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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:
BatchCookBabe · 03/09/2025 22:06

AnneLovesGilbert · 03/09/2025 21:59

What the fuck?

That post by @ucandmykids is chilling. I hope they don't have daughters! 😱

ChessorBuckaroo · 03/09/2025 22:06

"Heartbroken" over your own child. God help that poor boy as he will need it.

This topic has to be an English thing as I've never come across this in Ireland. Mumsnet is predominantly made up of English users and is very anti male (I pity any man (glutton for punishment) who comes on here asking for advice) so the responses to the abomination that is "gender disappointment" will be sympathetic on here.

Boys here are cherished. They also stay very close to their mother (which clearly is not an English thing either).

To make loving your child, your own flesh and blood, conditional based on their sex. That's cold. I have sympathy towards English boys (perhaps this coldness they are subjected to would explain why they aren't close to their mums).

Sevenh · 03/09/2025 22:08

I have daughters and a son. I’m so grateful to have had the privilege of experiencing both. All the boy toys and activities are so different and such fun! You are so lucky OP and will realise it as soon as you embark upon your journey with him.

user1476613140 · 03/09/2025 22:09

GoldPoster · 03/09/2025 22:01

I don’t get this thing about daughters. I didn’t particularly like my mother and I was absolutely never girly. We didn’t have any sort of close relationship like you describe, I couldn’t imagine it.

People aren’t cookie cutters and I hate the way everyone’s supposed to conform today

I could have written that too. Hold similar views.

Livpool · 03/09/2025 22:09

YABU

I have one child - a boy. He is the happiest,
most loving child. He is 9 now and so bright and funny.

I never experienced upset at having a boy - he is a gift

LBFseBrom · 03/09/2025 22:09

I've always enjoyed being a mother to a boy and we are as close as ever. My late husband was close to his parents. My dad was close to his.

Don't worry about things in advance, just enjoy your children while they are small, create lovely memories.

Congratulations, you really are blessed.

Loreli1983 · 03/09/2025 22:09

I felt like you 2 years ago. At the time I had a 3 year old daughter who i loved beyond measure. We'd kept all her baby things. My pregnancy symptoms (or lack of) with my second pregnancy were identical to my first. I was sure I was having a girl. I have a sister myself and was imagining their close relationship growing up. My partner wanted another girl i think because he has had no relationship with his father for 30 years and couldnt see him connecting with a son. Well, early gender scan showed a very clear boy. I did feel upset at first. Probably more to do with thinking how different it would be after 'just learning' how to care for a girl. Utterly ridiculous! We love him just the same! He is incredible. How silly we were. He has his own personality and without stereotyping he is a bit more rough and tumble but its brilliant fun. How lucky we are to have two happy and healthy children! My 5 year old daughter and 2 year old some are the beat of friends. He copies her all the time and is so excited when she comes home from school. Looking back I can't believe the emotions we felt about having a boy. He has completed our family in the best way.

Marvellousmeadows · 03/09/2025 22:09

Mum of a daughter and two sons . Absolutely adore them all, my sons are funny, really affectionate and I have a great relationship with them . One is off to uni this month and I am going to miss him terribly !

Namechange2700000 · 03/09/2025 22:09

SockFluffInTheBath · 03/09/2025 22:06

It’s almost like all families are different…

🙄

BatchCookBabe · 03/09/2025 22:10

Dundonia · 03/09/2025 22:00

This is what I mean. Why do you need your grown up children to hug you and hold your hand? It’s a bit weird.

I’m plenty close to my parents but we don’t walk down the street holding hands…

Yep, another odd post from a 'boy' mum. Not covering themselves in glory here. Praise up boys/sons by all means, but bashing and berating girls/daughters to do this is a shitty thing to do, and is NOT showing you in a good light at all! If this is how these posters really feel, I feel sorry for their daughters (if they have them, AND their sons!)

Midnights68 · 03/09/2025 22:10

Lotsofpots · 03/09/2025 21:04

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. It’s not an inherent boy thing, it’s a family thing.

Every man in my life (DH, DP, BIL, friends) is very close to his parents and has them just as involved in his children’s lives as his partners parents. I’d attribute that to how they were raised, and the fact their families are all wonderful people who they enjoy being with.

I think this is absolutely true and have also observed this in families. If you assume you aren’t going to be as close to a son as a daughter, then it’s totally obvious that you won’t be.

For what it’s worth, in my group of ‘mum friends’, most of us would say that our children are closer with our MILs than our own mothers.

I have two boys myself and they are truly wonderful. I’m sure girls would be wonderful too but I honestly thank god every night for my two lovely boys - and I’m not even religious.

RanyaJerodung · 03/09/2025 22:10

Heartbroken? 😢
You are having a child. You don't know what he'll be like, personality wise. He may be loving and close to you, he may not.
You'll be very fortunate indeed to have 2 healthy children, so just focus on that.

chachahide · 03/09/2025 22:12

I have a very difficult relationship with my mother, as do a few of my female friends.

My DH has a good relationship with his mum. So what you’re saying is not something I relate to really. Having a daughter doesn’t mean making a ‘bestie’.

sundayfundayclub · 03/09/2025 22:12

@BatchCookBabe some mums have a preference for boys though like the OP prefers girls. One of my friends was originally distraught at having a girl because she doesn't get on with her mum & wanted boys.

Trendyname · 03/09/2025 22:12

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?

I already love him.

You say in your title you are heartbroken about your child being a boy and at the same time you say you already love him. If you already love him, then celebrate him the way he is.

