• Mycatiskai
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    1 day ago

    $600 for a vasectomy in a private clinic booked and performed within a week of booking. 15 minute operation with no needles and no scalpel.

      • Mycatiskai
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        17 hours ago

        No they use a numbing spray then punch a small hole then pull the vas deferens out the small hole and do the procedure. It heals up to a pin hole sized mark that can barely be seen.

        I was in to work that night on desk duty(with ice packs) for a few weeks rather than my normal heavy lifting which I went back to soon after.

      • DerisionConsulting
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        17 hours ago

        $600.00 for it is pretty expensive for it in Canada. It’s free in normal clinics

        • Mycatiskai
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          17 hours ago

          It is free elsewhere but has a longer recovery time and uses a surgical method that has more negative effects I didn’t want to deal with.

          Also it meant dealing with a doctor who wasn’t going to question me being young and childfree and wanting to remain childfree.

  • SpikesOtherDog@ani.social
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    2 days ago

    I’m in the USA. The bill for birth and a month in the NICU 15 years ago was nearly a million dollars.

    They wrote it off.

  • wise_pancake
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    2 days ago

    Sometimes, they find the right place but without en suite laundry (this matters with a newborn) or up two flights of stairs

    This is the kind of thing my parents would have told me to just deal with. They just dealt with it.

    I don’t want kids, but there is something for making do without needing it to be perfect.

    • bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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      2 days ago

      Sure, but your parents were also on the tail end of single income detached housing being a thing.

      Double income MDU barely works anymore. Concessions are made to save time or money.

      • wise_pancake
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        2 days ago

        We had 4 boys sleeping in one room and the laundry was in the basement.

        My wife grew up with two girls sharing a room until her dad actually build a drywall partition so they’d stop fighting.

        I know there are too many places without laundry and only one bedroom and that’s a problem, but complaining you can’t find an en suite laundry feels low on the priority list.

        • bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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          2 days ago

          Oof that’s fair

          The purchasing power of people like your father has been reduced in this time frame. Check how much he could afford for that renovation vs how much you could afford now.

          • wise_pancake
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            2 days ago

            I’m not saying purchasing power is the same

            I just think if the only thing stopping you from having kids is an ensuite laundry then you’re letting perfect get in the way of good enough.

            • bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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              2 days ago

              So it’s a question of, is dad working? How much is his wage? If he leaves early infrequently does he earn less? Can mom take the stairs for a few weeks or months before/after giving birth? Are we close enough to friends they can help? Do we have a chute to get smelly diapers away from mom and baby? Can we afford disposable vs cloth diapers?

              If it costs you more money to leave work, or get an ensuite, or hire somebody, or buy disposable, or you are priced out of every option, that’s not perfect that’s just one of a series of financial choices.

              Right now they are priced out of all the options, ensuite seemed like the best one.

            • Flocklesscrow@lemm.ee
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              1 day ago

              So that the eldest children get the privilege of raising their siblings? Of trading their own childhood for parentification by their selfish and ignorant parents?

              Nah. Absolutely not. Having a bunch of kids all stuffed in some shitty apartment is not providing for them. Forcing existence on someone is not sharing some miracle of life; it’s rationalization from narcissistic parents who decided they were just going to do what they wanted, regardless of means, ability, or know how.

              Then those shitty parents will forget how awful their children’s childhoods were and the children will grow up saddled with resentment and awareness that their peers never had to struggle as they did, because they had better parents, who were actually ready for the responsibility of being a parent.

              The “I grew up fine,” crowd did NOT grow up fine.

              • wise_pancake
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                1 day ago

                My wife’s parents got divorced and her dad struggled to give them a roof over their heads and make things fun.

                The free things they did are some of my wife’s favourite memories. They camped a lot, they did portage and walking trips for vacation, they had family dinner of samples and a hot dog at Costco, they played the same board games 1000 times and played cards together and they made memories.

                Times can become tough even when you’ve done everything right. I don’t think it’s fair to say that just because they didn’t have everything they shouldn’t have been able to have kids, or suggest that they should have lost the kids when things got tough.

                • Flocklesscrow@lemm.ee
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                  1 day ago

                  These anecdotal outliers are not the statistical mean. Of course, creative, thoughtful parents, who want their children to thrive, can find ways to provide meaningful childhood experiences. But that is not how it goes for most.

                  Society is built by averages. The median experience is more insightful than the particular experience you, or someone you know may have had in the margins of the bell curve. That doesn’t mean their personal experience are devalued. But it DOES mean that we cannot hold them up as the standard, nor pretend that there aren’t significant truths behind the realities of parents who struggle financially, emotionally, mentally, and otherwise. Moreover, the compounding factor in most destitute childhoods is that the parents never really wanted their children to love and rear, and develop into flourishing adults; instead, they simply followed the prescribed processes as they were instructed, or feared their own loss of status and position among their peers.

                  I hope you can expand your perspective to encompass more than just the winning stories; society is better measured by our treatment of the most vulnerable.