Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what age did you tell your donor conceived kids about half siblings? My boys are 10. They know they were conceived via donor sperm but haven’t spoken yet about their half siblings. I know they have 3 of them for sure.
Good God. What have you and other people who used donor sperm done to these children who will need a DNA test for everyone they date.
Anonymous wrote:At what age did you tell your donor conceived kids about half siblings? My boys are 10. They know they were conceived via donor sperm but haven’t spoken yet about their half siblings. I know they have 3 of them for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id wait until after college. Do you want your kids partying or finding themselves with "family" they trust but don't know, could have major issues?
You are really stretching. THey can party with anyone, including your family.
Anonymous wrote:Id wait until after college. Do you want your kids partying or finding themselves with "family" they trust but don't know, could have major issues?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We will not be bringing strsngers into our family either. Some of you people are obsessed. So funny the way the obsessed ones want to tell other people how to raise their kids snd conduct their lives.
You can do as you please but in 20 years when your children no longer wish to speak to you you’ll only have yourself and your ego to blame.
Your child could easily feel the same way about you since you’re forcing a relationship with strangers on them.
In adult adoptee circles, I've never met anyone whose trauma is related to exchanging Xmas cards with distant relatives. I've met a lot of people who are estranged from their adoptive families or their biological families over secrets, however.
By definition, if you are in an adoptee support group you are coping well!
Some people do not cope well and struggle with identity.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, most mothers make it about them. No one likes their mother. Many girls are daddy’s girls. That is a universal and global terms
Mother are known to be selfish and difficult and needy later in life.
Anonymous wrote:Id wait until after college. Do you want your kids partying or finding themselves with "family" they trust but don't know, could have major issues?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My good friend who has 3 children via donor egg has not told them at all—oldest is in college. It’s a tough call. Not sure what I would do in her place.
It's not a tough call. She is literally denying these kids knowing their true medical history, which is awful.
Also in this day and age where 23and me tests are a dime a dozen, the kids are bound to find out.
Denying? Well that ship has sailed. These women make a decision at birth (and before) that they DO NOT want a relationship with the biological father. Any biological father. No natural dad. That is an intentional and deliberate decision.
I doubt the child’s feelings or potential needs factor into this decision. A woman not “telling the kids” is probably because she didn’t think it through (or maybe think at all) about how it would impact them.
Most parents make it about them, not their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks. I will do it this year. I do believe they deserve to know. I used an anonymous donor so who knows if they will ever connect with their half siblings or their biological father but they could always do 23 and me when they are 18 or go in the donor sibling registry.
With donor sperm, they may have more half siblings than they want to know about.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/08/01/woman-finds-65-half-siblings-sperm-donor/70498194007/
those girls all look like I guy I dated in college who donated sperm …
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We will not be bringing strsngers into our family either. Some of you people are obsessed. So funny the way the obsessed ones want to tell other people how to raise their kids snd conduct their lives.
You can do as you please but in 20 years when your children no longer wish to speak to you you’ll only have yourself and your ego to blame.
Your child could easily feel the same way about you since you’re forcing a relationship with strangers on them.
In adult adoptee circles, I've never met anyone whose trauma is related to exchanging Xmas cards with distant relatives. I've met a lot of people who are estranged from their adoptive families or their biological families over secrets, however.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We will not be bringing strsngers into our family either. Some of you people are obsessed. So funny the way the obsessed ones want to tell other people how to raise their kids snd conduct their lives.
You can do as you please but in 20 years when your children no longer wish to speak to you you’ll only have yourself and your ego to blame.
Your child could easily feel the same way about you since you’re forcing a relationship with strangers on them.