Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We didn’t find out until DC was born AND I’m feeling a little snarky tonight, so take the following with a grain of salt:
Con: Suffering through condescending / self-congratulatory remarks from other newish moms along the lines of, “Oh, I’m such a planner, I just had to find out in advance!” (Implying I was not planning/preparing because I didn’t know the sex.)
Pro: The satisfaction of knowing you would ace the marshmallow test and that you’ll nurture this skill in your progeny.![]()
I love this so much. Thanks for posting. The "I'm such a planner" is the dumbest thing I heard when I shared that we weren't finding out.
My OB was thrilled we weren't finding out, said there are so few true surprises in life. And I never had an ultrasound tech complain about us not wanting to know.
As other posters said, not knowing/not sharing means folks buy you practical things/what's on your registry, which was great.
Anonymous wrote:We didn’t find out until DC was born AND I’m feeling a little snarky tonight, so take the following with a grain of salt:
Con: Suffering through condescending / self-congratulatory remarks from other newish moms along the lines of, “Oh, I’m such a planner, I just had to find out in advance!” (Implying I was not planning/preparing because I didn’t know the sex.)
Pro: The satisfaction of knowing you would ace the marshmallow test and that you’ll nurture this skill in your progeny.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the con as someone who is high risk is that you stress out the ultrasound techs. I had a lot of scans with my first (over 20), and I had a few techs tell me that it's frustrating for them when the parents are trying to be surprised and that gets in the way of doing their jobs. To them, they can see the baby's sex clear as day and if they are trying to image the baby's kidneys and the genitals are in the picture, that can be stressful.
Those techs sound unprofessional. As the mom it's on you to look away if you don't want to know too much, but the only thing you're asking the techs to do is not announce anything, which is not stressful. I had more than the standard number of scans and the techs ranged from unbothered to excited that we didn't want to find out.
Anonymous wrote:I think the con as someone who is high risk is that you stress out the ultrasound techs. I had a lot of scans with my first (over 20), and I had a few techs tell me that it's frustrating for them when the parents are trying to be surprised and that gets in the way of doing their jobs. To them, they can see the baby's sex clear as day and if they are trying to image the baby's kidneys and the genitals are in the picture, that can be stressful.
Anonymous wrote:I think people who don't find out are often expecting a special moment where the doctor says, "It's a _______.". But both of my babies' births were unexpectedly traumatic with dozens of people in the room, yelling, and a blue, limp non-breathing baby who is hustled to the NICU. I was also at risk with heavy bleeding, so far from completely lucid.
We had the doctor write down the gender after NIPT and put it in an envelope. We opened it over dinner and got to celebrate together. Then we sent blue or pink flowers to the grandparents and great grandparents, who called us so so happily when they received the news.
We didn't get a ton of overly gendered presents. We were having a girl, so one aunt made a few sweet baby dresses by hand. Another great aunt made a sweet baby quilt with pink, blue and yellow flowers.
I really hate all of the guessing conversations that seem to come when someone doesn't find out the gender. It always seems to be the only thing anyone wants to talk about, when it's the least of the life change that is happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people who don't find out are often expecting a special moment where the doctor says, "It's a _______.". But both of my babies' births were unexpectedly traumatic with dozens of people in the room, yelling, and a blue, limp non-breathing baby who is hustled to the NICU. I was also at risk with heavy bleeding, so far from completely lucid.
We had the doctor write down the gender after NIPT and put it in an envelope. We opened it over dinner and got to celebrate together. Then we sent blue or pink flowers to the grandparents and great grandparents, who called us so so happily when they received the news.
We didn't get a ton of overly gendered presents. We were having a girl, so one aunt made a few sweet baby dresses by hand. Another great aunt made a sweet baby quilt with pink, blue and yellow flowers.
I really hate all of the guessing conversations that seem to come when someone doesn't find out the gender. It always seems to be the only thing anyone wants to talk about, when it's the least of the life change that is happening.
My birth was unexpectedly traumatic and we still got the special moment when DH told me "It's a girl." He told me later it was the best moment of his life, which I was a little surprised by (he wanted to find out earlier, although he didn't feel strongly about it). I'm truly sorry your births went terribly and what you're describing sounds terrifying, but I don't really understand what that has to do with finding out the sex before or at birth.