Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the perception is that girls are easier to manage behaviorally. Im not saying that it’s true, but that is what people think.
It’s is hard to broad brush a whole gender but this is the answer. People think girls will be calmer and easier. Depending on the family and cultural dynamics, mothers likely think girls will eventually help them with female dominated labor. Helping with cooking and cleaning, eventually elder care for grandparents. My close friend is going through this now. Her grandfather is living with her parents and needs a lot of help. She stops by every weekend to give her mother a break, her two brothers only really come around for holidays. In my own family it is the women that organize and cook every single holiday meal.
I know that this isn’t the case for every family, but I think this dynamic is common.
Anonymous wrote:I do think there is a perception that, once grown/married, a girl will typically remain closer to her family and a boy is more likely to be closer to his wife's family. I am not sure why that stereotype exists, but that is the perception. So I think some people prematurely grieve a future they think is less likely to exist if they have a boy.
Anonymous wrote:I think the perception is that girls are easier to manage behaviorally. Im not saying that it’s true, but that is what people think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the perception is that girls are easier to manage behaviorally. Im not saying that it’s true, but that is what people think.
Ask any teacher. Girls are easier to manage than boys. Boys can make up for it by being held back a year in school though.
The girls might be quieter but they are being ridiculously cruel and toxic to the other girls around them all day long with the looks, comments, gossip, sneering, put down, and sarcasm. I have 2 boys and 1 girl and the boys are infinitely easier and nicer to each other. The teachers are ignoring what they either don't see or claim not to see.
All the girls are being toxic to all the girls?
Enough of the girls are being toxic to other girls that it creates a lot of social havoc. Don't act like you have no idea what girls are like.
Don’t act like all girls act the same way. You are as bad as the people who say all boys are bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have four adult daughters. Three are married. I will offer two comments to previous posters based on our experience.
1. It’s true that teen girls and sometimes adult daughters sometimes clash with their mothers in a way that boys don’t. We did with a couple of ours. But it’s typically temporary so long as the mother is a reasonably decent parent. A girl grows up and realizes that at times she was a PITA and that her mother did her best.
2. We see way, way more of our daughters and our grandchildren than their husbands’ families do. The husbands all get along with their families just fine but adult men just don’t make the same effort to see their families that women do.
As I grew up and became a mom I realized how self centered and absorbed my mom was. We rarely talk as I don’t meet her needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the perception is that girls are easier to manage behaviorally. Im not saying that it’s true, but that is what people think.
Ask any teacher. Girls are easier to manage than boys. Boys can make up for it by being held back a year in school though.
The girls might be quieter but they are being ridiculously cruel and toxic to the other girls around them all day long with the looks, comments, gossip, sneering, put down, and sarcasm. I have 2 boys and 1 girl and the boys are infinitely easier and nicer to each other. The teachers are ignoring what they either don't see or claim not to see.
All the girls are being toxic to all the girls?
Enough of the girls are being toxic to other girls that it creates a lot of social havoc. Don't act like you have no idea what girls are like.
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 boys (9 and 11). They are rambunctious at times, but keeping them in sports and kicking them out of the house to ride bikes or jump on the trampoline helps with that.
They are also really cuddly, love reading, do well in school, help with laundry and chores (granted with a billion reminders), and are family-oriented. They have tons of friends, but also still want to do stuff with us like watch movies and play board games. One has ADHD, which can be challenging at times, but is improving with age and medication.
I’m not sure whether this will change at some point during the teen years, but I know teen girls can be tough too.
I think the thing that may make some parents prefer a girl is that there are a subset of boys that can be really wild, behaviorally challenging, struggle in school, etc. Not that this doesn’t happen with girls, but it seems more likely in boys (also higher incidence of neurodivergence). But plenty of boys are also really sweet kids and if you end up with those they are great.
Anonymous wrote:We have four adult daughters. Three are married. I will offer two comments to previous posters based on our experience.
1. It’s true that teen girls and sometimes adult daughters sometimes clash with their mothers in a way that boys don’t. We did with a couple of ours. But it’s typically temporary so long as the mother is a reasonably decent parent. A girl grows up and realizes that at times she was a PITA and that her mother did her best.
2. We see way, way more of our daughters and our grandchildren than their husbands’ families do. The husbands all get along with their families just fine but adult men just don’t make the same effort to see their families that women do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the perception is that girls are easier to manage behaviorally. Im not saying that it’s true, but that is what people think.
Ask any teacher. Girls are easier to manage than boys. Boys can make up for it by being held back a year in school though.
The girls might be quieter but they are being ridiculously cruel and toxic to the other girls around them all day long with the looks, comments, gossip, sneering, put down, and sarcasm. I have 2 boys and 1 girl and the boys are infinitely easier and nicer to each other. The teachers are ignoring what they either don't see or claim not to see.
All the girls are being toxic to all the girls?