Cedar Valley News
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Room in the House
By Chloe Papadakis
New national polling shows finances are now the number one reason American families say they are limiting how many children they have. Forty-three percent cite insufficient money. One in five rural parents say they are putting off having more children because childcare alone is more than they can carry.
I have heard every version of this conversation. I am twenty-eight with one daughter. She is three. My friends talk about it at the kitchen table, at the park, in the parking lot. We can’t afford another one. We’re not ready. Maybe next year. Maybe never.
I grew up an only child. My mother came to this country with my father from Greece and built a life from nothing. I know what it is like to grow up in a quiet house—the closeness with my parents and the loneliness. My best friend growing up was Debbie Larson. She had five brothers and sisters. Her house was loud and crowded, with shoes by the door. I loved being there.
I understand the question from both sides. And I want to say something most people will not say out loud.
The money is real. Childcare in this country averages more than $15,000 a year. I work from home partly because the arithmetic told me an office job would barely cover daycare. I am not dismissing the cost. I live inside it.
But I also know women my age who spend more on their vacations than they do on a year of daycare. I know couples who say they cannot afford a second child but just financed a new truck. I know families earning half of what my friends earn who are raising four children and getting by. Not comfortably. Not easily. But getting by. And their children are not suffering. Their children are loved. Their house is small, full, and alive.
Think this through. The question my generation is asking is not really about money. A second child costs sleep, space, freedom, time, and the version of yourself you have gotten comfortable being. The real calculation is not on a spreadsheet. It is in the mirror. Am I willing to become a different person to make room for this life?
I am not writing this to judge anyone. Every family is different. Some people cannot have more children for reasons nobody else can see. But I want to challenge the one reason everybody hides behind—the one about money. I believe my generation has been told we should not have to sacrifice. And when the math says we cannot have everything, we cut the child.
My daughter is three. She plays by herself in the living room while I work at the kitchen table. She talks to her stuffed animals. She lines them up and gives them names. Some mornings I watch her, and I think: she is doing what I did. She is making a family out of what she has.
I have not decided yet. I want you to know this. I am not writing from the other side of the question. I am writing from the middle of it. Some nights, after she is asleep, I sit at the table and do not open my laptop. I just sit. I think about the quiet. I think about Debbie’s house. I think about my mother on a ship, leaving everything she knew. And I wonder whether the thing I am afraid to give up is the thing I would be most grateful I gave.
I asked my mother once whether she wished she had more children. She was quiet for a long time. Then she said yes. Every day. I asked her what stopped her. She said life stopped her. Circumstances she could not control. Then she looked at me and said something I have never forgotten. She said, “Do not let money be the reason. Money comes and goes. A child stays. If there is room in your heart, there is room in the house.”
This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town are fictional, the national events they reflect on are real.
Cedar Valley News has a new Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

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Correction:
This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. ACM is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authors who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for serious authors, but a burden for hobbyist. We don’t recommend ACM for hobbyists.

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