60 answers

To Circumcise or Not to Circumcise? - Auburn,WA

Ok so I have a strange sort of situation. I currently have 2 kids 1 girl 1 boy. When our son was born dad decided he thought he should be circumcised, and I kinda figured in that area he should have some say and I was pretty indifferent to it. So when the day came I had to take him in (of course) and it was HORRIBLE. The whole experiance. My OB couldnt do it until my son was 3 months old due to vacation and scheduling so our GP recommeneded another doctor, who did the ring method (basically cut a little off, slip this ring under the rest, tie it off and let the tissue die and fall off). Well, the idiot doctor didnt tie it off right and when I opened his diaper the next morning the ring was off and just sitting there. I couldnt get ahold of any doctor from that practice (it was saterday) and ended up taking my 9 day old son to urgent care. IT WAS AWFUL! The skin did eventually die and fall off from the 1 day of being tied but after going through it all I deeply regreted the decision to circumcise. From the inital unnessasary pain to my poor little guy to the extended drama and pain which COULD have resulted in needed to have it re done.
So now 18 months later I am 31 weeks along with our third unplanned and final (I'm getting my tubes tied) who happens to be a boy. And I am at a loss as to what to do. I dont want either of my sons to feel strange for not being like the other one or there father (who is circumcised), but I also dont want to make a my newborn go through so much pain. Not to mention the trama of watching my baby being straped to a board naked so that someone can literally hack some skin off of him. Talk about a hard thing to witness, I am very protective of my kids and was fighting off hurting the doctor the whole time.
So I guess what I'm getting at is, do you think it would be wrong to have 1 circumcised and 1 not circumcised? I mean will it effect them later, if they're not the same... Wow, that was long. Sorry.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Well, we still havent decided what to do, but all of the comments have made me feel that either way we go it can turn out ok. A few people suggested making dh go in with him to get it done. That is a great suggestion, but he would definately hurt a doctor, when our first got shots he had to be removed from the clinic. (hes a bit protective as well) and a few others suggested that I not be there for it. I cannot imagin sending my son off to endure so much pain with complete strangers, even if at that point he doenst know one person from another... I mean if hes going to have to go through that kind of pain shouldnt I be commited to it enough to go with him? I mean isnt that part of being a mom? If I decide to circumcise this time I will be doing a lot more looking into whos doing it, and if we dont, than I guess we deal with that later on in life. Neither of my brothers were cut, they had awkward teenage years and first girlfriends, but Niether of them would ever get cut now so I guess I've just got more to think about. Thanks to everyone who responded!

Featured Answers

You need a different doctor. They did both my sons on day 2, before we left the hospital. They took them back, and brought them back to me in less then 20 minutes, circumcised and perfectly happy.

I also know a woman who choose not to do it until her son was old enouph to decide for himself, so the poor boy had to do it at age 12, and went through much more pain, and the embarrassment of having mom help with creams and such. But even knowing this going in, he wanted it done.

I think you should do eeny-meeny-miney-mo, because if you end on the "right" one you'll breathe a sigh of relief and if you end on the one you don't want you'll realize right away too. :)
I imagine that they will totally notice that their penises are different, but it shouldn't be hard to explain that you circumsised the first because you thought it was the right thing to do and then you learned more information and decided not to circumsise the second because you thought THAT was the right thing to do. They'll understand.
That said--I have a friend that had a similar situation (the circumcision itself wasn't terrible, but she just had a lot more information the second time around) and she and her husband decided to circumsise the second because they had already circumsised the first.

I don't think it'd be a problem to have things be different. If they had questions later, you could always tell them what happened and that you decided it was better not to do it again.

My father in law was circumcised, but didn't want to do his sons. They were fine with being different from Dad.

More Answers

If you want a circumcision to be done right and without any chance of infection or emotional damage call a Mohyl. (Jewish circumcision ritual rabbi). Call a Reform or Conservative synagogue to get the name of one.
Why doctors who are so poorly trained do the cap cut (this is what your son had) rather than the full circumscision I do not know. Or why they even bother
to do it I do not know. The Mohyl does not strap the baby down. Usually during the procedure the baby is held by the godparent. And the child is give a tad of wine on a piece of sterile gauge to suck on. They don't get drunk but they go to sleep.

If you want it done right get an expert.

2 moms found this helpful

I am against circumcision. God didn't make a mistake when he made your baby... He made him the way he should be.

I don't think a defensless baby should be strapped naked to a board and hacked on. I just can't see any way in my mind that should take place.

If Ryan (my son) wants to do it when he's older - so be it. but its his choice.

