Body & Soul1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Some people may get comfortable with this though and think "well, we're already choosing the sex. It's not that different to choose eye colour, hair colour, personality etc."
Dom Tuk...you are right. I know for a fact there are health trusts in the UK that will not disclose the sex of a baby if it can be identified in a scan, as they have had cases of abortions involving asian (and some non-asian) women carrying female babies.
I believe that if you can't leave it to chance, and love the baby, regardless of it's sex, then you are too selfish to have a child. Babies should be loved for what they are, boy or girl, and you should be glad of the gift.
As someone who has had IVF twice I was just desperate for it to work full stop as I suspect are the majority of couples embarking on the long and extremely stressful road of IVF. If I'm honest and we had been given the choice at the time we probably would have opted (if that's the right word) for a girl as my husband already has two sons from a previous marriage, however once I discovered I was pregnant I wouldn't have cared if the baby had come out green with sky blue spots as long as it was healthy! In the end I had a son and there is a not a child in the world who is more loved and cherished than he.
Personally I do not think parents should be able to choose the sex unless there is a medical reason such as congenital health defects to one sex etc. As kick3m0n says it should be left to chance.