Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom of a boy #1 and girl #2 here, I would pick a girl if you ever want to feel like having another child. There are some crazy girl babies, but boys will run you ragged 100%.
This is ridiculous and not helpful towards OPs question. Signed, mother of an extremely calm, easy 6 year old boy who slept 12 hours through the night starting at 9 weeks and spends much of the day quietly reading.
Personally, I needed a VERY large gap. Most of my friends with boys were the same. Obviously I don't know you, but not a single friend with a boy had an easy go of it.
Anonymous wrote:We have multiple male embryos and one female. Female one was ranked the lowest in genetic testing (unsure about grading). Doctor said to let them know if we have a sex preference. Shouldn’t they advise against going with the female?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My embryos were heavily skewed towards one sex, like I had four of one sex and one of the other. For my first transfer I chose the sex that I had the most of, that way, if it did not take, I wouldn’t feel like I lost my only chance for the sex I only had one of. I was worried it being my first transfer I may find some other infertility issue related to implantation during the process that led to failure. Does that make sense? I want more than one and ideally different genders, so that factored into my decision as well.
Was it a fresh transfer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom of a boy #1 and girl #2 here, I would pick a girl if you ever want to feel like having another child. There are some crazy girl babies, but boys will run you ragged 100%.
This is ridiculous and not helpful towards OPs question. Signed, mother of an extremely calm, easy 6 year old boy who slept 12 hours through the night starting at 9 weeks and spends much of the day quietly reading.
Anonymous wrote:Mom of a boy #1 and girl #2 here, I would pick a girl if you ever want to feel like having another child. There are some crazy girl babies, but boys will run you ragged 100%.
Anonymous wrote:My embryos were heavily skewed towards one sex, like I had four of one sex and one of the other. For my first transfer I chose the sex that I had the most of, that way, if it did not take, I wouldn’t feel like I lost my only chance for the sex I only had one of. I was worried it being my first transfer I may find some other infertility issue related to implantation during the process that led to failure. Does that make sense? I want more than one and ideally different genders, so that factored into my decision as well.