惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

SecWiki News
SecWiki News
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
V
Visual Studio Blog
博客园 - 叶小钗
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
IT之家
IT之家
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
博客园_首页
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
月光博客
月光博客
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
腾讯CDC
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
V
V2EX
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
量子位
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
T
Tor Project blog
J
Java Code Geeks
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
AI
AI
The Cloudflare Blog
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
S
Schneier on Security
爱范儿
爱范儿
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
S
Secure Thoughts
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
博客园 - 【当耐特】
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
S
Securelist
P
Proofpoint News Feed
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
C
Cisco Blogs
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
B
Blog RSS Feed
K
Kaspersky official blog
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
G
Google Developers Blog
S
Security Affairs
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog

Vox

Vox Vox Vox Vox Vox Vox Trump says Cuba is “next.” What does that mean? What twins can teach us about friendship Trump’s next redistricting targets Graham Platner’s triumph, explained by a Maine reporter A major new study found AI outperformed doctors in ER diagnosis — but there’s a catch What China is learning from the US war in Iran The surprising reason why buying guns helps endangered species Why “neighborism” is having a moment This is what it takes to become Trump’s attorney general The Voting Rights Act is all but dead. Prepare for maximum gerrymandering. Activists tried to free 2,000 dogs bred for lab research in Wisconsin. Then came the tear gas. The sad, ugly debate behind the new Michael Jackson biopic We’re missing the economic fallout of the Iran war — just like we did with Covid Why famous people want to be death doulas This billionaire could be California’s next governor — and he wants to arrest Stephen Miller What really happened after Trump slashed HIV funding What haunts America’s animal shelter workers James Comey gets indicted (again) The numbers on US political violence MAHA wellness culture is coming for teens. Grown-ups aren’t ready. Renewable energy just broke a 100-year-old streak What Trump wants out of the Correspondents’ Dinner shooting The Supreme Court seems nervous about letting the police track you with your phone Has Lena Dunham changed? Have we? The great 2028 Olympic ticket crashout, explained Democrats’ latest critique of Walmart is wrong — and dangerous The surprising reason why pedestrian deaths are down in the US Welcome to the May issue of The Highlight Should you feel guilty for killing the bugs in your house? What we know about the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner Caregiving has a burnout problem 5 of your biggest questions about the Iran war, answered Why colleges are going out of business How charities should handle the next Jeffrey Epstein Live Nation lost. Will anything change for ticket prices? Are the latest Iran talks for real? Can Mayor Mamdani get Democrats back on track? Why America’s HIV epidemic hasn’t ended The 1980s sex scandal that explains TMZ’s move to DC The real problem with Hasan Piker The return of resistance crafting The most successful health campaign in modern history Nobody is laughing at Donald Trump anymore Trump’s big marijuana move Please don’t inject yourself with bootleg peptides Am I the bad friend? Democrats are winning the redistricting war — for now, anyway Yes, you need “me time.” Here’s how to do it right. The next global Trump ally to fall? Trump’s cruel plan for Afghan refugees, briefly explained The wide-ranging fallout from the Supreme Court’s new terrorism decision, explained The best thing you can do for the planet on Earth Day What happens when a tradwife has to put her money where her mouth is Why are states unleashing millions of these fish? Anthropic just made AI scarier Another Trump official exits in scandal Want to fight climate change effectively? Here’s where to donate your money. The Supreme Court will decide if migrants can be sent back to war zones The fight for paid parental leave is more winnable than you think Virginia voters just handed Democrats another win in the Great Redistricting Wars Why the Pentagon is dropping a flu vaccine mandate The war in Iran isn’t ending — it’s becoming something new The diabolical, millennial obsession with chicken Caesar wraps Can you profit off nature without destroying it? These venture capitalists are betting on it. Is it wrong to send your kid to private school? What do we lose when we erase ugliness? RFK Jr. is in his influencer era The lucky few who can apply for tariff refunds How to make unemployment suck a little less The Supreme Court will decide when the police can use your phone to track you Israel’s critics are winning the battle for the Democratic Party Is “time confetti” ruining parenthood? What to do about burnout at work Rubén Gallego on why he defended Eric Swalwell — and why he regrets it now The simple question that could change your career How Americans really feel about immigration Is the Strait of Hormuz really open? An expert forecasts how the Iran war could hit your budget Live Nation lost in court. Here’s what it means for concerts. How to ask for help when you’re really going through it Trump’s ceasefire announcement, briefly explained What to know about the Israel-Lebanon conflict The alcohol crisis quietly hitting high-stress, “high-status” workers Trump’s bungled Iran negotiations didn’t have to go this way Trump’s DOJ wants to undo January 6 convictions Donald Trump messed with the wrong pope 8 ways to zone out and relax that don’t involve being on your phone Why Americans can’t escape credit card debt A cautionary tale about tax cuts The tax code rewards generosity. But probably not yours. Obama’s top Iran negotiator on Trump’s screwups The case for AI realism The new Hormuz blockade, briefly explained Why inflation is up
I don’t want children. I do want children. What should I do?
Sigal Samuel · 2024-11-03 · via Vox

Editor’s note, June 7, 8 am ET: We’re bringing you some of our best-loved Your Mileage May Vary columns while Sigal Samuel is on parental leave. The one below originally published on November 3, 2024.

