Anonymous wrote:I have an older boy (5) and a younger girl (2). I care about what both wear, but I would say I spend 5x money on older boy's clothing because I need to dress him clean to daycare. My younger girl wears a lot of hand-me-down from her brother, and I think she looks cute in boy's print clothing with pigtails. And, I give her a little bit accessories here & there. She does not seem to care what she wears, and she loves them all. To her, they are all new.
I have a ton of pictures of first child, and a few for second child. The main reason is because I cannot take picture with 2 kids running around, and they wear pajamas all the time during this pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your friend really watches your parenting closely doesn’t she? With a friend like that, who needs enemies? Why are you friends with someone who is so judgmental?
Listen, you are your children’s parent. It is literally up to you what you think is best for them.
Like it or not, girls and boys are actually different. And so is each individual child. I trust you as the parent know your children better than your friend does.
This is so simplistic. Using this logic there's apparently nothing a parent can do wrong. This one needed to be beat with a belt with nails on the end, how dare you question me, I know my children!!
Several people have asked OP whether the reason for the disparity is because her daughter cared more about clothes and her son doesn't care, or whether she was the driver behind going all out for her DD's clothes, and she has not responded. The assumption that it must be for a nongendered reason, even though none has been provided, and that OP's friend who actually knows her knows less about the situation than you, a person who has invented exculpatory details in her head, feels extremely defensive.
OP there's nothing wrong with giving some thought to this and making sure you're comfortable with your choices. The people insisting that nothing about your parenting choices can ever be questioned or you're a bad, childless friend who's actually a hater!!! sound like something off of 16 and Pregnant to me.
OP here- I did not mean to avoid that. I would say that my daughter does care more about clothes so that could easily be a reason for the dress example. Like I said before, her other examples were related to behavior and expectations so not clothing related. (I am learning from reading this board that talking about clothing and gender can really fire people up!!)
The point about favoritism makes me feel very defensive because of course, no parent wants to acknowledge any favoritism. I would say that if anything, I baby my son and I have a harder time setting clear boundaries/restrictions with him. But I will continue think about that too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your friend really watches your parenting closely doesn’t she? With a friend like that, who needs enemies? Why are you friends with someone who is so judgmental?
Listen, you are your children’s parent. It is literally up to you what you think is best for them.
Like it or not, girls and boys are actually different. And so is each individual child. I trust you as the parent know your children better than your friend does.
This is so simplistic. Using this logic there's apparently nothing a parent can do wrong. This one needed to be beat with a belt with nails on the end, how dare you question me, I know my children!!
Several people have asked OP whether the reason for the disparity is because her daughter cared more about clothes and her son doesn't care, or whether she was the driver behind going all out for her DD's clothes, and she has not responded. The assumption that it must be for a nongendered reason, even though none has been provided, and that OP's friend who actually knows her knows less about the situation than you, a person who has invented exculpatory details in her head, feels extremely defensive.
OP there's nothing wrong with giving some thought to this and making sure you're comfortable with your choices. The people insisting that nothing about your parenting choices can ever be questioned or you're a bad, childless friend who's actually a hater!!! sound like something off of 16 and Pregnant to me.
Anonymous wrote:Your friend really watches your parenting closely doesn’t she? With a friend like that, who needs enemies? Why are you friends with someone who is so judgmental?
Listen, you are your children’s parent. It is literally up to you what you think is best for them.
Like it or not, girls and boys are actually different. And so is each individual child. I trust you as the parent know your children better than your friend does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the friend who mentioned this have kids? I cannot imagine remembering something like this nor mentioning something like this about a friend's children.
I can’t remember what my own kid wore yesterday, never mind what someone else’s kid wore 4 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- she actually gave several examples but that was the most concrete. Others were much more nuanced and context specific... but had to do with behavior and expectations for independence.
I do think that with all we are learning about gender and identity it is good to explore within ourselves. I also think that some people are getting lost in the weeds of wokeness and losing sight of the individual child in front of them.
My friend is a dear dear friend so it truly wasn’t an offensive comment. We have conversations like this often and she is so good at wording her comments in a way that genuinely doesn’t make me feel offended or defensive. It was a very open dialogue. For what it is worth, she has several children (twins included) and they are all the same gender.
Anonymous wrote:Does the friend who mentioned this have kids? I cannot imagine remembering something like this nor mentioning something like this about a friend's children.