| I mean I use this term for my own baby. He was born during the pandemic. You need to chill out. |
Because she wouldn't ask the question if she wasn't both, dumba$$ |
Same. DD2 was born in May. Her first year has been completely different from that of her older sister's first. No family, no travel, no activities. My post-partum experience has been far more isolated, as well. At times, I have hated that, but other times it has been sort of nice and peaceful. |
| I find it a bit offensive in that it feels dismissive of our long journey TTC. But I also agree w the PP who said that no harm was likely meant / it is a way to make chitchat. |
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I do think that people feel "hurt" or "jarred" when they hear that because it feels judgemental. Like you were bored or irresponsible or frivolous during the pandemic. Even when for most people that is not the case. Many people were trying before, had infertility issues, or age issues, or perseverated for a long time about if getting pregnant during the pandemic was the right mood.
So I get the reason why it makes some people feel sad or icky when people say it |
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I mean...you have a baby. And it’s COVID-Times. So you have a Covid baby. The nurse may have just been acknowledging the unique challenges you’re facing, like not having your partner at visits during your pregnancy or not having a lot of help since. The rates of PPD/PPA are increasing. But sure you can be annoyed instead?
—Mom of 5MO “Covid Baby” who has appreciated when people see that this can be unique and tough |
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First of all, I mean your baby is pre-COVID conception.
Second of all, if someone chose to get pregnant during COVID and then complained incessantly about pregnancy during COVID etc etc then I judge. |
| I get annoyed—but not offended—when people refer to my baby as a quarantine baby. We ended up doing fertility treatments and we had our IUI at the end of February 2020. Found out the day everything shut down that I was pregnant. I choose not to be offended by it, but it does annoy me that my much desired, expensive in time and money to conceive baby is essentially openly described as an accident because people have no idea how hard we tried to have him. |
Did you consider that maybe that they just meant that you had a baby during covid? |
Not PP, but I’m very curious to see what will happen developmentally with my covid baby! Born last summer so has basically spent 24/7 with both parents and an older sibling. Three pretty strong attachments! It’s been fascinating to watch. |
uh, what?! The attachments we make in infancy and the experiences we have greatly influence our personalities and future development! Like, monumentally. |
My (late) uncle was born during the Spanish Flu pandemic, the youngest by several years. It hit the area his family lived in, hard. He served in WW2, went to college on the GI bill and was an engineer. I think the COVID babies will be fine. |
| I'm not that big of a fan of the name, but I'm pregnant now. Maybe they'll be like "baby boomers." They came back from WW2 and then had lots of babies. I think A LOT of people will have babies next year in 2022. So many marriages pushed back due to covid, so many babies pushed back due to unemployment and potential illness. |
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Who cares. Relax
We call our dog a COVID dog. |
Egads. Find another hill to die on |