This unconventional advice column offers you a unique framework for thinking through moral dilemmas. It’s based on value pluralism — the idea that each of us has multiple values that are equally valid but that often conflict with each other. Stay tuned for more original Your Mileage May Vary columns coming in June. In the meantime, submit your own question here.

I’m at an age where I feel like I need to decide whether I want to have kids, but I’m very ambivalent about it and don’t know how to know whether I want them. I don’t dream of parenthood or filling my days with caregiving for a young child. But, does anyone?! That doesn’t seem like a good way to decide whether I truly want to be a parent. But then what is? The main place my mind goes is that I fear my life would be sad and depressing when my partner and I are 70 and childless. I like the thought of having well-adjusted adult children to spend time with when I’m old. That seems like a misguided and selfish reason to have kids.

A better reason might be that I think my partner and I have good values, and I’d like to bring more people into the world who have those values, but that also seems selfish because there’s no guarantee that a child will embrace your values, and your duty as a parent is to let them flourish as whoever they want to be. I worry that I would be the kind of parent who struggles to support my kid if they rebel against everything I believe in. But I also feel like you just can’t know what you would be like in that situation until you’re in it. How do you decide that such a life-altering decision is right for you, let alone its ethical implications for a person who doesn’t exist yet?

Dear Fencesitter,

Ah, parenthood ambivalence. So many of us can relate. And, like you, so many of us try to answer the question “Do I want to have kids?” by looking inward for the answer. We introspect, we ruminate, we dig through childhood traumas. We consider what makes us happy now in hopes of predicting whether kids would make us happier or more miserable later. We assume the answer is there within us, a buried treasure waiting to be unearthed.

That’s understandable: Most advice for people considering parenthood encourages us to do just that. Countless articles, books, and yes, advice columns are premised on the idea that the answer exists as a stable fact within us. So is the parenthood ambivalence coach Ann Davidman’s online class, the “Motherhood Clarity™ Course” which opens with a mantra: “The answers will come because they never left … It’s all within me.”

Have a question you want me to answer in the next Your Mileage May Vary column?

But there are a few problems with that approach. For one, you could spend your entire adult life auditing your soul for the answer and still end up looking like the shrug emoji. That’s because introspection is an unbounded search process: You’ve got no way to know when you’ve searched enough.

Another problem is that this approach centers you and your desires too much. As you pointed out, bringing a kid into the world can’t only be about its costs and benefits for you.

Finally, you’re just not well-positioned to predict whether kids will make you happier or more miserable! As the philosopher L.A. Paul notes, you can’t quite know what it’ll be like to have a kid until you have one, and besides, the “you” might become transformed in the process, so that the things that make you happy now are not the same as the things that will make you happy as a parent.

So, what I suggest is a radically different approach: If you want to arrive at a decision, you have to go beyond your own interiority. You have to turn your gaze outward and ask yourself: What is it that you find awesome, thrilling, and intrinsically valuable about being in the world?

I’m not asking because I think the key is deciding which values you want to transmit to your kid. Like you said, there’s no guarantee that your kid will embrace your values. Instead, I’m asking because this is the basis on which you can make a choice — not “find the answer” but make a choice — about whether to have kids.

Up until now, you’ve been thinking of the kids question as an epistemic one — you say you “don’t know how to know” — but I would think of it as an existential one instead. The existentialist philosophers argued that life doesn’t come with predefined meaning or fixed answers. Instead, each human has to choose how to create their own meaning. As the Spanish existentialist Jose Ortega y Gasset put it, the central task of being human is “autofabrication,” which literally means self-making. You come up with your own answer, and in so doing, you make yourself.

A decade ago, just for fun, my friend Emily sat me down in a park and had me do an exercise that would turn out to be extremely impactful: It was, believe it or not, an online quiz. It listed dozens and dozens of different values — friendship, creativity, growth, and so on — and instructed me to select my top 10. Then it made me narrow it down to my top five. I found that brutally hard, but it was revealing. My number one value turned out to be what the quiz called, somewhat idiosyncratically, “delight of being, joy.”

