When I was childless, the idea of just a soulmate and children would have appealed to me.
When I became a mother, I realized how important extended family was. My sister stayed with me for one week and I cannot overemphasize the value of having other women around to help with a baby. It was the best week of my life. We are meant to use a village to raise a family. The idea of supermom doing it all on her own, no thanks, that led to postnatal depression to me.
While some may laugh at the arranged marriages and other institutions of more 'traditional' cultures (ie. Indian as indiblue talks about), I am simply in awe of the female family support that the mother get (and later give back when they are elderly). I lived in a city with a 50% Indian population and those women never used daycare, there simply was no need, there were too many grandmothers/sisters/aunts/cousins available to help. IMO, that's doing something right.


) I made a conscious decision, upon marriage, to leave my mother and father and join with him. So if we decide, as a family, that we need to be in a situation where we are isolated from other people and family, or where we move further away, that's just what we have to do.