Anonymous wrote:“Mom of boys,” you’re fine.
“BOY MOM,” you are annoying and think your son does literally no wrong.
“He’s all boy,” I will punch you in the tit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two boys and a girl and I absolutely hate the term. I also hate “girl mom.” People are individuals, not their gender.
+1. It's so weird to me to act like gender is the defining characteristic of your child. I'm a dad, and my daughter is basically exactly like I was when I was her age. That matters so much more than that she's a girl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am technically a boy mom though I don't use that phrase but aren't you reading something into it that's not there?
I think there is an element of wistfulness there. When I pictured being a mother I admit I pictured a little girl a lot like myself. Motherhood has been completely different with boys though of course wonderful! So I think there's a "making your own happiness" component to that.
There is no "mom of both" identity because those people are considered to have the ideal situation.
There is also a whole girl-mom social scene that the moms of boys are completely left out of. My kids have their few best friends and I see those moms but we never get together in big groups the way the girls seem to.
There's also no "girl mom" or "boy dad" identity, it's a thing specific to opposite gender parents, and mostly women not men; self-conscious "girl dads" are way less common than "boy moms." I'm not sure what that says about people that identify this way (I don't and I'm a dad of one girl, so I COULD), but I think it's more than just "one of each is ideal."
Anonymous wrote:I have two boys and a girl and I absolutely hate the term. I also hate “girl mom.” People are individuals, not their gender.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone knows this is not a good thing, right? I married the son of a "boy mom". He didn't know how to heat up pizza when I met him.
Anonymous wrote:Why all the boy hate?
Anonymous wrote:Everyone knows this is not a good thing, right? I married the son of a "boy mom". He didn't know how to heat up pizza when I met him.
Anonymous wrote:I am technically a boy mom though I don't use that phrase but aren't you reading something into it that's not there?
I think there is an element of wistfulness there. When I pictured being a mother I admit I pictured a little girl a lot like myself. Motherhood has been completely different with boys though of course wonderful! So I think there's a "making your own happiness" component to that.
There is no "mom of both" identity because those people are considered to have the ideal situation.
There is also a whole girl-mom social scene that the moms of boys are completely left out of. My kids have their few best friends and I see those moms but we never get together in big groups the way the girls seem to.