over her family. You don't have to choose, you can find a compromise. She both has a healthy kid and a good marriage and is fulfilled in her career.
@annmcsnelly11 ай бұрын
Love this. As a child and teenager, I always knew I wanted to be a mom one day. When I entered the university after high school, I had my 1-2 year phase of "no I don't want kids the world is too messed up for kids and the planet cannot sustain more kids and blah blah blah." But in that same time I was falling in love with my now husband (just married last summer), and I soon realized that this was the real deal and that he would be my forever person. For the past few years we have been doing our independent/careerist/education thing (him building an online teaching platform and me going back to school for a master's) and doing some travel, but all under the assumption that we will start our family in the next few years. Now almost everyday we talk about how excited we are to have kids one day while still doing our own thing right now. Society acts as if that's not possible and is oppressive?? It's frustrating being an ambitious and educated young woman (24) who cares about social change who also wants to be a mom one day relatively soon because none of my peers or friends care or talk about wanting kids anytime soon (or at all). Even my family, who I love dearly and who is so supportive, always makes these comments about how I shouldn't have kids for a loooong time and I get the vibe that they'd be disappointed in me if I became pregnant at 26 or 27. It's a weird pressure coming from them, but my husband and I know what we want and are so happy about it.
@meagandbrothers11 ай бұрын
Are we the same person? I feel the EXACT same pressure from my family. My husband and I got married when I was 21 (25 now) and we want a family. We have chosen to wait a bit longer until I'm further in my masters program, but the amount of people that have told me not to get pregnant until years from now is appalling. Thankfully, my husband and I have shut those people out. I'm glad you and your husband are happy planning towards your family!
@kimwestra296111 ай бұрын
Oh Sweet Young Ladies, have those babies!!!! Families are the most precious blessing a young couple will ever experience. Once your first baby arrives, you’ll wonder where have you been my whole life!!! You’ll be the best mom ever because you’ll absolutely LOVE your baby.
@kemsari996911 ай бұрын
I believe that people in general should not be so focused about what other people want them to do/think/say. Because its most of the time not what they really want and they will regret it. If you want to have kids, do it. Dont listen to people that say "but you have to have a career", when you dont want to it. Dont listen to people that say "but as a woman you have to have children to be happy", when you dont want to. I never did something that i did not want to, just because someone else said "but thats what you are supposed to do". I never wanted children ever (i had a relationship for 20 years and after that time he broke up with me because of another woman) and now i am 43 and very happy living on my own. I got a new job, bought my own house and i love my alone time. I am sooo glad that i never got a child because other people say that as a woman you should want to have one.
@LazyDaisy1110 ай бұрын
This is exactly what I was going to write before I read your comment. :) A part of feminism is the freedom to choose how you want your life to be. There is nothing un-feminist about being a homemaker, neither as it is to choose a career over kids. As long as we are not surrendering to any trend-pressure, rather choosing what we truly want - I think we have cracked the code! 😊
@crimson15049 ай бұрын
Yup - the point of feminism is that you have the choice. My carreer fulfills me. I know this is what I'm meant to do. My mom quit her job to raise my siblings and I, and she made it known that she resented that choice. My man admires that my first love is work so I'm lucky I'm supported in following my own desires. It truly depends on the person. Maybe I will change in the future. That's the beauty of like - I get a choice.
@lihuang60057 ай бұрын
You are right! We should focus one what we think not what the social media and society think 😅
@LillieWilliam7 ай бұрын
Exactly you know yourself better than anyone don’t let anyone pressure you.glad you’re happy
@raeannaroylance540111 ай бұрын
My mom saw the big picture way back during ERA and taught me that a woman’s place is in the home. I was “left behind” by all of the Boss Babes who now look at me with envy *because* I have a 30-year marriage to a doctor with 7 beautiful children.
@katherinerodz11 ай бұрын
I turn 30 this year and I was driven to be a “girl boss” over 10 years ago. I enlisted in the Marines at 17, it didn’t work out. I enlisted in the Army at 19 and served for 5 years and it was my excuse to get away from a toxic broken home and to also break generational curses. I also was the first female ever in both my mom and dad side to enlist. I seen when my parents were divorced when I was 14 and my mom was left with nothing but a house and the kids and working a minimum wage job, I decided I didn’t want to be like my parents. I worked 3/4 jobs at a time even when I was pregnant and had HG then had preeclampsia. My son is almost 8 and I raise him alone with no help/support. If I have another baby, I want to be married, I before never wanted marriage and kids because of how I was brought up.
