The Palm Beach Post

Mom-to-be worries about ruining in-law’s surprise

- Tell Me About It

Carolyn Hax

Carolyn Hax is on leave. This column originally ran on Sept. 1, 2013.

Question: We are expecting our fifirst baby — a little girl! Just before the tell-all ultrasound, my mother-in-law expressed surprise that we would want to fifind out the gender and informed my husband that she does not want to know until the birth.

We have shared the good news with other people, and there are genderspec­ifific items in the nursery and on our registry. She knows we know, but it’s still a secret for her, which she doesn’t think is a big deal.

However, I am stressed about “ruining” the surprise for her; my parents are, too. I also am sad she did not get to share in our excitement about fifinding out the gender halfway through the pregnancy, and I feel like we are being judged for already making bad parenting decisions — that fifinding out the gender was somehow “wrong.”

My husband thinks I am making a big deal out of nothing, and I should just ignore her.

Should I just bite my tongue and respect her wishes, or should I talk to her about this? — Expecting in the Mid-Atlantic

Answer: You don’t just have a baby coming (congrats!); you’re also getting a new stage in your relationsh­ip with your mother-in-law.

To get things offff to a sustainabl­e start, try viewing the gender juggle from the following perch:

■ You can have diffffffff­fffferent approaches without judging each other.

■ If she is judging you, then that’s her problem, since it will gain her nothing (seriously — is there any practical use for smugness?) while compromisi­ng her chance at a close relationsh­ip with you, her son and her granddaugh­ter.

■ You can’t make her respect your choices, but you can set the tone by respecting hers. Yes, she “didn’t get to share” in this particular excitement, but there will be others. Don’t dwell.

■ You also can’t bear responsibi­lity for her choices beyond respecting them. That means you can remind yourself to watch what you say, but you can’t blame yourself if someone slips or brandishes something pink.

■ When in doubt on any of the above, act as if adults are actually adults. Bite your tongue, sure, but also treat the possibilit­y of “ruining” her surprise as a mild bummer, not an irreparabl­e tear in the family tapestry.

This isn’t just for babygender surprises; swap in just about any other issue and it still works.

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