Large Family Logistics - Questions and a Poll

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When did your family start feeling large?

What changes did you have to make in your family life to accommodate more children?

What things did you sacrifice in order to be able to have more?

What funny/annoying/unexpected reactions from other people did you hear as you made that transition from an average-sized family to a large one?
 
I have 9.

At 4, I could ‘justify’ it as, lots of people have 4. At 5, I convinced myself it’s only one more than 4, which lots of people have. At 6, I had to admit to myself, I’m One of Those People with a BIG family. It was hard, given that my own mother had expressed dismay over me being pregnant with the 5th. (Even today, I hear she’s making cracks about me ‘with all those kids,’ in a less than complimentary way.)

I don’t really feel I’ve made any changes to accommodate. It’s just the way we’ve always lived. Always room for one more (or two, in the case of twins.)

I don’t feel I’ve sacrificed anything, but then again, that’s because this is just the way it’s always been. Yes, we could have had more peace and quiet, maybe a nicer house, maybe family vacations, but I simply don’t feel the loss.

I do think having so many children led to the event that was the catalyst in me refusing to go near my family anymore. I have wondered, if I’d had a normal family, just my son and daughter, would that day have gone the way it did. I’m absolutely sure it wouldn’t have. However… the fact remains, my father is an alcoholic, there have always been problems, there were problems when I was in high school, and problems bad enough when I had only two that we packed up and moved as far away as we could. He was still the same man when we came back. So while I might have struggled through, had I only had two children, it never would have been good, and chances are, something else would have been the catalyst instead.

I haven’t had that many negative comments. I’ve mostly had positive comments. But I did have one parent of a student tell me several times, rather firmly, there are ways to stop that, you know. Ditto for the wife of a colleague, an older woman who I had liked very well up until then, but who got right in my personal space, making sure I knew there were ways to stop that. The doctor who delivered my twins also made the comment, “You don’t have to keep getting pregnant, you know.”

I always find these comments, the suggestion that people not KNOW how to use birth control quite laughable. REALLY??? In this day and age, it’s virtually impossible to not know birth control exists, and it’s not really that hard to figure out how to use it. Not exactly rocket science.

And if their intention is to let me know I’m allowed to use birth control, despite what the pesky silly Catholic Church tells me…well, again, have they thought this through? Do they really think that in my 30s, with that many kids, I’ve been blindly following some silly, nonsensical teaching without any thought, but they’re going to say, “You don’t have to do that, you know,” and suddenly the blinders will fall away, (imagine the light shining, the angels singing LAAAAAA! :D) and thanks to them, I will suddenly see? 😉 Like it just never occurred to me before!!!

Mostly, though, I’ve had positive comments.
 
I voted 6 or more!!! We are expecting baby #7 in March but we always call #6 our “million dollar baby” because we needed to upsize everything with him!! We purchased a 12 passenger van since we couldn’t fit everyone in our minivan. We still live in a fairly small 3 bedroom home but needed to be a bit more creative with things so we made a small room into a kids closet so we could get rid of dressers and make more room for beds and finished part of our basement as another living area for “overflow”!! Now we can fit several more:)
 
Love it! Thank you so much holyrood and cathmom, for sharing your stories. I hope we get to hear lots more.🙂
 
My wife and I have four kids, but I don’t really feel like we have a large family, so I voted “6 or more.”
 
We have three and I don’t feel like we are a “large family” yet. We have gotten a little grief over the third, but I think three is still seen as pretty normal. Jim Gaffigan, he’s a Catholic comedian with a bunch of kids, details the change in reaction from his first kid to his most recent (I think he has 8??) in a chapter in his book Dad is Fat which was pretty funny.
 
