| three girls, maybe will try for a fourth, would be pleased as punch to have a boy- new experience! but love my girls and would love another girl just the same.. |
LOL, love it. For some reason, this is a perfectly normal question to ask strangers. I remember when my mom was pregnant with the third, that people would yell out, "hope the next one is a boy", as she walked along with me and my sister. I think there is this idea that you have one of each so you get to experience having both a daughter and a son. But at the same time, there is a sort of identity around having any combination other than a boy and a girl spaced 2.2 -2.6 years apart. I find myself in conversations with other people with a sibling 15 months apart like my kids, strangers assure me it's hard at first, but they will be close friends. If someone has kids 5 years apart, I may find myself in conversation how they may be closer when they get older or my memories of being a lot older than my sisters. If someone has all girls, I feel like we have something in common because we have all girls. I imagine people with twins, three kids, four plus kids etc, have a perceived identity around that family configuration. In fact, I think most people tend to follow-up the least if you have one boy and one girl that it isn't unique in some way. Talking about family configuration identity, I think it is different for the dad that has all girls, not bad or that their life isn't complete without a son, just different. I know my DH gets way more attention taking the girls out to the mall by himself, than I would get with the girls, or he would get if he had two boys with him. There was also an article I remember reading that there were differences in boys raised in all boy households, versus boys raised in households with a sister. So anyway, I'm just saying these comments for better or worse have been around atleast 30 years since I can remember and I'm sure I have made silly twin questions that everyone asks just as I have gotten the trying for a boy comment. |
no, i don't think you should be "offended" because some one asks you a question like that. i don't think it implies that you SHOULD be disappointed, it is just a question about how you feel about something. it is, in fact, a neutral question. if you had a boy and were pregnant with a girl, would you be offended by the same question? sure, you have the right to be annoyed and offended by just about anything, I guess. I just don't see why you want to be. now, if someone looked at you and said "wow, that's going to be an ugly baby" THEN you can be offended.
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I have 2 boys and love it. Really thought I wanted a girl the second time around but LO is such a little sunshine. We will probably have a third. I'm a little scared to have a girl now! But like a PP said, I will get the kids I am supposed to have.
And speaking of stupid things people say, I had my oldest as an unwed teen mom. People still constantly asked when I would give him a sibling. Wow. |
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I have two girls and am pregnant with a third. I will find out what it is when it comes out. When I had my second girl, someone asked me if I was disappointed that she wasn't a girl. With this one, everyone is saying "I hope you get your boy" or "What does your husband want?"
I really don't care, I prefer a healthy baby to a penis or vagina. But if I do have a boy, I hope people have enough sense to not say in front of my 2nd child, "you finally got your boy" like she was some sort of disappointment. |
They won't. Prepare yourself now. |
But sometimes, it goes beyond just a question. Sometimes it's practically a DEMAND that I try for a boy [two girls here]. Hello, I'm 38 years old and I just had a baby. Do you really think I want to take the 1/6 risk of Downs just to try for a boy?! Anyways, I don't say that. I turn it around and tell them to try for [choose a gender], even if they are already grandmas. |