|
It is Ok to be sad. I doubt you and your daughter would have had a special bond of any kind different than you and your boys, but as a very girl identified woman who wanted three girls and got one boy and one girl, I completely understand your feeling. I love having a daughter. We don't have a special bond, but I love being a mom to a girl and would feel the way you feel if things were different.
But You know this sadness is fleeting. it will come and go, but the joy in your boys will be a permanent presence. |
| Be grateful you have to healthy boys. You sound like my sister in law who still can't get over that she just had another son. Her baby is 3 months old and she's already focusing on number 3 (hoping for a girl) rather than her son. |
True. I have one son and one daughter. My daughter would prefer playing ball with her brother and dad to hanging out at the spa anyday. I agree with a PP that perhaps you could create a special bond with a niece, cousin, etc.
|
This exactly |
| girls hate their moms at age 11-30 |
|
I completely understand, OP. I too only have sons and would love to have a daughter. I don't really have advice except to say that you try to enjoy your sons as much as you can and help them become well-rounded, sensitive, caring people. And when you are feeling down, try to remember how blessed you are to have 3 precious children.
|
|
I think there is a certain type of "reverence" that sons have for their moms that daughters don't. Boys can adore their momma in ways that girls generally don't - esp. if you raise them to be kind and respectful.
I have 2 sons (no daughters) and this is what I try to keep in mind. |
| To state the obvious, you should have left it at "I know this sounds ridiculous . . . ." |
This was me! My father's cousin had three boys and I became "the daughter he and his wife never had" and they spoiled me rotten. Yep, I had parents, but I also got to enjoy being part of another family. This poster has good advice - maybe there is a young girl in your or your husband's family that you can build a relationship with. Surely, it's not the same as having a daughter of your own ... but maybe it will turn out to be WAY MORE FUN! |
This is why I also hope for a daughter some day (don't know what #2 is yet). My son is so fun, and I really love raising a boy, and think I'd enjoy having a house full of boys. But the thought of some day being relegated to the role of mother in law makes me sad .
Of course, intellectually, I know that my son(s) could be gay, or perhaps marry an orphan, and therefore not have to deal with competition from another family...or that any daughter's I'd have would not have a close relationship with me, or that none of my kids would get married, or maybe they'd join the foreign service and raise their family overseas and I'd be lucky to see them once a year. But I figure in any of those situations, I'd have many years to come to terms with it and mourn the loss of the extended family I've imagined. When you find out in one instant that the sex of your child does not match what you've imagined, you mourn it all at once. So it's okay to feel these feelings and allow yourself to process them. |
|
i count my 2 daughters among the greatest blessings of my life. I love having daughters and I would be deeply sad not to have the experience of having daughters.
But I'm an only child with a senile mother who no longer recognizes me (at age 68) and I had to do IVF and spend thousands of dollars to get pregnant. You win some, you lose some in life. You just have to focus on the positive things you've been given. Obnoxious and trite I know. |
| I've had feelings like this but they've gone away as my boys have gotten older. Don't let gender define your expectations for who your kids can be. |
|
I wonder if people feel this way about never having a son. I have one of each, but always wanted a boy and I think I would have always wanted a boy if I hadn't had one.
I think the mother-daughter relationship is intense, which can be as often bad as it is good. Boys love heir mothers and it somehow seems simpler even as adults. |
I'm the pp and I totally agree. My relationship with my mother was amazing but incredibly intense (in a good way) and I feel like it would have been an enormous amount of pressure had I had a girl. There are simply no guarantees of relationship, regardless of gender. I know you said you are one and done but just to mention - when I found out my second child was a boy, I was actually happy (if you had known me prior to having kids you'd never have believed this would be possible because I wanted a girl so badly). I had fallen so in love with my older son that I realized how amazing it is to be a mom of a little boy. Now I have two and I couldn't imagine, or be happier with, anything else. |
| Think about it this way, it is more the personality of the child as to this so-called "unspoken connection". I have more of that with one of my boys than I do with my daughter. She has that with her dad. I can see this son of mine living with or near me forever, my daughter will be gone for good when she is 18, off to conquer the world, just the person she is. |