KatyaKat · 03/09/2025 22:12

biscuitsandabreak · 03/09/2025 20:58

And no, ‘they’ aren’t more loving FFS. They are humans: some loving and affectionate and some a bit more prone to distance, some are quiet and introspective and some boisterous and loud, some physical and strong and some bookish and thoughtful.

You say that, but for every single person I have ever spoken to, they have all, without exception, described their sons as more cuddly and affectionate than their daughters. So I think there has to be something in that - it's also true in my own experience

Gremlins101 · 03/09/2025 22:12

I have a boy and a girl. I just think both kids are a treasure chest that just keeps giving, discovering new and weird and wonderful things about their personality every day. They aren't supposed to be convenient, they're supposed to take your view of the world and turn it on its head, so just sit back and enjoy the circus. Congrats!

Labradorlover987 · 03/09/2025 22:13

IlovePhilMitchell · 03/09/2025 21:06

I hate these threads, get a grip.

It’s an absolute honour and privilege to be able to bring human life into this world and to be someone’s parent. You should start thanking your lucky stars and start thinking about how you are going to make a difference to the boy you raise and his life.

Agreed!! When I was pregnant with my son, someone at work actually said to me “I bet you wish you were having a girl don’t you” and I thought what a strange thing to say - I was just praying for a healthy baby. My son is so incredibly loving and a wonderful person

sundayfundayclub · 03/09/2025 22:13

This is what I mean. Why do you need your grown up children to hug you and hold your hand? It’s a bit weird.

I hug my mum, dad & mil. Not weird to me but not English..

RitaFires · 03/09/2025 22:14

ChessorBuckaroo · 03/09/2025 22:06

"Heartbroken" over your own child. God help that poor boy as he will need it.

This topic has to be an English thing as I've never come across this in Ireland. Mumsnet is predominantly made up of English users and is very anti male (I pity any man (glutton for punishment) who comes on here asking for advice) so the responses to the abomination that is "gender disappointment" will be sympathetic on here.

Boys here are cherished. They also stay very close to their mother (which clearly is not an English thing either).

To make loving your child, your own flesh and blood, conditional based on their sex. That's cold. I have sympathy towards English boys (perhaps this coldness they are subjected to would explain why they aren't close to their mums).

I don't think it's an English only thing. I'm Irish and I know of one family who were so desperate for a girl that after having 4 boys they adopted a girl. This was in the 80s and thankfully wouldn't be allowed now. Unfortunately the mother and daughter have a terrible relationship as the daughter didn't conform to how the mother imagined.

I also know of an Irish family where after 3 girls they turned to adoption to get a boy, that was back in the 60s but gender disappointment is not confined to any one nation so stereotyping it as English is unnecessary.

bm2b · 03/09/2025 22:14

Birthoptionss · 03/09/2025 21:31

Hi, I’m a mum to three boys (all under the age of 5). When I was pregnant with my first, I really wanted a girl. Everything changed once my eldest was born and by the second I was hoping for another boy and by the third I was practically begging for it to be another boy. I’m very girly and everybody always seems so shocked to hear that I genuinely wasn’t ‘going for the girl’, this is truly because boys are the bloody best. I adore them and they are my pride and absolute joy. Your feelings will drastically change.

Can I ask why and how, for what reasons, you changed from really hoping for a first girl to then desperately wishing it’s a third boy?genuinely the kind of thing I think would really help me

OP posts:
RanyaJerodung · 03/09/2025 22:15

chachahide · 03/09/2025 22:12

I have a very difficult relationship with my mother, as do a few of my female friends.

My DH has a good relationship with his mum. So what you’re saying is not something I relate to really. Having a daughter doesn’t mean making a ‘bestie’.

You're right, you cannot project what kind of person your child will be.

highincalifornia · 03/09/2025 22:16

I’m actually quite cheered by this thread. As a mother of 3 girls, these threads usually go straight into “ I love my daughter but she’s stroppy/ hard work etc and my boy is so loving / cuddly, nothing beats having a boy.” This thread has had a lot more voices saying a child is an individual. Despite being all the same sex I did not raise the same child 3 times. OP everyone worries if they will
love their second child as much as their first , I discovered like most others that there’s more than one way to be perfect. You will have a girl and a boy, a lovely family, just see your children not what sex they are .

BatchCookBabe · 03/09/2025 22:16

sundayfundayclub · 03/09/2025 22:12

@BatchCookBabe some mums have a preference for boys though like the OP prefers girls. One of my friends was originally distraught at having a girl because she doesn't get on with her mum & wanted boys.

But the constant berating and bashing of girls, and insistence that boys are sooooooooo much better is very odd. It smacks of methinks the lady doth protest too much. Wink

There's having a preference for boys, (which is fine) and then there's having a rancid attitude towards girls. (Not so fine!)

It's no better than the very odd attitude that the OP has that she neeeeds to have another girl, so she has another BFF.

Mustbethat · 03/09/2025 22:19

Catherine1210 · 03/09/2025 21:57

I genuinely felt the same way once upon a time. That little boy just started primary school today and has well and truly stolen my heart! Guess what… I went on to have another boy and he’s is equally as amazing. I am now very outdoorsy and we spend so much time outdoors, they are happy to keep walking when we go on hikes, they love going on their bikes and we spend so much quality time together. They are very happy go lucky and so more easy going than a lot of girls I know. We’ve grown together and the more stereotypical “boy mum” life is sooo much more suited to me. I’d wish for it no other way now!

That “boy mum” life you describe sounds very much like the relationship I have with my dd.

liking the outdoors, hiking and cycling are not exclusive to boys.

this is exactly the issue.

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