@caffeinatedinsanity232410 ай бұрын
I gotta give you respect for enlisting in the Marines and the Army. Sucks you had to go through a lot of family shenanigans. I don't want to spew spiel but there is always a chance that things will tip in your favor. I wouldn't call going in the military "girlbossism", in your case it seemed more like escapism.
@katherinerodz10 ай бұрын
@@caffeinatedinsanity2324 I agree with the escapism in regards to the military. But Girlboss ism was just me being independent, and not allowing a man to do anything for me not even the man I had a child with.
@Druidlord9110 ай бұрын
In Canada houses are over a million dollars for a small old one, and full time workers can't afford one, so to be left with 'nothing but a house' is like being left with 'nothing but the lottery'.
@katherinerodz10 ай бұрын
@@Druidlord91 that’s not how it is in the states. My mom still had to pay the mortgage and taxes on the house along with the children she had. Just because you’re enough at the house doesn’t mean it you have security. It got to the point where my mother couldn’t afford the house anymore on her own so she had to give up her house.
@Druidlord9110 ай бұрын
@katherinerodz that's still good though. J would get tenants to pitch in on the rent because a house is worth a lot but I guess it's cheaper I n the US I saw house prices to compare and it's insanely different.
@MimosaRose11 ай бұрын
Married at 24, we adopted our daughter at 33, quit my job at 35 while pregnant with my daughter. Now at forty have two more biological babies. My children, my husband, my family and faith are my life. As hard as it was to reject feminism at the time, I am so glad I did. These are the most important things!
@zman956411 ай бұрын
My wife was 38 when we met, we have two children and now one grandchild. It can be done, focus on what is truly important to YOU!
@wordsofwinter11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the hope! ❤ I'm 36 and finally able to start trying for a baby, and I've been anxious about pushing my luck
@2015BLOXXER11 ай бұрын
@@wordsofwinter My mom had me at 34 and my sister at 36 you should be good. And my mom had no issues during her pregnancy 👍
@basmafayez132411 ай бұрын
Exactly, it’s either hyper feminist approach or over correcting it! Each direction has its pros and cons and only you -man or woman- will know what best works for you
@DTreatz11 ай бұрын
Just because it _can_ be done, doesn't mean it should. Yall could have easily had impaired children because of her age mate. Count yourself _lucky_
@DTreatz11 ай бұрын
@@wordsofwinterchasing chad for 18 years....tf is wrong with yall today 🤣
@athomewiththemrs941011 ай бұрын
Got married at 21. Got pregnant right away but ended up miscarrying. Struggled to get pregnant after that. Ended up adopting our son 3 years ago. We’ve had a few hard times (who doesn’t) but I am 1000% happier now then when I was single. I get to stay at home with my son, take care of him and my husband. Who could ask for more??
@InformedFinancials10 ай бұрын
The Title was "I'm 38 and single, and I recently realized I want a child." That's NOT the voice of a woman who wants to be a wife. That's a woman who just wants a child. Careful Gents and pay close attention.
@jungleno.6 ай бұрын
Women have their own agenda...and men are the means to that agenda.
@JNChannel955 ай бұрын
In the full text she does admit to have been selfish
@pamelaburleson206311 ай бұрын
Absolutely LOVE this video and commentary. I feel so bad for the women who bought the Girl Boss lie at the expense of a family. If you can't birth your own kiddos, divorce rates are crazy high. There's a lot of single dads out there, be an amazing step-mom! Adopt! Foster! There are tons of kids who need decent adults in their lives.
@AK-American11 ай бұрын
No 90% of child custody goes to the 304 mom, how about you marry the average joe 😂😂😂😂😂
@pamelaburleson206311 ай бұрын
This video is about women who probably aren't going to have their own children because they waited too long. I don't understand your comment. @@AK-American
@motherofhellaphants11 ай бұрын
I am a stay at home mom, in my 30s. I have a college degree, but my husband (also in his 30s) and I have 4 children (ages 4 months, 4, 10 & 13) & I am most valuable to our family at home. Most families on one income struggle (we struggle yall) but we will NEVER get this time back with our kids & it's worth everything to us & them. I can only speak for myself & my family. Be child-less, single forever & all independent, everything.. if that's what YOU REALLY want. Don't let social media talk you into or out of anything. Make your own decisions for yourself.
