Because we've had so many of these posts lately, I have a question.
If you have your heart set on a certain sex, and KNOW you will be disappointed if you are told the opposite... Why in the world are you finding out early??? Stay Team Green. I guarantee that after labor and delivery and pushing a new baby into this world you wouldn't be disappointed... But halfway through when you aren't holding your child and haven't looked into their eyes and baby is only a "dream" you are told you're having the opposite of what you wanted...
Im simply curious... And FWIW I am not in the camp that jumps all over the GD posts. I am supportive and do understand.
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Re: S/O Gender Disappointment
My blog: Midwest Chaos
I don't understand it. Your given a 50/50 shot at one gender. Why be crushed it's not the one you wanted.
I'd give anything to have my son & daughter back with me right now. But I'm growing a healthy baby right now and could care less if it came out with 6 toes and and 2 arms.
I was thinking the same thing, but a while ago I saw a post about this topic. Someone wrote in that they were team green until the end (even though hoping for a boy...had a girl already). Baby was a girl; Dad said some not nice things at delivery.
I think waiting to delivery can build up even more fantasies about the desired gender. May as well get any disappointment over right away, so that you can enjoy your baby.
Definitely. I feel sorry for a lot of these women who are struggling with the gender disappointment. It seems a lot of them feel like they are disappointing others because they cannot give the one gender specific grandchild that their generation is missing. I am given a lot pressure from my MIL to provide a granddaughter because she had only boys. However, I really don't care what she wants. DH and I would be happy with either.
Kelly, Mom to Christopher Shannon 9.27.06, Catherine Quinn 2.24.09, Trey Barton lost on 12.28.09, Therese Barton lost on 6.10.10, Joseph Sullivan 7.23.11, and our latest, Victoria Maren 11.15.12
Secondary infertility success with IVF, then two losses, one at 14 weeks and one at 10 weeks, then success with IUI and then just pure, crazy luck. Expecting our fifth in May as the result of a FET.
This Cluttered Life
If you are going to have some gender disappointment it is going to happen either way. I was glad we knew and found out early because it gave me some time to think about all the great things about having a boy. By the time DS was born I was really excited to meet him and couldn't have cared less that he wasn't a girl.
Married since 06/19/2004|Anna born 11/19/2006|Charles born 11/1/11
Double undergrad graduation May 2011| Me: Psychology, DH: Communication| A long journey!
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I think the expectation that you'll immediately fall in love with your child the moment he/she is placed in your arms is a crock. I fell for that belief too with PG #1 and when I didn't feel the rush of love the moment DD was placed in my arms I actually thought something was wrong with me. It wasn't until a week or so later that my unconditional intense love for her started building up. It was then that I realized that it wasn't because I didn't love DD. I was so frickin' exhausted and in pain from all the pushing I really couldn't feel anything at the time. But once that had subsided that's when my emotions allowed me to have those feelings. So whenever people choose to find out the gender I hope that "myth" isn't what's stopping them from deciding to be Team Green or not.
I would agree with this, except that my parents didn't know I was a baby girl until I was actually born and my dad's family (specifically his parents) visibly and vocally expressed disappointment to my mother... for years... My grandparents drove down with blue balloons and lots of little boy things and horrified my mother's parents with their gender disappointment.
Waiting doesn't always work (if your family was as weird about boy-production as my dad's family was), but I think it might in a normal family.
That's actually what I was thinking. I personally think it's ok to find out early as it gives you a chance to prepare a bit better mentally.
Wow, zealous weren't they? I think that level of gender disappointment is a bit on the extreme side, and not very nice. Ultimately, you've got this child who doesn't deserve for anyone to be disappointed in him/her simply because they weren't born the opposite gender, and if the pointless disappointment lasts long enough for the kid to notice it I imagine the kid would have some questions about why their family members don't "like" them.
I guess I could see how getting the disappointment overwith early on would be better if disappointment is going to be an issue at all. It is true that not everyone falls in love with their LO immediately after the birth, and I guess I could see where there'd be some room for disappointment in the interim. Personally, I'll never be disappointed one way or the other - I wasn't with DD, and I wasn't when we found out this LO's gender either. But everyone approaches pregnancy differently.
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It's unbelievable how zealous they were. My dad's parents and (some of) his siblings took the production of a male child very, very, <b>very</b> seriously. And this type of behaviour went on for years, like every-time-someone-had-a child-for-about-15-years long time.
If the parents (or extended family in my case) are going to be disappointed, you might as well let them work it out before baby is born so that all the infant photos don't a) lack half the family because the child wasn't worth hanging around for or b) a very glum group of people staring morosely at the unacceptably genital-ed child. That doesn't make baby feel very nice when she's all grown up.