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Published: Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Gender disappointment doesnt equal bad parenting
By Angie Wagner
My good friend just found out she is pregnant with a boy. It is her first child, and instead of celebrating the good news, she cried during her ultrasound.
Thats because she really wanted a girl.
Good mothers are supposed to say they are happy with a boy or a girl, as long as the baby is healthy. But gender disappointment is a very real and heartbreaking issue that affects many pregnant women.
Christine Lich of Lindenhurst, Ill., always assumed she would have a girl. Instead, she got three boys. She wanted to appear to be the perfect mother, so she never let anyone except her husband know her disappointment.
And they tell you its a boy, its like, ahhhh, she said. For that short moment, youre kind of bummed in the back of your mind. Theres not going to be any pink dresses. Theres not going to be any scrapbooking. Thats not going to happen.
Lich gets tired of people making comments such as: Are you going to try for the girl? or You need to have the girl.
Even now, four years after her third child, she cant bring herself to buy clothes for a little girls birthday because she just cant look at the outfits.
Joyce Venis, a psychiatric nurse in Princeton, N.J., who works with women suffering from gender disappointment, said it is not really discussed because other people would perceive the disappointment as being ungrateful.
Venis said the problem mainly involves women who wanted a daughter.
Just because a woman has a gender preference does not mean she is a bad mother or that she doesnt want the child, Venis said.
They have the right to want the certain sex, she said.
Venis suggests women find out during the pregnancy what sex the baby is so they can deal with any disappointment before the birth. She said women should find someone to talk with, and if the woman is depressed, she should talk to a therapist.
Katherine Asbery was so depressed that her third child was a boy, she wouldnt even say the sex. She called him not a girl and spent hours crying.
She and her husband had even tried different techniques that promised to yield a girl.
That dream of what you wanted is gone, and you have to learn to live with that, she said.
Asbery, who has a masters degree in clinical psychology, started sharing her story on mommy message boards, and later decided to write a book called Altered Dreams: Living With Gender Disappointment.
She turned to her faith and drew strength from talking to others who felt the same way. She said its important for people to understand that mothers suffering from gender disappointment want their children and are not bad mothers. Its just the plan they had for their family has changed.
Her third son is 3 years old now, and Asbery admits she still has some pangs of sadness. She sometimes looks at her son and wonders, just for a moment, what he would look like as a girl.
She and her husband are not going to have more children. Their family is complete, she said, and she doesnt feel like someone is missing anymore.
What she most wants mothers to know is this:
Its normal. And they shouldnt feel like a freak, she said. It is a normal process of when a dream has changed. You just have to relearn a different dream.
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