Anonymous wrote:As a lifelong tomboy (a child who was like me would probably identify as nonbinary in the present day), I really wanted a son and not a daughter. I was hoping for a childhood of cars and robots and such.
Well, I got a boy, but he's not a "boy's boy". He's definitely got boy energy and rambunctiousness, but he loves fashion, art, and a lot of girly things. He's awesome anyway.
Life has a way of doing the unexpected and the ironic. Appreciate what you have.
Anonymous wrote:In my experience, sons don't call their moms when they grow up as much, they're not as close, they gravitate to the wife's family (if they marry), etc.
Anonymous wrote:Since this is anonymous OP, I'll admit that I'm so glad I have two daughters for exactly the reasons you outlined. DH loves his parents and is a dutiful Asian son but the level of closeness and frequency of communication is nothing like his sister has with their mom. I don't even like my own mom that much but my kids spend a ton of time at her house and we're in regular communication. It's just a different type of relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Try being grateful that you have children. Stop feeling sorry for yourself. You don’t need to seek others for suggestions, you already know this. I feel sorry for the children you have for not being appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:OP I get it. I have 2 teenage sons. Love them to pieces. But mine don’t share the magical brotherly bond that others have spoken of. In fact they rarely talk to one another and are not chatty huggers with me or my spouse. I typically get one or two word conversations from them in the evenings and tend to learn more about what’s going on at school from their friends’s parents. It is a constant struggle to do things as a family because of their resistance to the concept of family time. They are loners at heart.
For me it’s not a longing for a daughter. It’s a longing for kids who are closer to what some of the PP have written about, kids who are expressive and open. If you have that then it doesn’t matter the gender. I have made my peace with knowing I’m never going to have a relationship with my sons that is characterized by conversation and based on activities I enjoy. They are who they are and I can appreciate their special qualities such as the fact that they have never said a mean word about or to other kids. They are accepting of classmates with special needs. They know a lot about the things that interest them, so that is where I sometimes get more than a short one word conversation with them, by engaging them where they’re at.
FWIW my sons are very like my own brothers and have also inherited the extreme introvert tendencies of my father-in-law. So look around at your families to see the personalities your sons might have inherited. That might help if you see what the adult men in your families are like. It doesn’t mean they’ll be the same. But genetics can be powerful.
Think about them in terms of their personalities rather than gender.
Anonymous wrote:OP I get it. I have 2 teenage sons. Love them to pieces. But mine don’t share the magical brotherly bond that others have spoken of. In fact they rarely talk to one another and are not chatty huggers with me or my spouse. I typically get one or two word conversations from them in the evenings and tend to learn more about what’s going on at school from their friends’s parents. It is a constant struggle to do things as a family because of their resistance to the concept of family time. They are loners at heart.
For me it’s not a longing for a daughter. It’s a longing for kids who are closer to what some of the PP have written about, kids who are expressive and open. If you have that then it doesn’t matter the gender. I have made my peace with knowing I’m never going to have a relationship with my sons that is characterized by conversation and based on activities I enjoy. They are who they are and I can appreciate their special qualities such as the fact that they have never said a mean word about or to other kids. They are accepting of classmates with special needs. They know a lot about the things that interest them, so that is where I sometimes get more than a short one word conversation with them, by engaging them where they’re at.
FWIW my sons are very like my own brothers and have also inherited the extreme introvert tendencies of my father-in-law. So look around at your families to see the personalities your sons might have inherited. That might help if you see what the adult men in your families are like. It doesn’t mean they’ll be the same. But genetics can be powerful.
Think about them in terms of their personalities rather than gender.