@jhunsuc123911 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. I am at this very place at 36 years old, and I think this is more important than anything to show to this newest generation. My mother had 2 girls in her 20s, and went back to college in her early 50s and became an RN. I, on the other hand, went to college, got a Bachelor's degree in English, was not able to get a job with that degree, put off getting married and having kids, and now am at the poverty line about to start a second job, single, and about to run out of time to have children. You can always go back for that degree or career. Once you pass that fertility window in your life, you cannot go back and have children. Please young women, if you do want a family and children, put this first now. You can have the career and degree at any time. Start your family now.
@mysticstrikeforce595711 ай бұрын
Yep it shows a life is not a one way ticket you only get one chance. As you can replace a broken car or buy another one but you can't buy another human or replace them. Wants a life form is gone that's it.
@ladidaohoh316811 ай бұрын
If you don’t mind answering I have a question for you, I’m a women older than you, but I sometimes consume “ Red pill” content, and since you have Brett’s video’s on your content list, I’m curious if you ever watch that content?
@Animatthias10 ай бұрын
Women are NOT taking responsibility for their choices, Brett. That's the thing! They are just not doing that.
@SamanthaDavidson-jb4ck11 ай бұрын
As a girl I wanted to focus on my carreer and school before getting married. I'm now a 23 year old college senior doing online school and stay at home mom of a 5 month old, living on my husband's income. I am so thankful for the course my life has taken. I truly love every minute of it.
@edenelston766811 ай бұрын
I'm applauding you. Hang in there. It's tough, but you can totally do it. Motherhood is one of the most beautiful and challenging and rewarding things in the world. ❤
@johnnyminafo209711 ай бұрын
Good man
@johnnyminafo209711 ай бұрын
Good man
@johnnyminafo209711 ай бұрын
Good man
@johnnyminafo209711 ай бұрын
Good man
@ida44411 ай бұрын
The right partner strengthens you as an individual while simultaneously supporting the relationship. I'm so glad Brett said this because it's 100% true. I feel more comfortable and focused on what I love with my husband because he pushes me to be better, fulfill my goals, and provides protection while doing so. I wish for more women to have this same experience.
@kennyyuen160011 ай бұрын
I've worked in a hospice for 8 years and thoae that are happiest at the end are surrounded by a Loving family that they have a good relationship with.
@wandertree11 ай бұрын
There will be a lot of aged, lonely women (and men) in the coming decades - dying alone.
@JB-mg5lw11 ай бұрын
@@wandertree Yes but the difference is there has always been a lot of men dyng alone, this is a very new dynamic for women. It is very hard, men have been dealing with it for age eternal, women are far less prepared for such loneliness, imo they are built needing such relationships much more than the average man.
@athinam.459311 ай бұрын
@@JB-mg5lw Most single men thrive though while single women are sad and remorseful.
@queendesi635211 ай бұрын
I’m 21 and it scares me that I might not have kids till later. Everyone thinks I’m crazy for wanting kids now and wanting at least 5
@stajia46949 ай бұрын
It’s crazy 21 used to be a totally normal time to have kids. I’m 21 with one baby and we plan on 8 lol people do think im crazy although that used to be the norm
@queendesi63529 ай бұрын
@@stajia4694 Exactly everyone I speak to about it thinks it’s unrealistic or that it’s not possible especially since I want to be a stay at home mom and homeschool my kids, but my mom was a stay at home mom and her and my stepdad have 6. But congrats on the little one! And good luck with your future babies!
@Creativebettyart1806 ай бұрын
I'm almost 29 and still don't have kids. I was never thinking about it, but now that I'm getting closer to 30 I keep wondering about it and I feel lost.
@djaeger-k5m4 ай бұрын
LOL I'm a man and women run from me when I say I want atleast 4 kids
@ephraimwinslow11 ай бұрын
One simple question always deflates the whole deal: "Boss of what?" Actual answer 90% of the time? A lot of debt + buyer's remorse. (And either a dog or a cat or a bird or a reptile or an invertebrate -- listed in descending order of likelihood.)
@balitangkamatis11 ай бұрын
they do be sayin, "we girl bosses of patriarchy", i dunno. these broads makes fool of themselves.