I return to that again and again (my mind preserves the punctuation, so I regularly find myself talking to people about “delight-of-being-comma-joy!”) when I have to make tough decisions. It captures a core fact about me: I love being alive in this world! Whenever I snorkel with impossibly colorful fish, or experience deep connection with another human being, or stare up at all the galaxies we’ve barely begun to understand, I feel so grateful that I get to participate in the grand mystery of being.

And that’s what made me decide I want to be a mom one day. Choosing to have a child feels like one of the biggest ways I can say YES to life, at a time when many doubt the worthiness of perpetuating human life on this planet. It’s a way to affirm that being alive in this world is a gift, one I want to pass along to others.

So allow me to be your Emily. Let me present you with an inventory of values (one of many similar inventories available online) and urge you to select your top five. Then ask yourself: Would having a kid be a good way to enact my values — or is there another way to enact my values that feels more compelling to me? Which path is the best fit for you personally, given your specific talents and your physical and psychological needs?

This depends a lot on the individual. Imagine three women who all rank “personal growth” as their top value. They might still arrive at totally different conclusions about kids. For one woman, that value may feel like a great reason to have a kid, because she believes childrearing will help her grow as a person and that she’ll get to guide a new person in their development. The second woman might say her primary mode of growth is art-making, so she wants to focus on that while being an active auntie to her friends’ kids on the side. A third woman might feel that, for her, the most promising path is to become a nun. All three are completely valid!

A lot of people struggling with parenthood ambivalence say they’re scared that if they don’t have a kid, they’ll miss out on something sui generis — a completely unique experience, a sort of love to which nothing else compares. It sounds like this FOMO is playing a role for you, too; you mentioned that you fear your life would be sad and depressing when you and your partner are 70 and childless.

But there are plenty of parents who will tell you that, while they adore their kids, the kid-parent relationship is not magically more meaningful than anything else in their life. In the excellent new book What Are Children For? by Anastasia Berg and Rachel Wiseman, the former writes:

While the relationship between a parent and child is doubtless unique, what if I told you that, phenomenologically speaking, it is not really grand and tremendous? That it’s not even particularly extraordinary? … To love your child isn’t like nothing you’ve ever known. It isn’t unimaginable. If you have known love, you have also known it, or something like it … What is so special about this love isn’t how exotic, mysterious, or astounding it is but how simple and familiar.

So, if you just like the thought of having children because you want lovely people to spend time with when you’re old, try first experimenting with other ways to get that same need met. You might find that it’s not something that only a child can provide. As the author (and my friend) Rhaina Cohen documents beautifully in The Other Significant Others, some people find that deep friendships meet their need for connection perfectly well, with no child-shaped hole or partner-shaped hole left over.

But even if you believe having a child is a sui generis experience, the point I would make is: Other things are too! An artist might tell you there’s nothing that compares to the creative thrill of painting. Someone involved in political work may tell you there’s nothing quite like the feeling of fighting for justice and winning. Lots of things in the world are unique and incommensurably good.

So don’t be pushed around by societal narratives of what the ultimate good looks like. Let your choice flow from your own sense of what’s most valuable about human life. Whereas what makes you feel happy or miserable can change a lot over time, core values are relatively stable, so they form a more enduring basis for making major decisions. Yes, it’s conceivable that even those values might shift a little over the decades, but making a choice that flows from your values means you will at least be confident that you had a very solid reason for doing what you did — no matter how you end up feeling about it in the future.

And as for the future? You really can’t control it. So, your goal is not to control every possible outcome. Your goal is to live in line with your values.

Bonus: What I’m reading

  • Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard, often called the “father of existentialism,” proposed the idea that life can only be understood backward, but it must be lived forward. This week’s question prompted me to revisit that idea.
  • As I wrote this column, I went back and reread a great New Yorker article by Joshua Rothman about how we make major decisions. It discusses philosopher Agnes Callard’s idea that “we ‘aspire’ to self-transformation by trying on the values that we hope one day to possess.” In other words, you don’t decide you want to be a parent — you decide you want to be the sort of person who’d want to be a parent, and lean into that. I found the idea interesting but too complicated by half: Why would I ground this decision in values I hope to one day possess instead of grounding it in the values I already hold dear?
  • Lots of people bring up climate change as a reason not to have kids. I think that’s misguided. Having a kid is one of the things that can push you to take heroic action on climate change — so I was interested in this piece in Noema Magazine, which argues that we need to evoke heroism, not hope, with regard to the climate — and finds a prime example of that in … JRR Tolkien.