Originally Posted by
atomic sagebrush
:agree: I do think a fair chunk of gender disappointment is in part parenting disappointment. When I was in the throes of GD, mainly when I was pregnant with DS3, sometimes my older sons would do stuff - totally normal, kid stuff like not doing the dishes, being difficult with their studies, didn't want to do something I really wanted them to do, etc. and I would have a dark thought in my heart that if only they had been girls they wouldn't have been like this. These are the two nicest, most helpful kids in the whole wide world, and I never had one iota of gender disappointment with either of them, but because they were not PERFECT every moment I would have these thoughts.
There is often something magic about your first child that is just never quite the same with later kids, I think. I love all my kids, of course, but the level of blind adoration I had for my first son was like a bolt from the blue. And then my second son was sick constantly and I was also sick constantly (with something very scary and mysterious that no one knew how to fix) when he was small and I was terrified something would happen to him or me, so I had this insane level of bonding with him, too. I just felt he'd be taken from me or I'd be taken from him so I just showered him with affection constantly and then he was my baby for 13 years after that. My husband worked constantly back then so it was mostly just the three of us with no distractions. They were pretty much my whole universe.
It's not that I don't love my 3 younger ones just as much, of course, because I do. It's just that now I work and have 5 kids instead of 2 and my husband is here more. The intensity is different. I'm much less focused on them (and that sounds like a bad thing but it isn't) . I can't recapture those magical feelings I had for my first two kids. And it's probably a good thing because my 3 little ones are much more independent than my first two are - but at the same time, it's not as much "fun" as I remember it being the first time through. Sometimes it feels like more of a chore. But it's because I'm spread thinner and I'm not in this weird ethereal zone with just me and my babies like I was before. I can easily imagine how, if your DG was your first child, everything would get all tangled up together emotionally speaking and it could end up contributing to your gender disappointment. :)