DD roleplays with a mommy and daddy even though she has 2 moms

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My friend's daughter now almost two has started calling her other mommy (the birth mother's wife) "Daddy." She has never been in day care, never watched TV socializes with families of every possible configuration, and has never been guided in what to call her other mother. She came up with "Daddy" entirely on her own.

That said, I think to her "Daddy" simply means "loving parent" not "loving parent with a penis."


This was kind of what I was thinking. Everyone else has a mommy and daddy to her. I'm not sure she gets the gender association with those titles at age 2.5, she just knows that families are made up of a "mommy" and a "daddy". Which is why two ken dolls would also be mommy and daddy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.


NP here. I think you are over-reacting, and seeing "hatred" where someone else is seeing something straightforward. There are many types of families, and they are all completely valid, I agree with you. But I think we should recognize that every child has a biological mother and a biological father, and this is where we come from. By acting as if this is not "how children are made," you deny that child their rightful father and mother, and there is something deeply unsettling and wrong about that. Now, there are your birth parents, and there is your family, and they may be completely different. But don't try to deny that the world goes around because men and women make babies.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.


NP here. I think you are over-reacting, and seeing "hatred" where someone else is seeing something straightforward. There are many types of families, and they are all completely valid, I agree with you. But I think we should recognize that every child has a biological mother and a biological father, and this is where we come from. By acting as if this is not "how children are made," you deny that child their rightful father and mother, and there is something deeply unsettling and wrong about that. Now, there are your birth parents, and there is your family, and they may be completely different. But don't try to deny that the world goes around because men and women make babies.


Another new poster, and I agree with you. I don't see hatred in pp's post either. My ds recently asked me some questions about gay people and gay families and it wasn't easy to explain or answer all of his questions, but I think I did ok answering what he asked me. One of the things he asked was if it was "normal" for a family to have two dads or two moms and I had to think carefully before answering him, because my answer was "no", but I didn't want him to think he shouldn't be accepting and respectful towards that idea either. Same thing when he asked me if it was a bad word to say "gay". I told him that if you are using it to insult somebody, yes, it's a bad word, but if you are using it to describe a person that is gay then no.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.


NP here. I think you are over-reacting, and seeing "hatred" where someone else is seeing something straightforward. There are many types of families, and they are all completely valid, I agree with you. But I think we should recognize that every child has a biological mother and a biological father, and this is where we come from. By acting as if this is not "how children are made," you deny that child their rightful father and mother, and there is something deeply unsettling and wrong about that. Now, there are your birth parents, and there is your family, and they may be completely different. But don't try to deny that the world goes around because men and women make babies.


Exactly. I am the PP who posted the "every child has a bio mom and dad" post. I did not mean it hatefully. I just wish people would consider the deeply primal need of all children to understand where they came from. We would look aghast at adoptive parents who tried to tell a child that their biological parentage was insignificant because they, the adoptive parents, are the REAL parents -- or worse yet, concealed a child's status as an adoptee entirely. But we make all these brain-bending exceptions for gay parents and parents who rely on sperm/egg donors or surrogates, in the interest of furthering the idea that "love makes a family."

Love DOES make a family. But we don't need to downplay the significance of our biological origins in order to make that more true. That's not in the best interest of the children, who deserve to know the truth about where they came from.
Anonymous
Um, the pp said OP's child doesn't have two moms and that OP is trying to brain wash her child into thinking that she does. If you're going to shit on someone else's family, at least have the courage to own your bigotry. A child's parents are the ones who actually parent her, like OP and her wife.

I'm pretty sure the gay and lesbian parents on this thread are fine with their kids knowing that their families are less common than mom-dad families. We just don't want anyone telling us we're less than other families, and saying only one mom in a couple is actually a mom is a jerky thing to do.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Um, the pp said OP's child doesn't have two moms and that OP is trying to brain wash her child into thinking that she does. If you're going to shit on someone else's family, at least have the courage to own your bigotry. A child's parents are the ones who actually parent her, like OP and her wife.

I'm pretty sure the gay and lesbian parents on this thread are fine with their kids knowing that their families are less common than mom-dad families. We just don't want anyone telling us we're less than other families, and saying only one mom in a couple is actually a mom is a jerky thing to do.


The kid can have two moms, but at least one is going to be an adoptive mom. That is reality. A person can only have one biological mother and one biological father, barring unnatural technological intervention. There's nothing hateful about saying that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Um, the pp said OP's child doesn't have two moms and that OP is trying to brain wash her child into thinking that she does. If you're going to shit on someone else's family, at least have the courage to own your bigotry. A child's parents are the ones who actually parent her, like OP and her wife.

I'm pretty sure the gay and lesbian parents on this thread are fine with their kids knowing that their families are less common than mom-dad families. We just don't want anyone telling us we're less than other families, and saying only one mom in a couple is actually a mom is a jerky thing to do.


