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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel a little heartbroken about having a boy

408 replies

bm2b · 03/09/2025 20:52

I already have a daughter and recently found out that this baby is a boy. I feel incredibly grateful to be pregnant again, and I know how lucky I am to be carrying a healthy baby. I already love him, and I know I’ll adore him completely when he arrives. But I’ve been caught off guard by this quiet feeling of sadness that I didn’t expect.

I’m very close to my mum. We speak every day, go on little trips together, help each other out, and are part of each other’s daily lives. I’ve started to build something similar with my daughter, even though she’s still young, and I suppose I imagined continuing that dynamic with another girl.

With a boy, I’m not sure what that relationship will look like in the long term. In so many families I’ve seen, sons gradually become more distant from their parents as they get older, especially once they have partners and children of their own. It often ends up being the wife’s parents who are more involved, while his own mum becomes more of an occasional visitor.

Of course there are exceptions. I can think of the odd “friend of a friend’s cousin” whose son stayed close and prioritised both sides of the family equally, or doesn’t automatically side with his partner when she’s being unfair. But in my experience, that feels like the exception rather than the norm.

I also worry about what raising a boy will be like day to day. I know it’s a stereotype, but the boys I’ve been around — nephews, friends’ kids — tend to be more energetic, more physical, and more chaotic. I’m a bit afraid I won’t enjoy that stage as much, or that I won’t know how to connect with him in the same way.

If anyone has felt this way too, I’d love to hear from you. Especially mums of older boys — did the bond end up being just as close, even if it looked a bit different? What parts of having a son surprised you in a good way?

OP posts:
HeyThereDelila · 03/09/2025 23:32

They’re not dolls. They’re not extensions if your personality. They’re not there to fulfil your need for friends or closeness.

Have a word with yourself and be thankful for two healthy DC.

Zezet · 03/09/2025 23:33

Hi! I was very disappointed when I discovered I would have a boy. I wanted the closeness of a girl, I wanted the closer relationship that's more likely with grandchildren, all of it.
Then, when he was born, he was just so perfect and so mine. He is my son, yes, but he is much more like me than my daughter. It's very easy to find complicity with him. He fiercely admires his mum and is fiercely feminist. My husband has a very good relationship with his mum so I feel my son will learn from my husband to do the same. He is very protective of his younger sister and other small children. He is good-humored and very polite. He is just delightful to be around and all the ease and complicity that I expect from a girl, I have also found with him.

Bridgetjonesheart · 03/09/2025 23:36

IcedPurple · 03/09/2025 23:05

Saying she's 'heartbroken' simply because her baby is a boy is a bit more than 'voicing reservations'.

She knew there was a 50% chance that the baby would be a boy, so why get pregnant if you're going to be 'heartbroken' at an outcome that is as likely as not?

Well yes it’s not ideal but people throw around the phrase ‘heartbroken’ really lightly. If she said I’m in the depth of a prolonged depression and a crippling existential crisis I might wonder why she’d taken the gamble but if she’s a bit disappointed and weepy I reckon it’ll pass with time. Plus you can’t always foresee how you’re going to feel. She might not have realised she was going to feel like this when trying for baby. Either way berating her isn’t going to help.

Carolenarua · 03/09/2025 23:36

ChessorBuckaroo · 03/09/2025 22:53

Just to follow up on this. I said this topic ("heartbroken with a boy"), conditional love based on sex, is an English thing, but that was being too broad (for instance I couldn't imagine Scouse mums being disappointed with their sons or not being close to them throughout their life, for I know they are close). Rather this coldness applies to a certain type of English woman (who also seem to populate this site).

On the closeness of boys to their mums in Ireland, this much loved Irish electricity board advert from the 1980s (showing a son returning home while his mum is waiting for him) is indicative of that bond.

I remember that advert. How lovely. Thanks for posting. I'm right now holding my adorable 6 week old boy. Go raibh maith agat.

maybein2022 · 03/09/2025 23:37

Haven’t RTFT. OP, I was desperate for a daughter. My first, like yours, was a girl. When I got pregnant with my second I was secretly hoping for another girl. He was a boy, as was my third. Hand on heart, having boys has been amazing. I love my daughter beyond measure but she has been far and away my most tricky child. It’s not what I imagined. You can build a picture up in your head of what life will look like with children of whatever gender, but that’s all it is. A picture that may or may not become reality. Wishing you all the best with your pregnancy and enjoy your little boy.

