Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted a son and have one and for my second I want a son again. The anxiety of having a girl would kill me. Can’t imagine sending my teenage daughter to college. As for my son he’s fineeeee haha women are more at danger from others and I want as a parent less danger.
I have a son, and a daughter. I understand wanting a daughter once you've had a son, or vice versa.
However, my son causes the most anxiety, and puts himself in danger. He's a jump first, ask questions second type of person. He is in far more danger than my daughter because he has no fear and is willing/wants to try EVERYTHING. He likely isn't in danger (or as much danger) for physical or sexual assault, but he puts himself in dangerous places and situations. My daughter actually thinks through things. She is cautious about who she is with, what she is doing. She's not perfect, but her risk assessment is far superior. I do not fear that she is going to be dead in a ditch from driving too fast, or hanging out places with the wrong people. She understands about communication and making safe choices.
Don't get me wrong, he's fun, but kind of a disaster waiting to happen, and he welcomes it. "Let's see how I handle this." "This will make a great story some day." "Oh look, my broken bones/stitches count is up to X!"
I've never had anyone in my whole life give me anxiety like he has, it started with him at 18 months and has continued in college. Parenting is tough when you have a risk taker or an impulsive personality, and that can come with either gender/sex.
Anonymous wrote:I think it boils down to the fact that society accepts girls doing “boyish” things but does not accept boys doing “girly” things. So almost nobody who finds out they’re having a girl (these days) thinks “oh but I wanted a son to play sports and go camping with.” They figure they can do those things with a girl if they’re into it. But they do think “oh but I can’t get mani/pedis with my son or take him to the ballet.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted a son and have one and for my second I want a son again. The anxiety of having a girl would kill me. Can’t imagine sending my teenage daughter to college. As for my son he’s fineeeee haha women are more at danger from others and I want as a parent less danger.
I have a son, and a daughter. I understand wanting a daughter once you've had a son, or vice versa.
However, my son causes the most anxiety, and puts himself in danger. He's a jump first, ask questions second type of person. He is in far more danger than my daughter because he has no fear and is willing/wants to try EVERYTHING. He likely isn't in danger (or as much danger) for physical or sexual assault, but he puts himself in dangerous places and situations. My daughter actually thinks through things. She is cautious about who she is with, what she is doing. She's not perfect, but her risk assessment is far superior. I do not fear that she is going to be dead in a ditch from driving too fast, or hanging out places with the wrong people. She understands about communication and making safe choices.
Don't get me wrong, he's fun, but kind of a disaster waiting to happen, and he welcomes it. "Let's see how I handle this." "This will make a great story some day." "Oh look, my broken bones/stitches count is up to X!"
I've never had anyone in my whole life give me anxiety like he has, it started with him at 18 months and has continued in college. Parenting is tough when you have a risk taker or an impulsive personality, and that can come with either gender/sex.
Anonymous wrote:I think the main reason is you're becoming a mom and you only know the mom/parent relationship from the standpoint of a daughter? That's why you sometimes see people who have terrible relationships with their daughters saying they don't want to have a girl because their experience with that relationship is bad, and people who had a good relationship with their mom want to recreate it. I think at its most basic level it's a failure of imagination.
That or crazy gender stereotypes. You see that in those threads too.
Anonymous wrote:I wanted a son and have one and for my second I want a son again. The anxiety of having a girl would kill me. Can’t imagine sending my teenage daughter to college. As for my son he’s fineeeee haha women are more at danger from others and I want as a parent less danger.
Anonymous wrote:I have both. I already am upset about having to be a mil one day. Men grown up and don’t care for their families
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have both. I already am upset about having to be a mil one day. Men grown up and don’t care for their families
. . .
Girls get married too, PP. This one is weird.
No one wants to have a daughter in law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me personally, I grew up with all sisters, so that was what was familiar.
I think that's it. I have 3 brothers and 9 cousins (all guys), so raising boys is so easy to me. Some women also want a "do over" if they didn't have the happiest past. My SIL was relieved when she found out she's having girls because she's lower energy and didn't want to deal with sports, climbing up the walls etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For people who say men don’t stay in touch or take care of you when you’re older, isn’t that mostly society’s expectations and how you raise them? So obviously if you parent them well with modern expectations they should be able to defy this stereotype...
One would hope (I sure do), but children aren't born in a vacuum. They pick up on societal expectations and culture outside of the home, too.
Through WWI US men were still closely tied to their mothers. The mothers of fallen soldiers received the flags for their sons, not their DIL. When we needed more men for WWII we social engineered things so that men were not as close to mom (because moms didn’t want their sons dying in another war).
Anonymous wrote:I love my son, but I hope to have a baby girl. Call me superficial, but I love the bows, clothes, tea parties, etc. I am going to try the Shettles Method as someone mentioned in a previous post.