The kid can have two moms, but at least one is going to be an adoptive mom. That is reality. A person can only have one biological mother and one biological father, barring unnatural technological intervention. There's nothing hateful about saying that.


An adoptive mom is a mom.

To say otherwise is indeed hateful.

Use of terms such as "brainwash" is also hateful.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.


NP here. I think you are over-reacting, and seeing "hatred" where someone else is seeing something straightforward. There are many types of families, and they are all completely valid, I agree with you. But I think we should recognize that every child has a biological mother and a biological father, and this is where we come from. By acting as if this is not "how children are made," you deny that child their rightful father and mother, and there is something deeply unsettling and wrong about that. Now, there are your birth parents, and there is your family, and they may be completely different. But don't try to deny that the world goes around because men and women make babies.


Exactly. I am the PP who posted the "every child has a bio mom and dad" post. I did not mean it hatefully. I just wish people would consider the deeply primal need of all children to understand where they came from. We would look aghast at adoptive parents who tried to tell a child that their biological parentage was insignificant because they, the adoptive parents, are the REAL parents -- or worse yet, concealed a child's status as an adoptee entirely. But we make all these brain-bending exceptions for gay parents and parents who rely on sperm/egg donors or surrogates, in the interest of furthering the idea that "love makes a family."

Love DOES make a family. But we don't need to downplay the significance of our biological origins in order to make that more true. That's not in the best interest of the children, who deserve to know the truth about where they came from.


Do you actually know any gay families with children? They discuss "where did I come from" questions at the time they arise, just like straight-parented families do.

NONE of them have "downplayed" their biological origins. But the children understand that they have two moms, or two dads. Because those are the parents raising them.

Really. Children are capable of understanding "where they came from" even it is isn't the hetero mom-and-dad model. And it doesn't bother or confuse them.

Seriously, I think the RAMPANT ignorance on this thread must be a result of lack of exposure. I just moved here from twenty years in the Bay Area, and gay-parented families are everywhere, and they're just as "regular" and boring as any other family. And their kids are fine.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.


NP here. I think you are over-reacting, and seeing "hatred" where someone else is seeing something straightforward. There are many types of families, and they are all completely valid, I agree with you. But I think we should recognize that every child has a biological mother and a biological father, and this is where we come from. By acting as if this is not "how children are made," you deny that child their rightful father and mother, and there is something deeply unsettling and wrong about that. Now, there are your birth parents, and there is your family, and they may be completely different. But don't try to deny that the world goes around because men and women make babies.


Exactly. I am the PP who posted the "every child has a bio mom and dad" post. I did not mean it hatefully. I just wish people would consider the deeply primal need of all children to understand where they came from. We would look aghast at adoptive parents who tried to tell a child that their biological parentage was insignificant because they, the adoptive parents, are the REAL parents -- or worse yet, concealed a child's status as an adoptee entirely. But we make all these brain-bending exceptions for gay parents and parents who rely on sperm/egg donors or surrogates, in the interest of furthering the idea that "love makes a family."

Love DOES make a family. But we don't need to downplay the significance of our biological origins in order to make that more true. That's not in the best interest of the children, who deserve to know the truth about where they came from.


Do you actually know any gay families with children? They discuss "where did I come from" questions at the time they arise, just like straight-parented families do.

NONE of them have "downplayed" their biological origins. But the children understand that they have two moms, or two dads. Because those are the parents raising them.

Really. Children are capable of understanding "where they came from" even it is isn't the hetero mom-and-dad model. And it doesn't bother or confuse them.

Seriously, I think the RAMPANT ignorance on this thread must be a result of lack of exposure. I just moved here from twenty years in the Bay Area, and gay-parented families are everywhere, and they're just as "regular" and boring as any other family. And their kids are fine.




Maybe you've been brainwashed?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.


NP here. I think you are over-reacting, and seeing "hatred" where someone else is seeing something straightforward. There are many types of families, and they are all completely valid, I agree with you. But I think we should recognize that every child has a biological mother and a biological father, and this is where we come from. By acting as if this is not "how children are made," you deny that child their rightful father and mother, and there is something deeply unsettling and wrong about that. Now, there are your birth parents, and there is your family, and they may be completely different. But don't try to deny that the world goes around because men and women make babies.


Exactly. I am the PP who posted the "every child has a bio mom and dad" post. I did not mean it hatefully. I just wish people would consider the deeply primal need of all children to understand where they came from. We would look aghast at adoptive parents who tried to tell a child that their biological parentage was insignificant because they, the adoptive parents, are the REAL parents -- or worse yet, concealed a child's status as an adoptee entirely. But we make all these brain-bending exceptions for gay parents and parents who rely on sperm/egg donors or surrogates, in the interest of furthering the idea that "love makes a family."