@hmac77711 ай бұрын
Totally. I’m happy for cats and dogs though that they got their best lives out of this though lol
@MikeTheD11 ай бұрын
It's just being a boss of their life, which rings hollow for men who will literally be living on the streets if they don't do that. Yeah you take care of yourself, so what? So many narratives around feminism really do have a childish feel, just like the beginnings of feminism had, and smart women felt that was very patronizing. I think it was. Things were on the upswing, but then like everything else, our culture totally regressed and now we freely pander and condescend. We almost have to now, it's demanded as such. It's so pathetic that I can never actually do it, because I sincerely expect them to be offended by such things. Safe to say most won't be offended these days, like I said they expect it, but it's just wrong. They're actually screwing up their goal of real equality when it's possible, I'm the one holding the line.
@JohnAnderson-ev3lp11 ай бұрын
Silicone 😂
@ephraimwinslow11 ай бұрын
@@MikeTheD "They're actually screwing up their goal of real equality when it's possible, I'm the one holding the line." Or that was never their real goal, it's not actually possible, and you're chasing a pipe dream. One borne of a grift. (Food for thought.)
@lisapop521911 ай бұрын
I lost my woman card in the 90s because we had our first child and I wanted to stay at home with her. I didn't expect that at all. When we got married, I was so sure that I didn't want children, until I did. I was so sure that I could deposit the baby at daycare, until I had to do it day after day. My poor husband was amazing throughout all of this. He told me that I would change my mind when we got married and didn't press me on it. He was 100% right and thankfully we are still married and our kids are grown. But the crap I dealt with from other women was ridiculous. I was in mom's forums back in the 90s and 2000s, they were in their girl boss eras but at least they were having kids. I got it from irl women and some men!
@Joe-hz1nw11 ай бұрын
It’s disgusting men have to deal with women being so sure of what almost always is complete and utter nonsense. Politics /values being top of this list. You’re damn lucky your husband tolerated all your childish girl boss nonsense.
@JohnAnderson-ev3lp11 ай бұрын
The women card is being a traditional wife, not the boss-B. Card😂
@lisapop521911 ай бұрын
@@JohnAnderson-ev3lp I said that because I was legit told that I was dragging women back blah blah blah.
@TheKnellBelle11 ай бұрын
I agree. I spent a long time in school getting a BSN and RN license and put off having kids. One of the directors of the program flat out told us "don't get pregnant" because they wouldn't work with us if we needed to missed anything. A few years later, I was hired by a surgical dept. and asked if I had kids. I said no and the nurse I was talking to said, "Yeah. (So-and-so) likes her nurses unattached." She was referring to the director of surgical services. When I was finally pregnant with my first, I told director and she said, "Yeah. I thought you were going to do that." I've never had that kind of treatment from male bosses.
@johnserosanguineous188611 ай бұрын
Why do women get so defensive about things that are plainly obvious? Reminds me of this exchange between Gavin McInnes, and some dem lady on Hannity years back. "How DARE you suggest I want to be a stay at home wife and mother! I love my job!" Guess who got married and disappeared from politics?
@bettyswain510011 ай бұрын
I chose marriage and kids over a career. Now that my kids are teens, I am criticized because I don't want to go to work now. I am still raising my kids and I am happy with my decision.
@wendya125011 ай бұрын
Yes! I was asked "when are you going to go to work and help your husband?" My being at home and managing things, including a large garden, has allowed my husband to advance in his career. Like you, we are happy with our decision.
@theskipper3410 ай бұрын
Just got this in my recommended and damn am I happy to see it. As a 30 year old unmarried male, the dating scene SUCKS and has been infected with this attitude. Hoping this changes the tides. Ex girl bosses, we men want families and have been effected by your choices too!
@chadlumpkin237511 ай бұрын
I have a gym instructor friend who I've worked out with for the last 10 years. She was in her forties and regularly commented about how glad she had never gotten married or had kids. At 45 she found out she was pregnant. She was terrified and the father initially stepped out of the picture as he was also terrified. Eventually he came back and they got married. She just turned 50 and can't imagine a life without her daughter and husband.
@jessicaangeline11 ай бұрын
Wow, good for them!
@mtngrl585911 ай бұрын
One of the interesting things I've noticed when women in their mid-40's get pregnant, they usually deliver the babies without event. It's like nature's final hurrah before the system shuts down. True Crime host Nancy Grace got pregnant & delivered twins at 48. She had dated her BF for years but they got married soon after finding she was pregnant.