1 mom found this helpful

Dear L.,

I'm so sorry. That sounds like an awful experience for you and your little guy. No wonder you don't want a repeat performance. We made the decision not to circumcise our son after having a discussion with our pediatrician. I had read descriptions and seen photographs of the procedure online so I was already heading in that direction. Our doctor explained the pros and cons of each decision and it just felt like this was the right way for us to go. I had initially thought, well before our son came into our lives, that circumcision would be the only way to go. I couldn't imagine a son with parts that didn't match his father's. But we aren't religious and we can always decide to do it later, or better yet, we can let our son decide what he wants to do with his body, so I'm very happy with our choice. If your husband feels strongly that it must be done, try setting this up while you're still at the hospital. Also, I had a friend who made a deal with her husband that he would change all the diapers until the circumcision healed so she wouldn't have to see how bad it was.

Good luck and congratulations!

1 mom found this helpful

I feel terrible for the experience your first son had. If you and your husband decide to circumcise again, please understand that it does not have to be that type of experience.

I have three boys, all circumcised due to dads' preferences. None of them cried during their procedures; all circumcisions were performed in the hospital before we were discharged after birth, in a separate room (you wouldn't usually be in the same room for any other surgery on your child; I don't see how circumcision should be different); all of them received pain medication.

I just want you to know that if you choose to circumcise again, it doesn't have to be a repeat of the previous trauma. There are many variations to how circumcisions are done; make sure the doctor knows what you expect, e.g. pain medication and type of circumcision you prefer.

1 mom found this helpful

-- very clear, L.-- I absolutely get it. My son ( now 33) was not circumcised as he was near death the first week of his life- and the pediatric specialists at U.W. hospital made such a fuss about '''totally unneccesary risk''---that my d.h. and I never dared ---. like that. Niether of my grandsons' are circ--- 'd becasue their dads arent - -HOWEVER -- seems to me -- in your boat -- I'd go to a pediatrician I truly like and trust - and say-- ''prove to me you can do this with minimal pain or distress --'' doctors have the power to use pain relief - ( for decades they were taught that babies don't FEEL pain--- gads-- but new research ( they needed research????) has shown that babies DO feel pain- and it shouold be relieved-- )))). Thats' what I'd do in your situation- as I spect one of your boys would think there was something wrong if they didn't look alike--- just my opinion--but do talk it through with the doctor who will do the procedure and make sure they know your bad experience (never mind your BABIES' - bad experience) --. That's my''''' vote'''' -- but you'll do fine- I can tell-- you are a great advocate--.

Blessings,
J.=-== aka-- Old Mom

1 mom found this helpful

L., I think you have already made your decision and I respect you for it. Surely the dad has an opinion this time as well?

First, we should not be afraid to tell our children we've learned from our mistakes/past because after all that's what we'd like them to do.

Second, no children are going to look the same in most ways; we all have variations. I think the whole, 'penises must match' thing is really odd.

Third, if you have to leave the room because a cosmetic procedure is too horrible to watch your baby endure then you're kidding yourself about it being 'okay'.

Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

My husband is circumcised but none of our four boys. I went to a health seminar on it and the jest of it is unless you live in a third world country or you are a missionary somewhere where you can't take a bath at least twice a week and you know you will get disgustingly dirty for a long time than you don't need that surgery. It is unnecessary so much so that most insurances consider it elective now, a lot do not pay for it, it would be like getting a tummy tuck so to speak, not necessary.My older set of boys told me that at school it is 50-50 ---half the kids are and half aren't. I lived in Portland Oregon for 10 years so the second set of boys were with all uncircumcised boys as they are into the all natural there. The older guys might be circumcised but a lot of the new generation are not. My childrens pediatrician didn't have any of her boys done, she said it was unnecessary to put someone through pain for nothing so my final decision was not too. If you and your husband don't make a big deal of the difference between your husband and them, they won't either. Part of life is excepting people for who they are and they will meet many people different from them in school. Good luck to you.

1 mom found this helpful

We did not circumcise our son. He was almost 2 months premature and stayed in the hospitals special care unit for almost 3 weeks. The circumcision room was right beside the special care area. We watched the babies come down everyday, most without parents. We heard the screams and cries. There was no way I was going to let that happen to my son, even though we were concerned that he would look different from his father. At about 5 years old, he noticed the difference and mentioned to me that he thought he would look more like dad when he was older. I explained that we had left him the way God had made him, which was perfect. Daddy looked different because... and explained why and how boys are circumcised. Talked about his need to be extra good at keeping things clean. Our son is 7 now and I haven't heard another concern from him. We talk nearly every night about a lot of things. Haven't heard a peep.

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