I ran into a friend Monday afternoon who I hadn’t seen for awhile. I knew he had gotten married about 18 months or so ago, but I hadn’t heard any news of him since. He had some news for me. He and his wife had a baby boy a few months back, so he’s a father now.
I was happy for my friend, but I was also envious — because having my own family is something I’m really eager for. I’ve always known that I wanted children, and I want them even more as the years pass.
I’m glad I didn’t have kids when I was much younger, because I’m not sure I’d adequately dealt with my own childhood baggage to be a good parent. I fear that I might have left them just as damaged as I’d felt if I’d taken on the responsibility years ago. I feel ready now, but I’m under the impression that convincing the right woman to be the mother is a key prerequisite.
As I thought about all this again, I wondered — not for the first time — why human beings seem so driven to have families. Having children isn’t logical. They cost us money. There’s rarely a “return on investment” in the pragmatic sense. So why do most of us feel so driven to create families?

They won’t listen to arguments; they might listen to honest art
Autumn scents send subtle signals every year that it’s time for change
Financial crisis seems serious when it hits your own neighbors
Please be patient with my site as it’s being completely remodeled
Goodbye, Amelia (2000-2013)
How do you suppose invention of ‘truth machine’ would affect you?
Delusional Democrats help Trump re-election by chasing phantoms
UPDATE: Judge drops charges against Diane Tran; $100,000 raised
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