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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel like I don’t fit in with ‘straight’ mums?

178 replies

ZiggyStardew · 29/06/2026 10:39

I’m pregnant with my first baby and I’ve been trying to put myself out there by joining local pregnancy groups and booking antenatal classes because I don’t have any friends who are pregnant or parents.

The problem is I keep coming away feeling like I don’t really belong.

I don’t mean this as a criticism of anyone, and I know people are just excited about their babies, but most of them seem to revolve around very traditional ideas about gender and parenthood. Things like “show me your pink nurseries for your little girlies”, “does anyone have blue decorations for a boy baby shower?”, elaborate gender reveals, “boys are so much easier than girls”, or “your daughter will be fighting the boys off one day”.

None of those things are inherently wrong, but they just make me feel like I’m on a completely different wavelength. I’m bisexual and most of my friends are quite alternative, creative or queer, so I’m much more used to people who don’t think in those terms or make those kinds of assumptions. If I quip back with “or maybe my daughter will like girls when she’s older” I often get funny looks.

I’m starting to worry that I’m being judgmental because this seems to be the majority of people I’m meeting, and I don’t want to write people off unfairly. Equally, I also want to find friends I genuinely click with, especially as I’m about to become a parent.

AIBU for feeling a bit out of place? Or am I expecting too much from these groups and should just accept that pregnancy is one thing we have in common, rather than expecting shared values or outlooks? I just worry my baby won’t have any peers if I keep her away from all this.

OP posts:
ImpatientlyWaitingForSummer · 01/07/2026 14:43

Ultimately they’re entitled to be excited about/have conversations about the things they want to (as are you), so if they’re saying things like that they’re not in the wrong, they’re just people that you probably won’t gel with and have much in common with as your pregnancy progresses. I am surprised as none of my pregnant friends have ever said things like the stuff you’ve mentioned, but my friends and I had babies later so maybe it’s more of a younger person thing. I will say I didn’t get involved in pregnancy groups or anything of that ilk as I knew it wouldn’t be for me and chances are I probably wouldn’t like many of the people there 🫣

Toveylove · 01/07/2026 14:48

JoyousOpalLemur · 30/06/2026 19:20

It's been widely noted that much of what modern leftists romanticise as "alternative" (anti-consumerism, communal living, rejecting liberal feminism's career focus for family-centric life) is actually longstanding conservative beliefs before liberalism/capitalism dissolved those older structures!

This is so true, it’s amusing. Also peculiar, that they have no historical awareness. Very blinkered!

HaveYouFedTheFish · 01/07/2026 15:58

Toveylove · 01/07/2026 14:48

This is so true, it’s amusing. Also peculiar, that they have no historical awareness. Very blinkered!

Anti consumerism is about the environment and psychological peace though, not about being left or right wing!

Not everything is intrinsically good or bad depending on whether someone or a group you do or don't identify with do/ did it. Consuming less is pretty essential if these babies being discussed are going to live what's currently regarded as an average lifespan on a moderately pleasant, habitable planet, and see their own babies grow up and donthe same.

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