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Pregnancy

Talk about every stage of pregnancy, from early symptoms to preparing for birth.

Any other mums of boys who were heartbroken that it isnt a girl?

68 replies

bm2b · 03/09/2025 19:59

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:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
user9637 · 06/09/2025 08:36

I admit i was disappointed at first and in the toddler years. But just wait. There’s something really special about the mother son relationship. You are lucky to soon experience it. Don’t you worry. You are lucky to have both too.

Mine also isn’t a rough kinda guy so it’s really pot luck. Also girls can be a nightmare too in different ways.

Wemdubz · 06/09/2025 08:49

I can only assume you’re posting because you didn’t like the responses you received on your first thread. I’ll respond in the same way and say that when I read your thread, it’s your future baby boy that I’m feeling heartbroken for.

Rather than keep posting the same thing repeatedly, maybe reflect on the experiences of those who took the time to share them?

GloriaMonday · 06/09/2025 08:53

it’s your future baby boy that I’m feeling heartbroken for.
Rather than keep posting the same thing repeatedly, maybe reflect on the experiences of those who took the time to share them?
This.

Somekidsarejustdicks · 06/09/2025 09:10

Honestly, I felt the same for a little while, and I remember having a very honest conversation in my pregnancy yoga class with a other mum in the same position. You'll get plenty of people tell you that you're completely unreasonable to even think it for a second, but I believe it's a really common thing to go through. I'm no psychologist, but I guess something to do with just not being able to imagine the situation when you have no life experience of it.
All I can say is that my son is now my favourite child 😉

ecossegirl91 · 06/09/2025 10:56

These threads always make me sad because people always seem to be sad about having a son ☹️
to a degree I can kind of wrap my head around gender disappointment in certain circumstances but you already have a girl? You’re literally going to have 1 of each which is probably what most people want.
I have 2 boys, when I found out the second was a boy was I bit sad? For maybe like a minute because I knew it was my last kid and a daughter would have been lovely (& all the cute clothes!) but he’s a lovely healthy baby.

you have no idea how your relationships with your kids will turn out as they get older?

Underthemoon1 · 06/09/2025 11:55

The trouble is our culture celebrates mother-daughter relationships and either pretends mother-son relationships don't exist once the boy is older than 12 or treats then as highly negative.

Think about any TV series or film you've watched over the past year. I bet most have an adult daughter - parent relationship (not always positive but at least present) and almost none have any son - mother relationships or they are really negative. If anyone disagrees with this I'd love to hear your examples of portrayals of good mother-son relationships.

Is it any wonder that many women feel disappointment when they find out they are having boys when we're saturated with negative stories about them!

GorillazInTheMidst · 06/09/2025 12:06

I’ve 2 teen sons. Both are adorable. They cook and bake, we go to concerts and gigs together, go out for dinner, on holidays and mini breaks, go clothes shopping and we are going to a spa day 😂 They are 2 manly strapping lads. They tell me I’m beautiful, lovely and that they love my cooking.

They bring their girlfriends to stay over or visit and they are lovely too.

I wouldn’t swap my boys for anything.

As a wife whose DH has parents who massively favour his sister for no good reason, let me tell you that YOU will be the one to miss out.

You don’t know how things will turn out. My DH is the one who has DC and the one who has everyone piled in for Christmas etc. not his DSis.

romdowa · 06/09/2025 12:11

I've two sons. 4 and 3 months old . Yesterday I was feeling a bit crap so had a lay down upstairs, my 4 year old came up and got into bed with me because he was worried I'd be lonely . You can have a close relationship with your child regardless of their gender.

MrsSkylerWhite · 06/09/2025 12:13

defrazzled · 04/09/2025 08:39

No one in my family finds out, this is modern insanity. Be grateful for your baby when it is born, it is about them now, not you!

This.

Both our daughter and son are fabulous individuals . HTH.

InWalksBarberalla · 06/09/2025 12:13

I wonder what the reaction would be if a man come on here to say he was disappointed his partner was pregnant with a girl?

Primrose86 · 06/09/2025 12:24

I have a son and am one and done. I did dream about having a daughter when young but tbh now I am actually confronted with the reality i am relieved I only have a boy because I have no idea how to give contraceptive advice having never used contraception longer than a week (married at 22 and somehow had first and only baby at 32, we didn't use condoms).. dh then had a vasectomy when I was 6 months pregnant so I never need to worry about it. I am not a good role model in this respect.

