Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your twins ever get teased or treated differently by other kids or families due to their DE status? Was it ever a thing? I have a DE child; I worry sometimes not so much about my own kid, with whom I have a very close connection, but how other kids might treat my child as 'different' ?
Op here. My kids' friends and our casual acquaintances don't know the kids' DE origins. In fact I didn't tell my parents because I worried they would not accept them. Both of my parents passed away without knowing, but they absolutely adored their three grandsons.
NP here also with one OE and one DE kid. I love both my kids equally but the DE kid looks a lot like the egg donor and takes after my DH while the OE kid looks like me. I marvel at seeing my face in my OE kid's face and I miss not seeing that in my DE kid but I tell myself that he could have easily taken after his dad facially. Like PP we never told the grandparents for the same reasons. DE kid knows that "another lady helped us" as we were taught to do during the required counseling so that there is never a bombshell moment. He also knows that this is private medical information that we don't reveal to other people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your twins ever get teased or treated differently by other kids or families due to their DE status? Was it ever a thing? I have a DE child; I worry sometimes not so much about my own kid, with whom I have a very close connection, but how other kids might treat my child as 'different' ?
Op here. My kids' friends and our casual acquaintances don't know the kids' DE origins. In fact I didn't tell my parents because I worried they would not accept them. Both of my parents passed away without knowing, but they absolutely adored their three grandsons.
NP here also with one OE and one DE kid. I love both my kids equally but the DE kid looks a lot like the egg donor and takes after my DH while the OE kid looks like me. I marvel at seeing my face in my OE kid's face and I miss not seeing that in my DE kid but I tell myself that he could have easily taken after his dad facially. Like PP we never told the grandparents for the same reasons. DE kid knows that "another lady helped us" as we were taught to do during the required counseling so that there is never a bombshell moment. He also knows that this is private medical information that we don't reveal to other people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your twins ever get teased or treated differently by other kids or families due to their DE status? Was it ever a thing? I have a DE child; I worry sometimes not so much about my own kid, with whom I have a very close connection, but how other kids might treat my child as 'different' ?
Op here. My kids' friends and our casual acquaintances don't know the kids' DE origins. In fact I didn't tell my parents because I worried they would not accept them. Both of my parents passed away without knowing, but they absolutely adored their three grandsons.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, thanks for doing this! I’m a former donor and I wonder about my recipient family(ies) all the time and hope they are happy and well. So, for one of my donations, the clinic inadvertently discharged me home with a form that had the intended father’s name and address on it. I still have it in a file cabinet somewhere. This was from about 15 years ago when anonymous donations were the norm and semi-anonymous or open donations were pretty much unheard of. Would it be horribly intrusive and unwelcome to send a letter just saying “Hello, I might be your child’s donor. I’m open to contact, but please disregard if you prefer not to hear from me”?
I should probably have shredded it a long time ago and pretended I never saw it, but I’ve held onto it all these years. I believe the recipients were a same sex couple or possibly single father. Any thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Did your twins ever get teased or treated differently by other kids or families due to their DE status? Was it ever a thing? I have a DE child; I worry sometimes not so much about my own kid, with whom I have a very close connection, but how other kids might treat my child as 'different' ?
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, thanks for doing this! I’m a former donor and I wonder about my recipient family(ies) all the time and hope they are happy and well. So, for one of my donations, the clinic inadvertently discharged me home with a form that had the intended father’s name and address on it. I still have it in a file cabinet somewhere. This was from about 15 years ago when anonymous donations were the norm and semi-anonymous or open donations were pretty much unheard of. Would it be horribly intrusive and unwelcome to send a letter just saying “Hello, I might be your child’s donor. I’m open to contact, but please disregard if you prefer not to hear from me”?
I should probably have shredded it a long time ago and pretended I never saw it, but I’ve held onto it all these years. I believe the recipients were a same sex couple or possibly single father. Any thoughts?