L:
I have to say that much of what I wanted to say to you has been said by Kathy S.
Please don't be brow beaten into doing something, such a life altering step at that, that you are not ready for. No matter how much you may love your husband now, and no matter how much you will love your child(ren), you will feel resentment if his desire to have kids now prevents you from developing as an individual and taking steps along a career path for yourself, to see just what you can do and what you are made of.
Like Kathy, I have to question the strength of this marriage right now, and the strength of his committment to you as an individual, not as the future incubator of his children. The balance of power in your relationship as you describe it is overwhelmingly in his favour. That cannot make you happy, regardless of the children issue.
You are an individual person, and once you graduate, you have all the right to take the time you need to explore different sides of yourself through your career and professional and social relationships. To expect you to start birthing the minute your education is completed smacks of a 1950's attitude towards women. Can you really handle that? Is that how you see yourself? Can you bear to be treated like this?
His impatience to have kids now reveals that he is thinking of himself, not of you singular, and not of you as a couple either. I really do not see what the time pressure is for him: he can father kids up until the day he dies, and he's only 41, which is the new 30 afterall. There is absolutely no hurry here.
I can quite understand youer desire to work in a career and pay off your student loans, and you must stick to your guns and do that. That is your desire and need: you need to pay those off to feel better, to pay back the debt that enabled you to get this far today. It is part of your self esteem to pay this off, understandable.
You must treasure your own desires, goals and ambitions and take care of your own needs. Every good marriage allows both partnmers to do this, and where there are conflicts, then compromise must come iuntoi play, and that must be negotiated by both, not dictated to one by the other. Your husband, as you describe him, is not capable of compromise. He is dictating terms to you. Totally unacceptable. And even his professed love for you does not excuse this.
His idea that children will not change life much says everything there is to know about his dedication to you and your future family. What he means is: his life will not change much and he certainly does not intend to let that happen. You will be pregnant, you will give birth, you will breast feed the child, you will stay at home 24/7 and raise his child, you will continue to do 100% of housework and cook his meal every night, and to do all this, you will sacrifice your career, goals, dreams and ambitions, also the chance to grow as a person before growing as a parent. And no, the two are not the same. Can you see how this is shaping up? I can promise you, from one who has been there and is currently struggling with all these issues, that this will bury you alive, weigh you down, press you into the earth so far down that you lose sight of who you are. You owe yourself so much more than that. Please do not stifle yourself and shrink yourself to the size of his desire simply to make his life plan pan out.
Your husband intends to do very little to raise this family. To be a good parent requires a whole lot of selflessness. You can't be a parent without it. He just hasn't got it. He is selfish. It's clear as day. His life will not change, yours will. He already is selfish, even before becoming a parent. You work the long week he does and you still work at home in the evenings and weekends. You don't get time off. This is not acceptable.
Bottom line: if he wants kids and you want and need and deserve to work, day care will be a necessity. There is no way around it. Especially if you have no social support around you whatsoever. And you don't. Two things to say here: day care kids are just as attached to their parents as kids with a stay at home mum. And they will love you just as much as they ever would. Secondly, I have spent my whole motherhood so far being pregnant during grad school, giving birth and resuming undergrad teaching a week later, being principally in care of both kids and the home whilst struggling to get my PhD and with no support whatsoever because I have no family or friends around me since I am a long way from home. It is the fast track to depression and burn out. Been there, done that. Or should I say: doing that?
"When I hear him say that, what I'm hearing is that I'm going to have to do everything."
You have interpreted the situation accurately.
L: no apologies needed and your "rant" barely qualifies as such. What is needed here, if you wish to remain married tothis man, is marriage counselling. As Kathy S. says: sort out your marriage first. Then if you can shape it up more along lines of two equal partners who respect each other's wishes and desires and needs, then begin discussions about starting a family, when you are ready and only if you want to. And yes, you will need to discuss terms. And I would suggest discussing these terms in front of the counsellor.
Bringing children into this marriage right now is a recipe for much unhapiness and resentment. Please don't do it. Trust your instincts, the same ones that made you come here today to seek confirmation of your fears, concerns and interpreation of your husband's understanding of marriage and family.
I wish you all the best,
Clare