Re: Your gender revealed
Brunnen-G, on host 203.96.111.200
Tuesday, January 15, 2002, at 15:26:22
Re: Your gender revealed posted by Grishny on Tuesday, January 15, 2002, at 13:18:00:
> > There are gift receipts, so you can return > things if it turns out that you need a pink outfit > instead of a blue one, but what new mother > wants to go stand in return lines with a > brand-new baby? > > > > Ellmyruh > > On the other hand, you don't want to jump the > gun, because ultrasounds have been known > to be indecisive and sometimes just plain > wrong. (Well, not the ultrasound itself, but the > doctor's opinion of your baby's gender based > on it.) If it's bad to have to wait in line with a > newborn to exchange one outfit, just imagine > going to five different stores to return twenty > outfits, three sets of crib sheets with matching > curtains, a crate full of baby toys, and those > color-coordinated pacifiers? Not to mention > having to re-paint / re-wallpaper the nursery! > > All I'm saying is, unless the ultrasound is very, > very clear and the doctor is 99.999 percent > positive, you might still want to wait on your > most important baby purchases until after the > birth. We were certainly glad we did. > > Gri"wow, it's a boy! we weren't expecting a > boy!"shny
Personally, I wouldn't repaint a room because I was having a baby. If I did, I *definitely* wouldn't repaint it *again* because the baby turned out to be the other gender than expected. Unless the ultrasound showed conclusively that the baby was an interior decorating critic.
Apparently a large black and white checkerboard pattern is best, because it gives the baby's eyes something to focus on instead of a sea of pastel.
Brunnen-"if it has to be pink or blue, go with blue no matter what the baby is, because babies spend a lot of their time red and blotchy, and pink doesn't go with red and blotchy"G
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