@schnitzel71111 ай бұрын
I’ve never been on the “girl boss” wave BUT I’ve spent my twenties in school, becoming a doctor because it is a safe job and in my country both parents have to earn to support a family. I got married at 29 when I came to the States following my husband and now at 31 we’re having our first baby. If there’s one thing I regret is not getting married earlier and have kids earlier. My parents got married early in life and BUILT their life together from an empty apartment with a single mattress on the floor and they did so well with us! I admire them so much.
@rachelelaine709411 ай бұрын
If you didn't marry at 29 you probably would not be with the man who is your husband now. I say don't regret anything. God put the man you married into your life at the exact time you needed it and the exact time he wanted it to happen. Sometimes that means you don't get married until your 30s even through you deeply desire it.
@schnitzel71111 ай бұрын
@@rachelelaine7094 you’re absolutely right. I couldn’t help but wonder.. But as I look back I know the decisions I made only guided me towards where I am today and I’m very thankful. Having a family is the best thing in this world and I wish every girl would get rid of the pressure the society is putting on them of having a career and not “burden themselves with kids” and appreciate their most important role: being a homemaker and a mother.
@schnitzel71111 ай бұрын
@justinwentzel5166 my parents don’t wanna go back to that either haha. I’m just saying that I admire their sacrifice and courage. And they often talk about how resilient they were and they’re proud of how much they fought and succeeded.
@katieinhops516311 ай бұрын
My husband and I moved to another state in 2020 (height of covid) and i had applied to so many positions. The question that always knocked me out of the running was "what does your husband do that you're moving here?" He's an ER doctor. I was told time and again I was "unhirable". I refused to work from home because I didn't want that lifestyle. I loved being a homemaker and now I love being a stay-at-home mom. I get to watch my little grow and explore the world. Its hard at times, but I'd take this kind of hard any day over the hard of corporate climbing. I feel complete and fulfilled in my role.
@777Looper10 ай бұрын
No idea what you were saying in the first half.
@katieinhops516310 ай бұрын
@@777Looper did you read it? Brett was saying how women are waking up to the lies of feminism. Some of us were forced to open our eyes as we became homemakers due to the pandemic and spouse's occupation.
@777Looper10 ай бұрын
@@katieinhops5163 Sure. Can't imagine why your husband being an ER doctor would knock you out of the running, or even why "what does your husband do that you're moving here" is even an interview question.
@katieinhops516310 ай бұрын
@@777Looper my resume still had my VA address because we didn't have an in-state address, yet. So naturally their question was why are you applying here? My husband is starting a job here. Follow up: what does he do? He's a doctor. Follow up: what kind of doctor? ER. That's when most of them straight up told me thanks for applying but no. I'd have to miss too much work due to being exposed to COVID on a daily basis (thankfully neither of us ever got COVID).
@777Looper10 ай бұрын
@@katieinhops5163 Oh, right.
@normaespinosalopez66998 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@rosiebluekite840111 ай бұрын
I have a career, but I know when I get married my family is going to be my main priority and a way greater source of happiness, so sad how so many young girls were lied to😔
@calebhicks444111 ай бұрын
You know not everyone wants to get married or really is meant to nor is going to get the same level of meaning and happiness in their life from it
@hhd30711 ай бұрын
you can have a career and a family. I hope you get married soon girl
@harrylongabaugh740211 ай бұрын
@@calebhicks4441 That's a lie.
@harrylongabaugh740211 ай бұрын
@@hhd307no you can't.
@rosiebluekite840111 ай бұрын
@@calebhicks4441I know marriage is not for everyone, that’s why I said it’ll be a greater source of happiness for myself, because everyone’s life looks different❤️
@ashleybond877011 ай бұрын
Glad I realized (with the help of my wonderful husband) that I wanted a child at 28 instead of putting it off because I thought I didn’t want one. I’m glad I have my beautiful daughter and I’m able to be a homemaker and take care of her and my husband. No career path ever felt fulfilling, but being a mom and a wife makes my heart the happiest it’s ever been.
