Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 1 year old from DE. It was the best decision that we ever made. We also considered adoption, but the truth was that, because our problem was also egg quality not another problem with carrying a baby to term, DE offered a much higher chance of getting a successful outcome before our money ran out. For us, we were lucky that it worked on the first try. Only you can decide if the genetic connection is necessary for you, but having a biological connection to my child through pregnancy and breastfeeding was wonderful and plenty of a connection to make me never think about the fact that he has different genes. The truth is that I feel like he is 100% my son since I have cared for him every day since he implanted in my uterus. He would not be a person if I wasn't involved. An egg, and even a fertilized egg, is not the same thing as a baby. I learned that lesson the hard way through many OE miscarriages.
I would agree with this mom's thinking in terms of having the biological connection. I am an adoptive mom and have met many other adoptive moms who really, truly mourn the lack of biological connection for years to come. I often think those moms would have been better off choosing an option like Donor Egg or surrogate.
Interesting. I am the adoptive mom who posted above you. I am not discounting the other moms' feelings, but I myself have never felt this way. If anything, I love seeing traits in her that I do not see in me (or my DH). I also was sooo tired of having my body manipulated by IF treatments that it felt like I had finally found the right route for me to find a child without having my body artificially manipulated and jerked all over the place. It was like it was I had been waiting for all my life. Also, like I said, I love seeing some traits in her which I have never seen in me or my DH. She is like a present we continue to unwrap every day. I love her!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 1 year old from DE. It was the best decision that we ever made. We also considered adoption, but the truth was that, because our problem was also egg quality not another problem with carrying a baby to term, DE offered a much higher chance of getting a successful outcome before our money ran out. For us, we were lucky that it worked on the first try. Only you can decide if the genetic connection is necessary for you, but having a biological connection to my child through pregnancy and breastfeeding was wonderful and plenty of a connection to make me never think about the fact that he has different genes. The truth is that I feel like he is 100% my son since I have cared for him every day since he implanted in my uterus. He would not be a person if I wasn't involved. An egg, and even a fertilized egg, is not the same thing as a baby. I learned that lesson the hard way through many OE miscarriages.
I would agree with this mom's thinking in terms of having the biological connection. I am an adoptive mom and have met many other adoptive moms who really, truly mourn the lack of biological connection for years to come. I often think those moms would have been better off choosing an option like Donor Egg or surrogate.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 1 year old from DE. It was the best decision that we ever made. We also considered adoption, but the truth was that, because our problem was also egg quality not another problem with carrying a baby to term, DE offered a much higher chance of getting a successful outcome before our money ran out. For us, we were lucky that it worked on the first try. Only you can decide if the genetic connection is necessary for you, but having a biological connection to my child through pregnancy and breastfeeding was wonderful and plenty of a connection to make me never think about the fact that he has different genes. The truth is that I feel like he is 100% my son since I have cared for him every day since he implanted in my uterus. He would not be a person if I wasn't involved. An egg, and even a fertilized egg, is not the same thing as a baby. I learned that lesson the hard way through many OE miscarriages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did 2 cycles of IVF that went no where b/c of egg quality issues. Planning to give it one more try b/c I bought into Shared Risk at SG. If that doesn't work, it's either donor egg or adopt.
While donor egg has some advantages (control over 1/2 the biology of the child, and control over pregnancy), part of me thinks it's just odd that it's my husband's sperm mixed with some other woman's egg. But adoption would have both my husband and I similarly situated, and fills a real human need whereas paying women to be donors still strikes me as a bit unsettling.
What are some considerations or questions that others have thought about when going this path?
Nope. If you're talking infant adoption, there are far more parents wanting to adopt than there are babies needing adopting.
Not saying it makes either choice right or wrong, but that shouldn't be a factor.
Anonymous wrote:Did 2 cycles of IVF that went no where b/c of egg quality issues. Planning to give it one more try b/c I bought into Shared Risk at SG. If that doesn't work, it's either donor egg or adopt.
While donor egg has some advantages (control over 1/2 the biology of the child, and control over pregnancy), part of me thinks it's just odd that it's my husband's sperm mixed with some other woman's egg. But adoption would have both my husband and I similarly situated, and fills a real human need whereas paying women to be donors still strikes me as a bit unsettling.
What are some considerations or questions that others have thought about when going this path?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, do some reading on epigenetics. If you carry a donor egg baby, you absolutely influence the genetics of the child. In a very real sense, he or she would have three genetic parents.
That's not true at all. You have a misguided idea about epigenetics.
Anonymous wrote:OP, do some reading on epigenetics. If you carry a donor egg baby, you absolutely influence the genetics of the child. In a very real sense, he or she would have three genetic parents.