Anonymous wrote:OP again; I wanted to share a quick pro-boy tidbit I remembered as I was driving last night. I’m grad school I had a professor who invited us to her house for lunch. When we arrived, I saw that she had 3 boys, aged middle school age and early high school. I asked her what having 3 boys was like, and she said, “more fun than feels like should be allowed.”
Anonymous wrote:Talk to moms of teenage girls or best yet go and see teen girls yourself, this will cure your blues![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait till they get older! You will realize you are the lucky one. Girls are so much drama, like non stop, day and night drama, drama, drama. Moms and daughters, love and hate. As a mom to a girl you can never do right! I have a lovely teen dd and she finds fault is every single word. Someone hit her car! again 2 times in 6 months, and I showed my exasperation, new cars too! How dare I show up frustration when it wasn't her fault, it is clear that I love her brother more! She never sees that due to these accidents and her being a hesitant driver, I am in a nervous wreck anytime she drives anywhere. She never sees how much I do for her, only the negatives. I am sure not all teen DDs are the same, but I see this dynamic with my sister and me and our mom, with SIL and her DD, with other SIL and her oldest dd, with my DD's friends and their moms. She presents me is if I am a monster mom, when in fact I am trying my best.
Putting girls down is not the right way to help OP. Good grief.
Always a slight and a put down and so many victims here! It is very common all that wrote about, and I am not putting down girls. I am telling like it is for most girls. Girls are hard, most moms of girls will attest to this. But, you go on your Female power trip and find insult in everything. All I was doing it showing her that the grass is not always greener. But, please good grief, imagine yourself a victim in every single scenario. This is a typical dcum way for women, always a victim, of DH of ILS, of parents, of friends, of lovers, does the halo shine brighter if you are a victim? Girls are hard, do you even have daughters?
Anonymous wrote:I always wanted a daughter and every once in a blue moon I still feel a bit wistful about it.
Still, I love having 2 boys, now ages 21 and 16. I love their brotherly relationship--I do think it differs somewhat from the relationship between sisters or between a brother and sister. I kind of like being the only female in the house--hard to describe, but it's almost like I have a special status that I don't think I'd otherwise have. I feel close to both my boys, but my eldest is particularly attached to me. He likes spending time with me and apparently speaks glowingly about me to others. He's quite independent and self-confident but still texts a few times a week from college, just to say hi or tell me something funny, and he recently asked me where DH and I think we will retire because he wants to live near us in adulthood. (DS1 is also very close to both sets of grandparents; he visits/calls/emails them regularly without any prompting from me or DH.) My younger son is not quite as attached to us or grandparents, but still is very loving.
FWIW, my DH is a very dutiful son, checking in on his elderly parents several times a week, doing their grocery shopping, assisting them as needed. His sister is not close to MIL/FIL at all--visits a few times a year though she lives only about 3 hours drive away. I think I'm a great DD to my parents (if I do say so myself, LOL), and I feel very close to them emotionally, but I live 500 miles away. My brother OTOH lives 5 miles from our parents and sees them very frequently. They have a close and loving relationship.
Don't despair, OP. It will be just as wonderful to raise your boys as it would have been to raise a girl. Different, maybe, but no less wonderful. But I think it's important to recognize that much of the reason why it would have been different to raise a girl is that she would have been a different *person* from the 2 little people you have, not because she would have been a different sex. And please do consider whether this might be PPD.
Congrats on your wonderful boys.
Anonymous wrote:I feel lucky that we didn't have girls. So happy to have boys.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 4 year old boy and he is just THE best. Now expecting a girl and worried I won’t be able to bond with her as well.
Don’t worry OP, your boys will love you and you will have decades of fun together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait till they get older! You will realize you are the lucky one. Girls are so much drama, like non stop, day and night drama, drama, drama. Moms and daughters, love and hate. As a mom to a girl you can never do right! I have a lovely teen dd and she finds fault is every single word. Someone hit her car! again 2 times in 6 months, and I showed my exasperation, new cars too! How dare I show up frustration when it wasn't her fault, it is clear that I love her brother more! She never sees that due to these accidents and her being a hesitant driver, I am in a nervous wreck anytime she drives anywhere. She never sees how much I do for her, only the negatives. I am sure not all teen DDs are the same, but I see this dynamic with my sister and me and our mom, with SIL and her DD, with other SIL and her oldest dd, with my DD's friends and their moms. She presents me is if I am a monster mom, when in fact I am trying my best.
Putting girls down is not the right way to help OP. Good grief.
Anonymous wrote:Wait till they get older! You will realize you are the lucky one. Girls are so much drama, like non stop, day and night drama, drama, drama. Moms and daughters, love and hate. As a mom to a girl you can never do right! I have a lovely teen dd and she finds fault is every single word. Someone hit her car! again 2 times in 6 months, and I showed my exasperation, new cars too! How dare I show up frustration when it wasn't her fault, it is clear that I love her brother more! She never sees that due to these accidents and her being a hesitant driver, I am in a nervous wreck anytime she drives anywhere. She never sees how much I do for her, only the negatives. I am sure not all teen DDs are the same, but I see this dynamic with my sister and me and our mom, with SIL and her DD, with other SIL and her oldest dd, with my DD's friends and their moms. She presents me is if I am a monster mom, when in fact I am trying my best.
Anonymous wrote:I have a boy (16). He's the greatest person I've ever known, from birth to teen. I don't expect that he'll be uninvolved as an adult, but I don't worry about it either. Boys to men are generally very loving and respectful to their moms. I expect yours will be too. Also, wait until the teen years when you spend time with their friends that are girls. You'll be very grateful to have no drama, easygoing guys.