@wildspirits868311 ай бұрын
Had my first baby at 33. My last at 38. Yes you still have time my mom had her last at 43 . He is why i wait . We lost our mom so I stepped in and took care of him . What a blessing. Is without him I wouldn't have the children I have today cuz we ended up in a new state new places new friends. So you still have time ladies don't give up. You're just getting everything straight right now sometimes we just have to make choices and decisions for ourselves and for others around us
@FreedomWriter-r1o11 ай бұрын
Yes! I know a mom who had 2 kids in her early twenties and then had 4 more in her late thirties/early forties. You don't have to look far back in history to where this was the norm.
@kaleyjoplinRAWRR11 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@marderprod8 ай бұрын
I'm not sure how it's the men's job to encourage, welcome or support women who make bad choices. It's the bed you made, lie in it.
@k3th.b.w1225 ай бұрын
Men don’t get this either by the way to. If u can’t make money or find a job it’s still your fault.
@mwhite129811 ай бұрын
To sum it up, staying at home and looking after your kids is far more feminine than trying to do everything by yourself. Also, on an unrelated note, Brett's segways into talking about sponsors are always so smooth and unexpected.
@alexia355211 ай бұрын
To go further than that, why do we have to be feminine? Why do we have to be masculine? Why do we have to "be" anything and fit an image or mold to be acceptable or "do life right"? If you're happy, you're happy. You're the one living your life, you're the only one experiencing it every day.
@JB-tz8fu11 ай бұрын
Barely an Inconvenience 😂
@crystalnichols722411 ай бұрын
My husband and I laugh so hard every time she catches us off-guard.😂
@sandrahedlund421411 ай бұрын
Of course that plan requires a spouse that brings in enough to support the household alone.
@napoleon199211 ай бұрын
That segway was as smooth as silk. Great technique
@UnderratedBurnyBadger11 ай бұрын
I'm thankful I realized how little I wanted a career after I spent 4 years in college. I walked away and I don't regret anything besides going to college in the first place. Which was something I was pressured into by my parents and wider society. I have a beautiful daughter who is getting homeschooled so she won't face the same pressures and indoctrination I had to go through. People call me crazy and tell me I can't do it, but I will. No matter how hard it is. She's gonna be better than me.
@gloriajean802411 ай бұрын
Right now it’s important for our society to find balance, because neither the 1950s housewife or girl boss lifestyles worked out for most women. Also, that shade of green is so pretty and flattering on Brett.
@SeaRaven22711 ай бұрын
Strangely enough, if you look at the real history and not the one peddled by feminists, most women at the time (near 70%) didn't want the vote and thought leaving the home for work was a bad idea. It was forced on the population because the government wanted more taxes and corporations getting to stagnate wages by doubling the manpower. The housewife lifestyle worked fine, being bored is normal when technology makes everything too easy, women just need to learn to do as men do and get a friggin hobby.
@ephraimwinslow11 ай бұрын
Funny you should mention the color green. Trad women aren't happy. Boss babes aren't happy. And when part-time boss babes aren't happy? I'm sure y'all will find a new shade of green on the other side of yet another fence that you figure will be the ultimate winner.
@derpymcderp596611 ай бұрын
1850's housewife 4 lyfe
@peachimugi11 ай бұрын
@@SeaRaven227 When trad housewives weren't managing their household, they worked for their community. Planning social events, watching each other's children, cooking for each other, etc. Everyone is lonely and miserable now, it almost seems like atomization was a net negative.
@rebekahmontesdeoca56511 ай бұрын
I think most women are happiest when they are prioritizing their family and home and have a part time job that is meaningful to them, even if it makes little money.
@alexandraelhardt97678 ай бұрын
I graduated with my Master's at 22, worked another year or two in my chosen field, and got married at had a baby at 24. A few more wonderful babies later, my husband and I have several businesses together, a farm, hopes. I am so much happier than when I was careering! Sometimes I feel pathetic for not having a career anymore, only doing things that fit around my kids. But the kids i meet that arent being raised....break my heart and make me realize every moment of effort is worth it. They only get one start in life.
