had or having?

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roseriver1012

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Before I knew it I was in my thirties, married, ____________ a job, yet still had this idea in my mind with each passing year.

Is "had" or "having" fit for the gap according to the context? Thanks for help!
 
This looks like your homework, roseriver, which we don't do.
 
This looks like your homework, roseriver, which we don't do.

I don't know what makes you think so! Maybe I should have asked in another way?
If "had" is in the blank, the sentence may be considered as one consisting of a series of predicates connected with "yet"; if "having" is in the blank, "married", together with "having a job" may be considered as the adverbial part of the sentence. So which option sounds natural or right? Thanks.
 
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Only "had" works for me.
 
If it's not a set question with only two possible responses, I'd like to add an option. I would say "... married, with a job, ...".
 
Only "had" works for me.

Could you tell me why "having" doesn't work? Can't I make "having a job" an adverbial phrase for the sentence?
 
Could you tell me why "having" doesn't work? Can't I make "having a job" an adverbial phrase for the sentence?
Because there's something ellipted - either 'I' or "was", or something else.
"Before I knew it I was in my thirties, married, having a job ..." means:
"Before I knew it, I was in my thirties, was married, was having a job ..." or
"Before I knew it, I was in my thirties, I was married, I was having a job ..."
None of these work. There's a limit to the number of different grammatical structures that you can join with commas. Ideally, they should all be parallel. Even 'had' has problems. "Before I knew it I was in my thirties, married, had a job...". In this sentence "I was" carries over to "married", but only "I" carries over to "had a job".
If you wanted to distribute only "I" over each element, you could write, "Before I knew it, I was in my thirties, was married, had a job ..." This requires "was married", not just "married".

But Ems' "with a job" was also my favourite alternative.
 
Because there's something ellipted - either 'I' or "was", or something else.
"Before I knew it I was in my thirties, married, having a job ..." means:
"Before I knew it, I was in my thirties, was married, was having a job ..." or
"Before I knew it, I was in my thirties, I was married, I was having a job ..."
None of these work. There's a limit to the number of different grammatical structures that you can join with commas. Ideally, they should all be parallel.Even 'had' has problems. "Before I knew it I was in my thirties, married, had a job...". In this sentence "I was" carries over to "married", but only "I" carries over to "had a job".
If you wanted to distribute only "I" over each element, you could write, "Before I knew it, I was in my thirties, was married, had a job ..." This requires "was married", not just "married".

But Ems' "with a job" was also my favourite alternative.

Really grateful for your detailed explanation! About "having a job", is it all right grammatically to say "Married, having a job, I was in my thirties yet still had this idea in my mind with each passing year" ?
 
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