Hi, Kat.
I get your point and I'm sorry you have felt judged so many times but you also need to understand where everyone of those who say that are coming from.
For every teen mom who eventually raises great kids and becomes a doctor or a lawyer, there are teen moms who end up on welfare and don't even finish school and end up being a burden on both society and their families.
Yes, motherhood is difficult whatever the age but a woman who has a job and takes motherhood seriously probably has a better chance of putting her kid through school as compared to a teenager who still has to go to school herself. Also, a person who gets pregnant after having finished school and is in fact working at a career and is hopefully married can provide a more stable home environment for a child. It's a wonder though why some idiots who have jobs and are married still can't manage that but that's another story.
I guess the main issue here is that motherhood is not just a matter of being there and cuddling your kids, making formula and changing diapers. It really includes buying formula, buying diapers, making sure there's money for school stuff, exposing the child to stuff that will make him/her a better person, etc. Yes, all that costs money and a person with a job has more control over money. We're not all heirs to the Hilton fortune so we can't all mess up and still be a celebrity like Paris.
It's not even all about money, either. A person who takes life seriously doesn't play around too much. All of us when we're young focus on ourselves because that's exactly what we're supposed to be doing. That's when we discover ourselves. When we're secure with that, then that's when we are more capable of letting another person into our lives.
Too many of us think that having kids is great and it is especially when they're all cute and cuddly. It's different when we get our own teenagers (that's history's way of getting back at us) and they think that they always know what's best for them and that their parents know jack shit about what it is about being teenagers.
I guess the long and short of this is, yes, parenthood is really tough so why make it tougher on yourself by being parents so early when what you're supposed to be doing is discovering yourself and having fun?
I don't want to belittle the women here who have been good parents and have worked their asses off trying to be the best parents they can be and they try and help others to do the same. There's Meg, Kandi and Nikki to name a few who have been truly remarkable here but I think they will agree with me when I say that kids and teens shouldn't try to be parents so early. It's hard enough as it is and it's scary to hear people around 15 years old saying \"they can do the baby thing\". Let's just all imagine what it would be like to be just 30 years old (I'm 37) and getting ready to be a grandparent because your 15-year old son/daughter is about to become a parent like you were when you were 15. Is that what we want for them?
Lastly, because I am a guy anyway, I suppose those of us here who know guys in their early twenties but have been parents already notice something: more often than not, these guys (not men) would much rather play basketball or drink with their buddies rather than take care of their kids. Yes, there are exceptions but would any of the girls here want to risk finding out if their guy is father material at the age of 17 or thereabouts?
There are simply too many sad stories of teenage pregnancies out there that it's hard for those who are making an honest go at it to survive. You have no choice then but to finish school, get a good job, raise that child of yours and provide a wholesome family environment hopefully including a husband . There's no other way of shutting up society about you than that. On the bright side, once you start working and you have a career, people will notice your work and your having been a teenage mom will just be one of the details of your life story.
Take care.
Erick