@Doplayors11 ай бұрын
After getting married at 22 and having my son at 23, I have been having this incredible urge to shout from the rooftops to all women to get married young and have all the babies! I am so grateful. The love in my home is so tangible & I wish the culture didn’t send the opposite message to young women. There’s absolutely no reason to wait! My son was a surprise, but I’m so glad things didn’t happen in my timing. I hope this shift continues in young girls today ❤
@silentassasin-q8l11 ай бұрын
Strongly disagree with the no reason to wait, there are absolutely reasons to wait at least a little bit, the last thing you want is to end up with the wrong person
@Doplayors11 ай бұрын
@@silentassasin-q8l I agree that there can be a few reasons to wait. The main one being maturity level. However, my husband & I along with all of my close friends all married our first boyfriends. Why? Because we dated with the intention of marriage. Other friends, as soon as they knew they didn’t want to marry their partner, would end things. When my husband and I were getting married we kept being told to wait because of money or to wait to get into our careers. When we got pregnant we were told the same thing. We couldn’t have kids because of money. Thankfully, we serve a God who always provides. We also trust Him to guide our every decision. We’ve never been in lack, therefore, all the people telling us to wait were wrong. It’s not a coincidence why Christians are usually the ones to get married young. We’re on a very narrow path in life & when we find someone who’s on it too, we know.
@Doplayors10 ай бұрын
@@silentassasin-q8l Hello! I’m grateful for your comment because I realize that I didn’t consider this side. I agree that there are legitimate reasons to wait. My husband & I are Christian (even though our families aren’t) and we were always told that we couldn’t do x, y, and x because of money. We know that the Word of God says that we have no need to worry because He’ll provide for our every need. This promise has held true! I also want to mention that myself and many of my Christian friends have all married their first boyfriends because we dated with the intention of marriage like in the old days. If we ever saw a quality that we didn’t want for our future family, we would call it off. The majority of the world doesn’t live this way which I think makes your point more valid. However, I stand by what I said in my original comment. It would only be the most ideal if people lived the way that God intends for them.
@border41111 ай бұрын
My wife, not only is a fantastic mother, is also someone with a Doctoral Degree in Physically Therapy, is extremely successful in the corporate world, and is such a giving person. I just retired from being a LEO of 20 years, and she always made more money than me. Guess what ladies.... You can be successful in the corporate world and as a wife and mother. I couldn't be more proud of her..... And couldn't be more lucky.
@melody96411 ай бұрын
It's no use telling these unachieved women who couldn't do shit in life, and now are blaming feminism for ruining their lives lmfao
@janjoyal601211 ай бұрын
When I went to college in the 70's the feminist wave was breaking over our heads; no one ever said "I want to be a home-maker, and raise my own kids rather than pay someone else to do so". But in my heart that was what I really wanted. I avoided getting a job that was "too good to quit", married a man who agreed, and ended up having nine children. I have never regreted my choice. P. S. Don't despair about age: I had four children in my 40's.
@Jermainesqueeze11 ай бұрын
Daycare is crazy high, too. My brother told me some years ago how much he paid for daycare, for one child, in a year in CA. 14k
@phoebegbesemete506411 ай бұрын
You’re an inspiration. I’m 40 and pregnant with my 3rd and sometimes I worry I’m too old to do this 😄
@loganblackwood292211 ай бұрын
I would not advise young women in an era pushing women to delay having kids if they want them. Health problems related to both women and child are far higher past 35 and that's assuming she can get pregnant, since fertility drastically drops off and having four children in your forties is an exception to the many women whose fertility has made it next to impossible to have children.
@danamania15011 ай бұрын
Thank you 🥲
@dragonmom466311 ай бұрын
@@loganblackwood2922Thissss!! Especially since most are being vaccinated with the COVID vaccine. My sister was perfectly fine, she got her vaccine and boosters for work, went to the doctor 6 months later and got told her egg count was extremely low at the age of 21. She has no genetic or non genetic conditions that would cause infertility, the only thing different was the vaccines.
@terseandtiny17463 ай бұрын
I often tell my clients that your 30's are the beginning of your contemplative years because their brain has finally fully developed. You're constantly thinking, reviewing, and realizing new things. Lucky for me, my daughter will be 18 when I'm 39 and I've at least had a kid via a not so great marriage. Being a stay at home, single mom, who was once just a stay at home mom when I was a student, was the best of my life with my kiddo.
@michaelfaber690411 ай бұрын
It doesn't help that these "girl bosses" were stepping on the good men that would have married them for 10 years. Those good men have good reason to be resentful.