Oopsadaisysgranny · 03/09/2025 23:39

I have 5 children all adults and it’s the boys who seem to be closer to me . They are the ones I go on shopping trips with ect . My daughter are more independent and off doing their own things . The boys have wonderful children and partners and it doesn’t stop them wanting their old mum !!! So stop worrying about being close to your new little boy he may be your shopping buddy when his sister is busy

Oopsadaisysgranny · 03/09/2025 23:43

And to add as a grandparent I am lucky enough to the closest mt granddaughters !! I am very lucky

littleburn · 03/09/2025 23:47

Part of the gender disappointment in boys that I find odd is so much of it is based on the idea that a daughter is preferable because she’ll be a mini-me/best friend for life, who’ll share all your interests and want to hang out with you forever more. But our kids don’t just exist as an extension of us, there to meet our wants and needs, they’re individuals and human beings in their own right. I honestly find framing being a parent in that way borderline narcissistic.

Flor457 · 03/09/2025 23:50

mumofoneAloneandwell · 03/09/2025 21:05

You'll get past it op, especially when he is in your arms xx

Bloody hell OP - not one but two healthy children and the “one of each 😍” which seems to be the ideal according to many.

I never cared what I got given. Truly. We had to find out what I was having second time round (it was a second girl) purely because of the condition she was diagnosed with at the anomaly scan, which affects the sexes differently. That “gender reveal” was done in the most matter of fact way as consultants discussed her diagnosis - they didn’t even ask me if I wanted to find out or not! DD had been through so much already, including multiple surgeries as a newborn - now that’s disappointing to be told at the anomaly scan. Many get told worse than I was of course.

I get it’s all relative but it’s not like you don’t have a daughter already. I hope you come to terms with it quickly and enjoy your pregnancy.

Flor457 · 03/09/2025 23:51

@mumofoneAloneandwell didnt mean to reply to your post specifically. Sorry.

Bowies · 03/09/2025 23:55

Agree with PP you have no idea how the relationships with pan out, but it would be unfortunate if it became a self-fulfilling prophecy because of your current blueprint and strongly held views about gender.

Your DD could also rebel later, this could be quite claustrophobic to grow up in the expectations you have of the relationship and that it should replicate you and your DM. She’s her own person and most of parenting as they grow up is fostering their independence.

IME what you are saying isn’t true. Family dynamics vary a lot and depend on various diverse factors such as need - eg physical disability, autism, proximity, personality, shared interests…to name a few that spring to mind.

Challenge your thinking about both DD and DS for a happier family life all around.

bendmeoverbackwards · 03/09/2025 23:59

I don’t really get this if you already have a dd OP.

I wanted at least one girl when I was growing up and have been blessed with 3 dds. And you know what - sometimes I feel a bit sad that I didn’t have a boy and wonder what a son would be like. I would have loved to experience being a mum to both sexes. But it’s just a passing thought and I am very happy with my lovely family.

I hope you feel better soon, little boys are so cute.

Justforthisoneithink · 04/09/2025 00:00

I will just say that even though I always expected to have boys due to a very strong all-male line on my husband’s family, when I found out that my second child was boy after first having a daughter, I was surprised by how disappointed I felt. I’ve always got on best with girls and wasn’t sure how I’d play with a son or chat to him. Turns out I couldn’t have been more wrong and since the day he was born I can’t believe how much I adore him and he delights me (we’re now in the teenage years).
Honestly, I really can’t express how much I wouldn’t have known what I was missing if I’d only had the daughters I wanted. There’s something amazing about the mother-son bond.

Netcurtainnelly · 04/09/2025 00:01

Pathetic all that matters is the baby healthy.
Would you still like a girl if you knew she was going to be born severely disabled, thought not.

conflictedmum82 · 04/09/2025 00:02

I have 2 boys and 1 girl. My 2 DS are adults my 1 DD is not far off. There’s just us - nobody else. We are so, so close. All of us. They all still live at home. My 2 DS work hard and travel the world, my DD watches this with pride and I hope she follows in her brothers footsteps. My point OP is that whatever gender your baby is, you’ll be so so proud anyway and look on in happiness :-)

Maray1967 · 04/09/2025 00:04

Hedgehogbrown · 03/09/2025 21:32

Yes because girls can't have nerf guns or go to Alton Towers.

Very few seem to in our circle - very sad!

