Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really hard to find gender neutral gifts and buying baby clothes is usually fun. Buying gender neutral baby clothes is not really fun. And, people who keep from learning the gender or keep their preferred names secret are usually pretty obnoxious. Sorry op
Hi, welcome to 2019. Have you met the Internet? It's pretty great. If you use this search engine called "Google" and type in gender-neutral baby clothes, a huge array of options at nearly all price points will be presented to you. Wowie, zowie! Did I just blow your mind?
I don’t find buying baby clothes on the internet fun. It’s the one thing that I still enjoy buying in the store. This is just my opinion, other people can think whatever. I’m just giving op another perspective. Maybe her MIL is not super savvy about shopping on the internet. Maybe someone has some special gendered baby item they want to give to her. Who knows?
In my experience, the people who don’t find out or keep baby names secret etc. tend to be people who want to draw attention to themselves and their “special” choices.
I totally agree. It must be some millennial nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn’t you want to know? Stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Hey, op! It’s just small talk. People can say “I wish I knew” or “I was glad to know” without you thinking they are judging your choices. They are not miffed. Just roll with it. You are acting like you are doing something so different and worth comment. You’re not. More people have done it your way than not. And nobody really cares that much about your baby.
Anonymous wrote:We didn't find out for either of our kids either. For the first it was because we struggled to get pregnant and it was just our way of trying to inject something "fun" or "interesting" back into the process. Plus, we were so happy to be pregnant that we just did not care what the sex of the baby was. Then, we just decided it would work just as well for the second. If I felt strongly one way or another, I would have found out beforehand. I wasn't trying to be an asshole, as another poster indicated. DH and I were doing what worked for us.
There were definitely people who reacted negatively to our decision, but oh well? Their problem.
We also didn't share names ahead of time and again it wasn't because we were trying to be assholes or get more attention, it was because we didn't want to hear other people's opinions. I knew there would be people who didn't like our choices and I didn't want to hear it.
OP, you do you - if anyone feels that strongly about the choices you are making, it says more about them than you.
Anonymous wrote:Hey, op! It’s just small talk. People can say “I wish I knew” or “I was glad to know” without you thinking they are judging your choices. They are not miffed. Just roll with it. You are acting like you are doing something so different and worth comment. You’re not. More people have done it your way than not. And nobody really cares that much about your baby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really hard to find gender neutral gifts and buying baby clothes is usually fun. Buying gender neutral baby clothes is not really fun. And, people who keep from learning the gender or keep their preferred names secret are usually pretty obnoxious. Sorry op
Hi, welcome to 2019. Have you met the Internet? It's pretty great. If you use this search engine called "Google" and type in gender-neutral baby clothes, a huge array of options at nearly all price points will be presented to you. Wowie, zowie! Did I just blow your mind?
I don’t find buying baby clothes on the internet fun. It’s the one thing that I still enjoy buying in the store. This is just my opinion, other people can think whatever. I’m just giving op another perspective. Maybe her MIL is not super savvy about shopping on the internet. Maybe someone has some special gendered baby item they want to give to her. Who knows?
In my experience, the people who don’t find out or keep baby names secret etc. tend to be people who want to draw attention to themselves and their “special” choices.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know how you don't know what gender your baby is. Didn't you watch the anatomy scan? I knew the sex of our kids before the techs said a word. Boys are pretty obvious...