@j.davila452311 ай бұрын
The metoo movement only affects actual good men and makes them risk averse, while the bad boys and dark triad people could care less about such things…
@tjhooker8243 ай бұрын
And cautious
@jareapeek11 ай бұрын
I’ve never commented on a KZbin video but this video is just too good! I grew up in a broken home and spent my high school years vowing never to get marriage! Fast forward to college when the Lord intervened and healed my heart through learning His design for marriage and sexuality. I am now 24, married to a man who wakes up early to pray and that I can trust 100000% and we have a beautiful daughter and a son on the way! I stay at home and he works his butt off to make ends meet! Making our marriage the first priority has made the journey to our dreams and financial security so much fun and I get to do it with my best friend! Don’t wait to get married, nothing is more important than the relationship between a man and a woman in society bc that is what builds the next generation! Fancy cars and steakhouses won’t be going to eternity with you, your spouse and children are the only things meeting you there! God bless!
@chrisvarner11911 ай бұрын
It took my wife and I seven years to have a baby. During that time we continued our education, developed our careers and came to realization that everything else is completely meaningless if we didn't have somone to pass it on to.
@rynm537310 ай бұрын
So glad god led me to my husband and I’m currently pregnant w my first child at 21. I feel like I got a head start on life in the best way possible and that’s even after I went to college and got a dual license in cosmetology in IL and OH. I have the license and worked my career job and now I’m at staying a family and we’re gonna have a big family and I couldn’t be happier about it all 🥰🥰🥰 it’s so worth it
@zoeya_wert11 ай бұрын
I'm so glad I never fell for the whole "Girl boss" thing. And my friends are saying I should, but I just... want to he happy? And my idea of happiness happens to be more trad.I have a job I love but I'm more than happy to start a family soon, just waiting for the right time (hopefully soon)
@shesloud104711 ай бұрын
It’s really sad to see, i turn 30 in August and I am married with 3 beautiful children, my youngest is starting school next fall and im going back to work then and im only doing that to support our kiddos extra curricular activities . At first i wondered if i was doing it right, and after seeing these women I know I made the right decision
@Itslauraokay11 ай бұрын
I have been shamed by my family for saying I’d want to be a stay at home mom even by my mom who IS a stay at home mom. I’ve been told by my dad to “not sell myself short” my aunt at thanksgiving was condescendingly like “yOU wAnT to DEpEnD oN a mAN” ???? Like yes that’s exactly what I want 😂 I want to focus on having kids and raising them and baking brownies and cupcakes for school bake sales and decorating and going to games and dance classes to support my children. I get in this economy I need to have the means and the funds to support my life but if that could be done with just one income I shouldn’t be shamed for wanting to focus on taking care of myself and my family and home.
@wandertree11 ай бұрын
You will be such a blessing and joy to your future husband and kids someday. These are wonderful things to pursue.
@Itslauraokay11 ай бұрын
@@wandertree thanks you that means a lot 🥹
@megankissinger826911 ай бұрын
I think the reason so many encourage working is due to "what ifs?" Like what if your spouse becomes abusive, or dies, or loses their good paying job?
@kingkohli495211 ай бұрын
@@megankissinger8269why don’t these people also tell ” what if’s” for men? Before marrying or marrying a promi$cious women, or stay at home wife? Considering family courts are rigged against men and women initiate 8/10 of the divorce cases so there’s no ”advice “ for men instead men are shamed and name called into getting married or date promi$cious women. It’s scary how selfcentred and di$gustingly selfish female nature is
@katiestevenson892011 ай бұрын
It can be done, even on varying degrees of income level! Budgeting, saving, being thrifty and sacrificing material things for your family life is well worth the effort!!
@lainelee363210 ай бұрын
When I was 16 I knew I wanted to have a family, I envisioned myself at age 40 having 14yo and 12yo, worked it backwards and realised in order to achieve that I'll have to be married by age 24, to have the chance to have my first child at 26. When I did talk to my mum's friends in those early years I asked them, is it better to live my life first, travel and work before having kids or have kids first? All of them unanimously said, have kids first, you'll never regret it. In fact they all wished they started earlier. I took their advice. Today, I'm 43, my sons are 17 and 15. I'm able to focus on my work because they're independent now, I'm happily travelling too, with them😊. Your body bounce back from pregnancy way easier in your 20s. You can focus on yourself all you want in your 40s when they've grown up. Please, if you're in your late teens and early 20s, please choose your life wisely and go with your heart's true desire. If you want a family, start early and not care about what others think. Money can be earned later. But the years to have and enjoy your children only come once and it's gone.