Love DOES make a family. But we don't need to downplay the significance of our biological origins in order to make that more true. That's not in the best interest of the children, who deserve to know the truth about where they came from.


Do you actually know any gay families with children? They discuss "where did I come from" questions at the time they arise, just like straight-parented families do.

NONE of them have "downplayed" their biological origins. But the children understand that they have two moms, or two dads. Because those are the parents raising them.

Really. Children are capable of understanding "where they came from" even it is isn't the hetero mom-and-dad model. And it doesn't bother or confuse them.

Seriously, I think the RAMPANT ignorance on this thread must be a result of lack of exposure. I just moved here from twenty years in the Bay Area, and gay-parented families are everywhere, and they're just as "regular" and boring as any other family. And their kids are fine.




I know several gay couples with children (some of couples are my peers, and some of the children of the couples are my peers). In every single case, the children are the products of one parent's previous heterosexual relationship. I don't know how common this is statistically compared to gay couples who adopt or use ART; these are just the families I've run into in my own life. Some of their kids are fine, some are not -- a lot depends on how the parents (all of them -- bio, step, adoptive, whatever) handled things. Their issues are obviously a lot different than those of kids who never knew one or more of their biological parents, though.
Anonymous
I have no comments for op but would like to say the hypocrisy on this forum is unbelievable. If op had been a straight parent coming on here wondering why her daughter was playing with two barbies, the replies would have (rightfully) skewered the poster into oblivion. Why not the same treatment for op?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Um, the pp said OP's child doesn't have two moms and that OP is trying to brain wash her child into thinking that she does. If you're going to shit on someone else's family, at least have the courage to own your bigotry. A child's parents are the ones who actually parent her, like OP and her wife.

I'm pretty sure the gay and lesbian parents on this thread are fine with their kids knowing that their families are less common than mom-dad families. We just don't want anyone telling us we're less than other families, and saying only one mom in a couple is actually a mom is a jerky thing to do.


-1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations, your daughter is normal. Literally every child on earth has a biological mother and a biological father, even your daughter. That is how babies are made. It is normal and healthy for kids to understand that and playact it.

You can raise her to be accepting of her circumstances, and those of other kids who are missing one or both of their biological parents. You can raise her to love and appreciate her adoptive parent or parents. But the fact that you are are a grown adult trying to brainwash her into believing she actually HAS "two moms" and that having "two moms" is a normal and natural thing is more likely to confuse the hell out of her than playing house with Ken and Barbie.


I would really like to know why you would come on this forum and write such a thing? There are many types of families and as long as the child is loved and cared for, what does it matter the configuration? I feel sad to think this child will face confusion, but not because of her moms, but because of narrow-minded people like you. You should spend some time reflecting on where your unnecessary hatred comes from. If you really care about children and their happiness, find a way to embrace others who are different from you.


NP here. I think you are over-reacting, and seeing "hatred" where someone else is seeing something straightforward. There are many types of families, and they are all completely valid, I agree with you. But I think we should recognize that every child has a biological mother and a biological father, and this is where we come from. By acting as if this is not "how children are made," you deny that child their rightful father and mother, and there is something deeply unsettling and wrong about that. Now, there are your birth parents, and there is your family, and they may be completely different. But don't try to deny that the world goes around because men and women make babies.


Another new poster, and I agree with you. I don't see hatred in pp's post either. My ds recently asked me some questions about gay people and gay families and it wasn't easy to explain or answer all of his questions, but I think I did ok answering what he asked me. One of the things he asked was if it was "normal" for a family to have two dads or two moms and I had to think carefully before answering him, because my answer was "no", but I didn't want him to think he shouldn't be accepting and respectful towards that idea either. Same thing when he asked me if it was a bad word to say "gay". I told him that if you are using it to insult somebody, yes, it's a bad word, but if you are using it to describe a person that is gay then no.


I could possibly see the answer being "no" if the question were is this common or typical, but normal?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

Another new poster, and I agree with you. I don't see hatred in pp's post either. My ds recently asked me some questions about gay people and gay families and it wasn't easy to explain or answer all of his questions, but I think I did ok answering what he asked me. One of the things he asked was if it was "normal" for a family to have two dads or two moms and I had to think carefully before answering him, because my answer was "no", but I didn't want him to think he shouldn't be accepting and respectful towards that idea either. Same thing when he asked me if it was a bad word to say "gay". I told him that if you are using it to insult somebody, yes, it's a bad word, but if you are using it to describe a person that is gay then no.


I could possibly see the answer being "no" if the question were is this common or typical, but normal?


nor·mal nôrm?l

adjective
conforming to a standard; usual, typical, or expected.
synonyms: usual, standard, ordinary, customary, conventional, habitual, accustomed, expected, wonted; More
antonyms: unusual

noun: normal; plural noun: normals
the usual, average, or typical state or condition.

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