ButterPiesAreGreat · 04/09/2025 00:06

This is just bonkers.

My kids are young adults now. I have a good relationship with DS because we support the same football team and talk about that a lot. He lives at home still, but we also have our fallings out. However, he knows I’m there for him if he needs help. My DD is away at uni and I definitely miss her when she’s away. We have good conversations about different things. My son jokes she’s the favourite (because she got better A level results) but he knows I’m proud of them both.

OH has definitely been closer to his parents than I was to my mum. Part of that was due to geography but she was also a challenging person to get along with. When my kids were small, they spent a lot of time with my in laws and their grandparents were a big part of their lives. My MIL recently passed away and OH visited them a lot recently. My FIL is still with us, and he still goes to see his dad every few weeks.

Where families become distant, there’s usually something else going on. There is a definite type of mum and son relationship where the mother wants to be too much of their sons lives and some do find it very hard to accept when they find themselves partners and start to lead lives. If you equip your children to be independent adults and support them instead of trying to do it all for them, you should not have a problem.

Ultimately, when it comes to gender, we get what we get and it’s our job to make the best of it.

Ilovechocolatelimesandsherbertlemons · 04/09/2025 00:07

I have 3 sons, all grown up now. They were great fun growing up, we did lots together. Might be aircraft museums and tanks and computer games rather than spa days, but great for their father to be involved. They still enjoyed being read to and chats at bedtime.
Boys are straight down the line, what you see is what you get. I used to find them much more straightforward than the girls when I was teaching.
TBH, I always wanted boys and was delighted that I had them!
I still chat to them on the phone several times a week, and their families are lovely. We holiday together with the grandchildren and they are kind and caring. I wouldn't change anything.

HonorLulu · 04/09/2025 00:14

In my experience, parents who see a difference in raising boys and girls, and assume they’ll be closer to a daughter, end up with a self fulfilling prophecy of adult sons who aren’t close to them

What a curious life experience.

In my own experience, nearly every parent I know expected some differences in raising boys and girls, and plenty of mothers who expected to understand their daughters better and forge a closeness based on their shared femaleness, that may or may not have come to pass. There are countless books dedicated to the subject. I don't know one who then suffered a 'self fulfilling prophecy' of absent closeness with their sons, never mind because of their thoughts or expectations during pregnancy.

I'm one of several sisters, all my cousins are female, my father died when I was a child, I had no male influence in my life at all. For that reason, I was worried that I wouldn't be a good 'boy mom.'

At least, until l had my beloved DS, then I just worried about being a 'good mom.'

OriginalUsername2 · 04/09/2025 00:14

Quitelikeit · 03/09/2025 20:55

I was once you but believe me you will absolutely adore your little boy. They are so loving! They are different vibe to
girls as in they can be less over emotional and much more straightforward creatures!

Next has lots of beautiful cute baby boy clothes in you should check out their website!

Think of having a mini version of your husband around……

Think of having a mini version of your husband around……

Aww I love this!

ShelleyCarpenter · 04/09/2025 00:19

Fragmentedbrain · 03/09/2025 22:27

No I think boys are affected by testosterone very early and are quite objectionable company as a result. It gives me the creeps tbh.

Fine if you don't agree but OP's feelings can't be magicked away.

Bloody hell, @Fragmentedbrain, you sound as though you have a lot of issues. I feel sorry for you.

Glitter0 · 04/09/2025 00:23

AlloaintheMiddle · 03/09/2025 20:59

You’ll love them as they are!

Mine is definitely a mini version of me (mum).

So funny to see someone with my wiring, I love it!

Mine too! We have the best little bond and relationship, I feel truly blessed to have him!

TheSilentSister · 04/09/2025 00:44

I have a one and only DS. I was so relieved I was having a DS as I was a tomboy, totally not a girly girl. But if I had of had a DD, I'm sure I would have coped. You just do!
OP, you're going to have the best of both worlds! What more could you ask for?
As DC grow up, of course they are going to prioritise their own relationships, that's natural and healthy. There is no guarantee that your DD will prioritise you if she has a family of her own. It's all down to the relationship you have and healthy family dynamics you show your DC.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 04/09/2025 00:45

My ds 31 is just lovely. I’m close to him and see him a lot. He makes me cry laughing.

Thursdayschild2025 · 04/09/2025 00:57

Some things are bset kept to yourself. This is one of them.