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Expectant parents want to avoid gender stereotypes

By Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Amy: My husband and I are expecting our first baby. We would prefer to avoid all hyper-gendered baby trappings.

For us, this goes beyond the usual pink and blue, as we've seen baby clothing with incredibly sexist language -- e.g. "Born to shop" or "Future trophy wife" for girls, and "Lock up your daughters" for boys.

Our goal is to minimize sexism in our parenting -- e.g. to talk to boys about their feelings, and tell girls they are smart and capable. How can we best communicate this to our families?

So far, we've feigned ignorance of our baby's sex, which we know from genetic testing. We'll soon have the mid-pregnancy ultrasound where sex is usually discovered. Also, we could slip up and accidentally use a gendered pronoun.

Would it be best to simply let everyone know our preference for gender-neutral items? Could we tell them we're keeping the sex a secret for now, and why? Or would it be best to just tell the sex, try our best to say thank you for all gifts (no matter how awful) and quietly discard or donate the ones we find to be overly gendered?

How should we handle any sexism issues that may arise later -- e.g. if grandma tends to tell a girl that she looks pretty, but never asks about her interests or hobbies? While it will be easy to toss sexist gifts, it will be much harder to ignore sexist treatment of our children.

 

-- Modern Parents

Dear Modern Parents: As a society, we are currently in the process of rethinking the binary understanding of gender. And so your baby may be assigned a sex at birth, but may develop anywhere along a gender spectrum.

When people ask you the baby's gender, you can say, quite truthfully, "... We'll see!" If people want some direction regarding gifts, you could say, "We're painting the room yellow. Anything with animals on it might be fun."

I applaud your desire to keep your unborn child's sex, private. I loathe those "gender-reveal" videos that couples post on social media, showing their unborn child's sex in a variety of "cute" ways.

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