We have three and I don’t feel like we are a “large family” yet. We have gotten a little grief over the third, but I think three is still seen as pretty normal. Jim Gaffigan, he’s a Catholic comedian with a bunch of kids, details the change in reaction from his first kid to his most recent (I think he has 8??) in a chapter in his book Dad is Fat which was pretty funny.
He has five children, but his family lives in a 2-bedroom apartment in NYC so it probably feels like 8. 😉

I only have 2 so far, but I grew up as one of 4 kids, and it never felt big, even though we were a larger family than most of the other families we knew. My mom said the transition from 3-4 was the easiest. She had a tubal ligation after my youngest sister, but has remarked that one more probably wouldn’t made much of a difference in how we lived or did things.
 
My oldest daughter thinks the funniest comment she gets is,“Your mom is a saint”

Now, why is that funny?:D:p
 
When did your family start feeling large?

We have five with us, lost three. It still doesn’t feel large so I didn’t feel right in answering the poll.

What changes did you have to make in your family life to accommodate more children?

We’ve had to cut back on a few things, but nothing really noteworthy. We shop at thrift stores more than most people we know, but a lot of that is common sense, especially when they’re really young. Why on earth would you spend $20 on a pair of shoes they’re going to outgrow in 2-3 months when you can get them for $1 at the thrift store?

What things did you sacrifice in order to be able to have more?

We don’t take big vacations, but we do take more frequent small trips.

What funny/annoying/unexpected reactions from other people did you hear as you made that transition from an average-sized family to a large one?

A lot of what has been said to us and about us probably shouldn’t be repeated here. Like Holyrood, our reproductive choices have played a big part in us no longer going around some of our family. It’s hard to fathom how strangers can generally be kind and supportive while family is outright hateful.
 
When did your family start feeling large?

What changes did you have to make in your family life to accommodate more children?

What things did you sacrifice in order to be able to have more?

What funny/annoying/unexpected reactions from other people did you hear as you made that transition from an average-sized family to a large one?
I am speaking as the eldest child in a family of seven, so it will not be the perspective of a parent. I would have been happy to have more children then we likely will, but my husband didn’t come to me until my thirties.
  1. I don’t remember my family ever feeling small. By the time I was conscious of my family (actually) there were already five children. So… it never really felt big or small.
2/3. We shared rooms, three kids to a room. We had one bathroom for seven kids. I ached for my own space, as a kid; like probably my husband wished for a sibling. I love being from a large family. Whatever sacrifices were made, I couldn’t have more joy, friends and unity.
 
Speaking as the granny of what I consider a large family: #4 kicked them into the bracket of needing a different car, for example. It also marked the point where finding a table at family restaurants is difficult. It is also the point at which many of the relations (Catholics) passed comments or raised eyebrows. The eldest sister-in-law has a noticeably less cordial relationship with them now.

I come from a family of 2 and always wished I had a bigger family. In fact I discovered as a young adult that I should have had twin siblings who would have been 8 years older than I. But that is a whole different story.

I also wished I was the mother of more than 2 children so I am loving being the granny of a large family. I know my daughter would like more and will continue to support their choices to whatever number. At the same time I will continue to feel a deep sadness for my elder daughter who is unable to conceive.

I love that wherever they may go my grandchildren have someone to play with. We have gone to various venues where there are playgrounds and they are immediately off and playing.
 
I think 6 was the magic number for us. We had to get a new van to fit the family.

There have been many sacrifices, but my friends who have secondary infertility have had to make bigger ones.

Oddly, we get much censure from my husband’s family which is painful esp. since we live adjacent to his family, but in our homeschool group there’s an opposite pressure: to be generous with family size. So, it’s not too bad. Once again, it’s hard for my homeschool friends who weren’t able to have a big family. Not only are they reminded of their loss, but they feel somewhat defensive.

Of course, having a big family is harder for dh. He gets it from his family and from greater society, esp. work. With this last pregnancy, he hasn’t told any of his workmates or any of his friends that don’t see me.

I guess my 8 almost 9 kids feels like the new normal. Recently, I glimpsed at a pic of the kids and thought with surprise, “that’s a lot of kids!”