With a boy I can just tell him to wear a condom.

Hazlenuts2016 · 06/09/2025 12:35

I am beyond disgusted with this post and hope it isn't real, particularly as I've already seen similar. I've known people not be able to have first or second children who are genuinely heartbroken. I've known people lose children. I can't believe anyone would think its ok to post this in the context of real problems that people experience. I'm hiding the post now.

Shivaughn · 06/09/2025 12:47

I posted on the other thread.
Stop making assumptions about the future! Why is it always ‘when baby boy grows up and has a wife and family and…’ How do you know he’s going to have a wife? He might not marry or have kids, he might have a husband.
I saw a statistic that at least 1 in 5 women don’t have children and this is projected to rise in even higher for new generations. So at least a fifth of women with baby girls are never going to get grandchildren from their DD anyway.
If you’ve built up specific ideas of how life is going to look in the future then you could get end up disappointed anyway. Just enjoy your lovely children for the unique people they are.

FKAT · 06/09/2025 12:50

In some ways I'm grateful for anonymous forums where people unload their real feelings instead of saying socially acceptable niceties. It shows how disordered some women's / mother's thinking is.

I agree with PPs. The same mothers who are 'heartbroken' that their children are male and fetishise the mother-daughter 'bond' are likely the same ones whose adult sons are distant and detached - it's a self-fulfilling prophecy.

scotlandmamatoone · 06/09/2025 12:58

SarahG17 · 04/09/2025 08:41

All I ever wanted was a boy. I was thrilled beyond belief when I found out that’s what I was having.

I’d have been genuinely disappointed with a girl although I’m sure it would have worked out just fine albeit not the life I hoped for.

It’s down to personal preference. I much prefer the average lifestyle of a boy than that of a girl but of course appreciate that any single child may well not fit in with broad stereotypes.

MY DS has just started Reception and I genuinely felt sorry for the parents with the pink princess type of daughters. I hope they see things differently to me, I’m sure most do.

Why on earth would you feel sorry for parents whose DDs are into pink and princesses unless you think things stereotypically female are lesser of course? I know both little girls and little boys who love all things princess and pink. Their parents are very happy, not necessarily because they love princesses and pink too, but because seeing their children happy and indulging their interests makes them happy too. I can’t say where I am there seems to be any ‘average lifestyle’ for boys vs girls…

LadyWhistledownAteMyHamster · 08/09/2025 10:12

I have two sons. When I was pregnant for the third time, I lost the baby half way through the pregnancy. THAT is heartbreak. It was another boy and I would give anything to still have him in my life, 12 years on.

I hope you have a healthy pregnancy and a beautiful little boy. Don't let silly notions spoil this very special time or your bond with him as he grows up. You genuinely do not know how lucky you are.

eastegg · 08/09/2025 11:25

LadyWhistledownAteMyHamster · 08/09/2025 10:12

I have two sons. When I was pregnant for the third time, I lost the baby half way through the pregnancy. THAT is heartbreak. It was another boy and I would give anything to still have him in my life, 12 years on.

I hope you have a healthy pregnancy and a beautiful little boy. Don't let silly notions spoil this very special time or your bond with him as he grows up. You genuinely do not know how lucky you are.

❤️ Sending you hugs. I also lost my third pregnancy, and it was also my third boy. Mine was at 16 weeks. 10 years ago August just gone.

It’s hard to find words for how these sorts of attitudes towards the sex of a baby make me feel. When I was lucky enough to get pregnant again, comments about how I must be hoping for a girl really riled me.

LadyWhistledownAteMyHamster · 08/09/2025 12:10

eastegg · 08/09/2025 11:25

❤️ Sending you hugs. I also lost my third pregnancy, and it was also my third boy. Mine was at 16 weeks. 10 years ago August just gone.

It’s hard to find words for how these sorts of attitudes towards the sex of a baby make me feel. When I was lucky enough to get pregnant again, comments about how I must be hoping for a girl really riled me.

This. I am sending you hugs too. We are part of a club no one wants to be in, and that experience definitely gives you a different perspective on this. The sex of the baby is so secondary to me.

I can also say that my two boys, who are now late teens are just fabulous human beings. Funny, creative, loving; we have a great bond and I am so proud of the men they are becoming. I think your attitude to your children shapes the people they are and it makes me feel sad that by virtue of having a penis, some mums treat their children differently.

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