Anonymous wrote:My #2 DD wore #1 DS baby clothes all the time. I would add some pink for specal occasions but for day to day onsies...anything goes. I am now paying college tuition and have NO regrets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would it possibly bother me?
I don't know. I'm the person who lent them the costume, a hand me down from my own kids, so I'm clearly not bothered.
I was surprised because this is grandchild number 9 in the family, and no one has batted an eye at little boys wearing their sister's dress ups, or putting a baby girl in an outfit with trucks on it, or anything like that. So, I was kind of surprised when people were like "No, I wouldn't do that" about this. I thought I'd ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still chortle at the memory of the African American ladies of our daycare telling my Asian husband, who was responsible for pick-up and drop-off, that they didn't want my 6 months old son dressed in pink girly outfits.
The back story is that at the second trimester ultrasound, we were told he was a girl. Then he was born premature (no other ultrasound), but my aunt had already sent us pink outfits, and we'd already bought a pink stroller. So he went to daycare with a variety of different boy and girl outfits. As if we cared! And he certainly didn't!
People are weird. You laugh. It's fine.
We did abandon this daycare shortly thereafter, because they weren't very good, and the clothes issue was the just the tip of the iceberg.
I don't understand what race has to do with this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still chortle at the memory of the African American ladies of our daycare telling my Asian husband, who was responsible for pick-up and drop-off, that they didn't want my 6 months old son dressed in pink girly outfits.
The back story is that at the second trimester ultrasound, we were told he was a girl. Then he was born premature (no other ultrasound), but my aunt had already sent us pink outfits, and we'd already bought a pink stroller. So he went to daycare with a variety of different boy and girl outfits. As if we cared! And he certainly didn't!
People are weird. You laugh. It's fine.
We did abandon this daycare shortly thereafter, because they weren't very good, and the clothes issue was the just the tip of the iceberg.
I don't understand what race has to do with this?
Anonymous wrote:I still chortle at the memory of the African American ladies of our daycare telling my Asian husband, who was responsible for pick-up and drop-off, that they didn't want my 6 months old son dressed in pink girly outfits.
The back story is that at the second trimester ultrasound, we were told he was a girl. Then he was born premature (no other ultrasound), but my aunt had already sent us pink outfits, and we'd already bought a pink stroller. So he went to daycare with a variety of different boy and girl outfits. As if we cared! And he certainly didn't!
People are weird. You laugh. It's fine.
We did abandon this daycare shortly thereafter, because they weren't very good, and the clothes issue was the just the tip of the iceberg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still chortle at the memory of the African American ladies of our daycare telling my Asian husband, who was responsible for pick-up and drop-off, that they didn't want my 6 months old son dressed in pink girly outfits.
The back story is that at the second trimester ultrasound, we were told he was a girl. Then he was born premature (no other ultrasound), but my aunt had already sent us pink outfits, and we'd already bought a pink stroller. So he went to daycare with a variety of different boy and girl outfits. As if we cared! And he certainly didn't!
People are weird. You laugh. It's fine.
We did abandon this daycare shortly thereafter, because they weren't very good, and the clothes issue was the just the tip of the iceberg.
That is so weird of them but also I’ve never heard of a gender reveal being incorrect. The reason I didn’t find out the sex of my baby before she was born was that I didn’t want my great aunts send super frilly dresses!
I've heard of it plenty of times when they determine gender via ultrasound (usually they just can't see). It's usually a presumed girl who turns out to be a boy.
It's never wrong if it's NIPT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still chortle at the memory of the African American ladies of our daycare telling my Asian husband, who was responsible for pick-up and drop-off, that they didn't want my 6 months old son dressed in pink girly outfits.
The back story is that at the second trimester ultrasound, we were told he was a girl. Then he was born premature (no other ultrasound), but my aunt had already sent us pink outfits, and we'd already bought a pink stroller. So he went to daycare with a variety of different boy and girl outfits. As if we cared! And he certainly didn't!
People are weird. You laugh. It's fine.
We did abandon this daycare shortly thereafter, because they weren't very good, and the clothes issue was the just the tip of the iceberg.
That is so weird of them but also I’ve never heard of a gender reveal being incorrect. The reason I didn’t find out the sex of my baby before she was born was that I didn’t want my great aunts send super frilly dresses!