Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My younger sister has offered to donate her eggs to us since IVF with my own eggs hasn't worked yet. Would love any advice from those who have used eggs from a relative or friend. Did you run into any unexpected problems? Did you tell your child who the donor was? Did you sign any kind of agreement with your relative/friend? Did you all talk to a counselor together to prepare? I assume insurance won't cover this even though it covers my own IVF. What can I do to make things as easy as possible for her? How did your husband/partner handle it (mine is still not comfortable with it). No one has ever offered such a precious gift to us before and I am floored.
Yes use your sister’s egg. You have the same genetic matter along. I have a friend who did this. All are fine. I am trying to use my brother’s sperm (I have no sister) and am worried about DH response to the idea.
—— PP, forgive me here, but if you want to use your brother’s sperm to conceive, isn’t that medically permitting inbreeding? You could run into a host of genetic issues as could future children of any conceived children in this process.
No. It would be a donor egg. Same as using sister’s egg and husband or donor sperm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My younger sister has offered to donate her eggs to us since IVF with my own eggs hasn't worked yet. Would love any advice from those who have used eggs from a relative or friend. Did you run into any unexpected problems? Did you tell your child who the donor was? Did you sign any kind of agreement with your relative/friend? Did you all talk to a counselor together to prepare? I assume insurance won't cover this even though it covers my own IVF. What can I do to make things as easy as possible for her? How did your husband/partner handle it (mine is still not comfortable with it). No one has ever offered such a precious gift to us before and I am floored.
Yes use your sister’s egg. You have the same genetic matter along. I have a friend who did this. All are fine. I am trying to use my brother’s sperm (I have no sister) and am worried about DH response to the idea.
—— PP, forgive me here, but if you want to use your brother’s sperm to conceive, isn’t that medically permitting inbreeding? You could run into a host of genetic issues as could future children of any conceived children in this process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My younger sister has offered to donate her eggs to us since IVF with my own eggs hasn't worked yet. Would love any advice from those who have used eggs from a relative or friend. Did you run into any unexpected problems? Did you tell your child who the donor was? Did you sign any kind of agreement with your relative/friend? Did you all talk to a counselor together to prepare? I assume insurance won't cover this even though it covers my own IVF. What can I do to make things as easy as possible for her? How did your husband/partner handle it (mine is still not comfortable with it). No one has ever offered such a precious gift to us before and I am floored.
Yes use your sister’s egg. You have the same genetic matter along. I have a friend who did this. All are fine. I am trying to use my brother’s sperm (I have no sister) and am worried about DH response to the idea.
Anonymous wrote:My younger sister has offered to donate her eggs to us since IVF with my own eggs hasn't worked yet. Would love any advice from those who have used eggs from a relative or friend. Did you run into any unexpected problems? Did you tell your child who the donor was? Did you sign any kind of agreement with your relative/friend? Did you all talk to a counselor together to prepare? I assume insurance won't cover this even though it covers my own IVF. What can I do to make things as easy as possible for her? How did your husband/partner handle it (mine is still not comfortable with it). No one has ever offered such a precious gift to us before and I am floored.
Anonymous wrote:I can only answer this partly because although we have another child from IVF, the donor eggs from a family member were not successful. Yes, definitely get a legal agreement (good walls make good neighbors on something like this). The lawyer will walk you through the issues. And yes we did counseling beforehand. If I recall correctly, our center demanded both.
For our son born from IVF, we were very candid at a young age that this is how he was born. This knowledge is now part of him and I cannot overstate the importance of this. When we took him to classes at our Catholic Church for first penance and communion, I was absolutely floored when the Church handed out a long list of suggested "sins" to both parents and kids that should be confessed. IVF was on the list. This did not escape my son's notice but it did not phase him in the slightest because he is comfortable and secure with who he is.
Our plan for the family donor was to tell the child at a very young age. IMO, the risk that the child could find out inadvertently is too high and it would not be good for a teenager or young adult to find out that auntie is the "real" mom. We also planned to talk to the child about genetics and what matters is not only which genes you have, but which ones are turned on or off and that this is environment dependent. So, it would not be true to say that auntie is the real mom, even on the genetic level. Your real mom is the one you emerged from, the one who created the blood flowing through your veins at birth and who created a loving home for you.