I get it, I do but I just wonder how far they took it. I think that is a bunch of bull about the toys that you give your kids defining them. We've hardly bought anything for DS, he has the same toys as the girls, and he plays with them totally differently.
Why is it okay to have the child be your own personal social experiment?
I wonder at what point wearing the girl's blouse will yield ridicule from his peers and how that will affect him going forward.
Couple Finally Reveals Child's Gender, Five Years After Birth | Parenting - Yahoo! Shine
Results 1 to 10 of 12
Thread: It's a Boy! 5 years later...
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January 20th, 2012, 07:34 PM #1
It's a Boy! 5 years later...
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January 20th, 2012, 08:57 PM #2
Yeah, I used to think that way too until I bought my sons a Barbie and she ended up naked on the floor with her head ripped off in 30 seconds after opening the box.
never played with her again.
little boys like their baby doll tho - if you hold it by the leg it makes a really excellent club for beating on things!!!!! Questions??Check out the NEW and improved Complete Index !!!
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January 20th, 2012, 08:58 PM #3
Each to their own but that's a bit extreme.
While the school requires different uniforms for boys and girls, Sasha wears a girl's blouse with his pants.
I wonder how this guy is going to feel when he is older ?
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January 20th, 2012, 09:04 PM #4
I remember reading the article about the other baby, Storm, when he/she (I am sure it was a HE) was born. I think it is ridiculous and would get exhausting trying to hide your kid's gender! I think it is great if you want to buy your son a doll, or let him wear pink if he likes it. But EVERYONE has a gender, so it seems to me that it would be harder on the child to keep that a secret. Right?
When my son was able to pick his own toys (at about a year old), he ALWAYS went for cars. At Target, he would get super excited when we went down the Hotwheels aisle. That had nothing to do with me buying him stereotypical toys; it was what he preferred. I don't think people are doing their children a disservice by letting them play with things they like, even if they are toys typically assigned to their gender.2004
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January 20th, 2012, 09:16 PM #5
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January 20th, 2012, 10:03 PM #6
Wow! Personally I think this is wrong. I read the "storm" story too, and thought that was ridiculous. Our gender is part of who we are regardless of stereotypes.
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January 20th, 2012, 10:15 PM #7
i think it's great to let your son wear pink if he wants--heck my husband loves wearing pink and purple (and for those abroad it is actually semi-in in the US) but to take it this far seems crazy. Let the kid pick what he wants to wear and play with--I read this and just thought poor kid. I was a tomboy growing up and my parents let me do as many sports as I wanted to. I hated pink and never wore it and legos were my favorite toy. Those were all my choices though--and my parents clearly never stopped me. If my son is going to be into girly things--so be it but it will have to be his choice. We'll start him out in tons of blue and sports (poor kid coming from two huge sports nuts).
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January 28th, 2012, 03:54 PM #8
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January 28th, 2012, 03:57 PM #9
Hi Kerribug! Can't believe your babies are a year!
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January 28th, 2012, 05:27 PM #10