How Can I have A baby Boy Instead Of A Girl?
Answer:
Like I told Michelle, you got to let him hit it from the back!
Someone told me get it from the back.
google shettles, I'm doing the same thing. I'm doing the whole bbt thing and following shettles ideas. good luck. and also google the ancient Chinese gender chart. i looked up my two girls and it was correct.
sure - just ask the stork
sleep with another man [it's his genes that cause you to have girls - odds are you'll get another girl] i dont think there are any tricks to it. . .although i'd love to know because i want to have a boy if/when i have kids.
Maybe it's ''not in the cards'' as they say.
I know of a woman who had 8 children--all boys--so basically, you get what you get. You know that you'll be happy just as long as your child is healthy and happy, so don't worry so much.
Good luck.
Go see a reproductive endocrinologist. The technology exists to choose the gender of your child. You will have to pay out of pocket since insurance wont cover it.
Can't say for sure that this works, but it seemed to work for me.
If you have sex the day before, the day of or the day after you ovulate, i think your chances are better for a boy.
They say "male" sperm swims faster. But that "female" sperm lives longer, so don't have sex within the 3 days before you ovulate.
This is something someone told me awhile ago. I wanted a girl for my 3rd child (already had 2 boys), so I tried this and I have a little girl. Coincidence??
The man's sperm determine the gender. There is no way to do this naturally.
Much is being offered by practitioners and, especially over the Internet, as allegedly “working” treatment options to select ones offspring’s gender. The truth is, however, that the real options are rather limited.
More specifically, there are only two options, which through studies have shown to be effective, and here is a brief description of both:
Sperm Sorting
This method is based on the long recognized principle that the (XY)-male determines the sex of offspring by either contributing a X-carrying or a Y-carrying sperm to the fertilization process. XX-women, of course, always contribute an X-chromosome. Consequently, based on the male’s contribution, the resultant embryo will be either XY (male) or XX (female).
Recognizing the importance of the male contribution to gender selection, various historical success claims have been based on the ability to separate X- from Y-sperm. Unfortunately, until recently, nobody could proof that their method really worked in improving odds towards one, or the other, gender. Only recently, a technique, which is based on the labeling of sperm with a fluorescence marker that can then be picked up by a so-called fluorescence cell sorter, has made inroads and proven effective. This technique is called MICROSORT® and is currently still offered only under experimental study conditions in an FDA-approved clinical trial. CHR is part of a consortium of medical practices, which offers access to this trial. The trial is, however, administered by the organization that invented (and patented) this techniques, the IVF and Genetics Institute in Fairfax, Virginia.
MICROSORT, in our opinion, represents the only sperm sorting technique that has been proven to affect gender distribution. Most recent data from the still ongoing trial suggest that sorting for female will be approximately 90% successful, while sorting for male will be approximately 85% successful. These numbers are based on successful births after treatment. In other words, sorting for female will be approximately 10%, and sorting for male approximately 15% inaccurate.
So far published data also suggest that this technique is safe and does not increase the risks for birth defects or other adverse outcomes in newborn. These data are, however, still preliminary and we strongly recommend that interested parties inquire further about risks and benefits of this technique with the trial administrator before deciding to pursue this option.
In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) and Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD)
This technique, in contrast to sperm sorting, is a post-fertilization technique. This may be an important distinction for some because, in contrast to sperm sorting (a pre-fertilization technique), here embryos are produced through the fertilization of the woman’s eggs with the partner’s semen. In other words, this technique practically every time will also produce embryos of the unwanted gender, later raising the ethical, and practical issue, what to do with embryos of an unwanted gender? Options then are (1) to cryopreserve them for potential future use; (2) to donate them (usually anonymously) to another infertile couple; (3) to donate them to CHR for research purposes; or (4) to ask CHR to dispose of them in an ethical way.
The process here involves that the woman goes through an IVF cycle, like infertile women routinely do these days. Embryos generated in this cycle then undergo PGD on their third day after fertilization, when embryos usually have reached 6-8 cell stage. At that point one of these cells is microsurgically removed from the embryos and its chromosomes (amongst them the X- and Y-chromosome) can be analyzed, allowing us to determine whether an embryo is female or male. Once each embryo is so defined in its gender, only embryos of the desired gender are transferred back into the woman’s uterus, virtually guaranteeing a pregnancy of the desired gender. This technique is, therefore, much more accurate than sperm sorting in predicting the gender of a pregnancy.
The technique has, however, additional advantages and disadvantages. A clear additional advantage is that, at the same time as examining the gender of each embryo, other chromosomes can also be checked. By doing this, the most frequent chromosomal abnormalities in human embryos, such as for example Down’s syndrome, can be ruled out with considerable accuracy. Disadvantages are that the manipulation of the embryos may marginally reduce its chance for implantation in the uterus. Data available so far suggest, however, that the risk for birth defects is not increased following the procedure.
Before deciding to pursue this technique of gender selection, we strongly recommend a further detailed discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of this technique with your physician. You should also review the costs for each of these options with your physician’s staff. A final choice between these two really “working” methods is, in the end, both, a medical, and an ethical, one with which patient and physician need to be comfortable with.
You can't choose, it's genetics. sleep with a guy who's got a ton of little girls already LOL even then you're not 100%. The sex is determined by the man's sperm since we've got an X, he can spit an X or a Y to determine the sex.
I have heard that the (x) chomosome-girl, sperm swim slower but live longer. The (y)chromosome-boy, swin more aggressively, but do not last as long. Therefore if you can pinpoint the day of your ovulation, perhaps with an ovulation kit, or if you know your cycles really well, than you should have sex as close to your ovulation date as possible. Thus the x chromosome sperm may reach the egg first. This is not a sure fire method, but science tells us it can work. The hard part is getting the ovulation date as close as possible.
adoption.
For doing it cheap at home...try shettles. I got one girl when trying for a boy...then got the boy the 2nd time I tried it. So who knows if it really helped.
Even with sperm sorting you are only increasing your odds to about 80% so still 2 out of every 10 women don't end up with the gender they paid to try to get...so if you don't have plenty of money...I wouldn't even try it.
I have also read that once you have 2 or more of the same gender then that it probably the gender you would continue to have more often than not...since your body chemistry may be more favorable to one type of sperm.
I've known two women who have used the Shettles method with much success. I understand your frustration. Give some it a try. Here's a site to help you with natural gender selection. It's an overview of every option available and I'm sure if you wanted to you could research more into whichever one you choose. Good Luck!
I think you should be happy that you are able to have kids, and not worry so much. There are so many people out there that can't have kids and want them so bad, and here you are complaining cause you have so many girls and want a boy. Be blessed that you are able to have children, and don't worry so much whether its a boy or a girl, let nature take its course.
Find another man! It's the man who determines the baby's gender. Women only produce X or female chromosomes. Men produce both X & Y (female and male) chromosomes, so it's entirely up to the father whether or not a baby girl or boy is produced. There is no choice at the conscious level as to which sex will be produced. There are lots of "theories" and ancient or natural remedies you can try, but there are no guarantees.
u can't so be grateful for what u have and who u get some ppl would kill 2 what u have.
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