| Hopefully it's a completely differnt race - that'll really drive your mom up the wall. Lolol |
I know this is hard for "grandma" to believe, but it's NOT ABOUT HER. Grandparent role is not actually necessary. Nice to have, great to have a wonderful grandma. But it is such a secondary role to parent. Grandma doesn't get a vote, regardless of genetic grandchild or not! Take a seat; a BACK seat. |
| I honestly do not think it's anyone's business. I would just tell her they were mine. It's a personal conversation many years down the road between you and your child. |
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It sounds like you and your mom have talked about this a bit already and you don't object to her knowing.
I'd just tell her. It'll be awkward for you, you'll cry, she'll cry, you'll both just really be happy that you're pregnant, and she'll support you. It'll make things easier and more emotionally-level when YOUR baby arrives. Good luck! |
| I have not read the entire thread but the whole genetics thing and wanting a child to look like the family is so ridiculous to me. I have a child who is genetically mine and DH's but I can't stand how people obsess over who the child looks like. Honestly she is her own person and I don't care one bit. We had trouble conceiving and were considering adoption and DH was worried that his mother would not treat the child the same since the child would not be the genetic grandchild. He vowed to cut off ties to his mother if she did that. OP, as a mother I can tell you that this will not matter one bit to you once your baby is here. If it's an issue for your mother, that is her loss and problem. It's not about her. |
Agreed. |
It's not about her so why would op feel the need to lie? She should know the truth. |
This. Tell her. Her sadness is hers to deal with, and she deserves to know before the baby arrives. Congratulations! |
I'm so annoyed with people who assume everybody else is just like them! It may be ridiculous to pp, but it certainly was not to me. I got lucky, but if I couldn't have a genetic child, I was considering donor egg route. You have no clue about what will matter to op and her family. The fact that you don't know this plight doesn't really give you a useful insight into the issue of genetic v. donor. |
She only "deserves to know" whatever OP chooses to tell her. Did you tell your mom THE TRUTH about which position you used to get knocked up? |
Maybe. But FWIW, I was adopted, and my parents and extended family still talk that way. Once the actual baby is here, you kind of forget about all that stuff. |
OK but straight genetic children are not guaranteed to be clones of the parents either. My DE DS however, does look exactly like his father. But that has nothing to do with grandmother. |
| DE mom here: I never told my mother, which also meant my father since they shred everything. Dad would have been OK, but mom would have shared with me all the differences between my children and my sibs kids. She is a bit mean. |
+1 My daughter looks exactly like me--strangers at the playground can pick her out from a group as my kid. It would be pretty sad if my MIL had her hopes pinned on having a grandchild who looked like her or her son. No one knows how the genes are going to combine. I really don't know what I would do in the OP's shoes, mostly because I cannot imagine my mother being anything but delighted to have a grandchild, regardless of how that baby arrived. But really, if I thought someone wasn't going to be supportive, I probably wouldn't tell them. |
| I would not tell her. This is such a personal piece of information that the thought of her disregarding your and your child's privacy to blab it all to whomever would listen is making me cringe, hard. Who knows, maybe your child wouldn't care at all about it being public knowledge, but it's her decision whether it should be public, and hers alone. I would lie through my teeth if I cannot trust my mom with something this sensitive. |