My kids themselves are very proud of our family size. 🙂
 
I think I felt like a mother to a large family when I had #7, but when I had baby #8 a mother of 10 told me “congratulations, you’re finally in the big family club!” :eek:😃

I think I have gained more than I have given up, and what has gone from our life style was never important anyway (ie: eating out as often, time to sit and “relax,” vacations are adjusted to accommodate a larger group, etc)

Negative comments lessened the more I had, so I only get comments of “wow!” and “you’ must be a saint!” and “how do you do it?!” I did have one man ask how I could tell who’s shoes were who’s! :rolleyes: That was the oddest question, but in all honesty the kids all had shoes at the kitchen door in a huge pile because it was a wet day outside…there were a lot of shoes in a small space!
 
I just had my 4th and it feels large to me now lol! I’m not sure if we will have any more but we have definitely filled our house to the max… all the kids are sharing bedrooms and we only have 1 bathroom (and it’s in dire need of remodeling too!).
 
I love all these responses! You guys are awesome for sharing your stories. Thanks!😛
 
I … Recently, I glimpsed at a pic of the kids and thought with surprise, “that’s a lot of kids!”…
:rotfl:

Every once in a while that happens to me too. It’s those pictures! Recently I saw a picture taken a few years back. I was pushing two in a stroller and had three others (who were all shorter than I was) crowded around me. It was not just lots of kids–it was lots of* little* kids!

My oldest two are adults and they’re both away at college now. Another one of mine attends high school, so he’s gone during the day instead of being here with us while we homeschool. I feel like we’re downsizing now that we have “only” six living in the house and I have “only” five with me during the day. But in that picture, five children sure looked like a lot!
 
I LOVE these stories…mostly because I am pregnant with #3 and wondering where I am going to put him/her in the car!! When I found out I was pregnant this time around, my co-worker actually said to me, “It’s that Catholicism.” Funny…I know lots of Catholics who aren’t pregnant:shrug:…but I’m glad that I am!!
 
I grew up in a large family, but this was before cars had seat belts. There is one thing I am curious about. How on earth do you pack all of your children into a car? What if you can’t afford a van?

The reason I’m asking is that when my grandchildren were babies, it was almost beyond me how on earth to get that car seat buckled in. Just trying to get a baby into a car seat seemed like a 15 minute job, and I usually had to have my husband do it. As you probably guessed, there were no car seat laws when my kids were small, and I always held my baby on my lap in the front passenger seat.

I would practically jump for joy every time a grandchild got old enough to get rid of his booster seat!

Also, those horrible huge strollers that people use these days seem like little semi-trucks. How do you even manage to lift them?

If I was young enough to be a mother of a large family, I would wonder how it would even be possible to pack up the kids and go someplace.

That is why I find this thread rather interesting.
 
I grew up in a large family, but this was before cars had seat belts. There is one thing I am curious about. How on earth do you pack all of your children into a car? What if you can’t afford a van?

The reason I’m asking is that when my grandchildren were babies, it was almost beyond me how on earth to get that car seat buckled in. Just trying to get a baby into a car seat seemed like a 15 minute job, and I usually had to have my husband do it. As you probably guessed, there were no car seat laws when my kids were small, and I always held my baby on my lap in the front passenger seat.

I would practically jump for joy every time a grandchild got old enough to get rid of his booster seat!

Also, those horrible huge strollers that people use these days seem like little semi-trucks. How do you even manage to lift them?

If I was young enough to be a mother of a large family, I would wonder how it would even be possible to pack up the kids and go someplace.

That is why I find this thread rather interesting.
Car seats are a parent-torture device. 😃 While I am sure I would be glad to have one if I were to get into an accident, the truth is that they have hurt me, pinched my kids, made my husband say bad words and brought me to tears. :mad:

As for the strollers…the big ones are for first time moms only. After the first one, I think most of us realize they are more trouble than they are worth and we either carry them or buy a $20 umbrella stroller from Target (which is still no fun to fold up by the way).
 
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