Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Books by Carla Lewis-Long
http://www.goodreads.com/author/list/4426362.Carla_Lewis_Long
Why I'm So Special: A Book ... Why I'm So Special: A Book About Surrogacy
by Carla Lewis-Long (Goodreads Author)
5.0 of 5 stars 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2010
Why I'm So Special: A Book ... Why I'm So Special: A Book About Surrogacy With Two Daddies
by Carla Lewis-Long (Goodreads Author)
4.0 of 5 stars 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2011
Want to Read
OH, please DON'T! I am an ES school teacher. Every adopted kid comes up to me on day one, tells me their special adoption story and lets me know how they are much more "special" than every other kid in the class. Boy are they let down when they find out they are just like everyone else, and that everyones else's mom loves them just as much or more. Big shocker.
Anonymous wrote:Books by Carla Lewis-Long
http://www.goodreads.com/author/list/4426362.Carla_Lewis_Long
Why I'm So Special: A Book ... Why I'm So Special: A Book About Surrogacy
by Carla Lewis-Long (Goodreads Author)
5.0 of 5 stars 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2010
Why I'm So Special: A Book ... Why I'm So Special: A Book About Surrogacy With Two Daddies
by Carla Lewis-Long (Goodreads Author)
4.0 of 5 stars 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2011
Want to Read
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid's 'genesis' story is very important to their development - 'lying' or essentially lying by omission about it is detrimental to their mental health, self-identity and self-confidence and relationship with their parents.
Did you read that in a book? Or did you actually find a live person whose life was ruined because the parents never told him they used a gestational carrier?
My parents never talked to me about my "genesis". My mental health, self-identity and self-confidence is just fine. It actually never occurred to me that my "genesis" is a source of self-confidence. My self-confidence comes from other things. I'm sure when I was a kid it came from knowing my parents love me more than anything in the world. Never remember being interested in much else.
Your parents never told stories about the day of your birth? I know all about mine (i.e. what my mom was doing when she went into labor, how they had to rush her to the hospital, how her labor was 45 minutes). It seems weird to have never been told the details of your grand entrance into this world. Also, what about if you have a DD and she starts asking things like "Mom, was your pregnancy like this?" Might get awkward to reveal that, uh, you were never pregnant. Kids deserve the truth. It doesn't need to be elaborate but just not telling seems like it could come back to bite you at a later date.
Anonymous wrote:A kid's 'genesis' story is very important to their development - 'lying' or essentially lying by omission about it is detrimental to their mental health, self-identity and self-confidence and relationship with their parents.
Anonymous wrote:every psychologist in the world agrees that you tell them.
Anonymous wrote:We had twins via a gestational carrier (genetically DH and mine) -- we've found the few books you can buy to try to explain it to kids are pretty lame, for kids of the GC's, or focus too much on the 'mommy had a boo-boo' aspect of it (worried about the kids will focus on mommy being boo-boo'd...
we were thinking about putting together our own little book and generally had advice from psychologists about beings straight forward just the facts kind of way and avoiding 'over talking' or 'over explaining' things that end up making it sound weirder.But - any advice on how kids reacted to the stories and things to do or avoid would be appreciated.
) but later it really does not matter at all. They are both genetically yours, right? The older they get the more that matter, and the less the "story of the GS" matters. BTDT. GL.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid's 'genesis' story is very important to their development - 'lying' or essentially lying by omission about it is detrimental to their mental health, self-identity and self-confidence and relationship with their parents.
Did you read that in a book? Or did you actually find a live person whose life was ruined because the parents never told him they used a gestational carrier?
My parents never talked to me about my "genesis". My mental health, self-identity and self-confidence is just fine. It actually never occurred to me that my "genesis" is a source of self-confidence. My self-confidence comes from other things. I'm sure when I was a kid it came from knowing my parents love me more than anything in the world. Never remember being interested in much else.
Your parents never told stories about the day of your birth? I know all about mine (i.e. what my mom was doing when she went into labor, how they had to rush her to the hospital, how her labor was 45 minutes). It seems weird to have never been told the details of your grand entrance into this world. Also, what about if you have a DD and she starts asking things like "Mom, was your pregnancy like this?" Might get awkward to reveal that, uh, you were never pregnant. Kids deserve the truth. It doesn't need to be elaborate but just not telling seems like it could come back to bite you at a later date.
Do you know all about your birth because your parents told you, or because you asked them? I suspect that if you have never been told about it, it wouldn't seem weird to you.
I have a super close relationship with my mom, and I honestly never asked her about her pregnancy with me, labor or delivery. She never spoke about it to me either. I am 40. It just never came up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid's 'genesis' story is very important to their development - 'lying' or essentially lying by omission about it is detrimental to their mental health, self-identity and self-confidence and relationship with their parents.
Did you read that in a book? Or did you actually find a live person whose life was ruined because the parents never told him they used a gestational carrier?
My parents never talked to me about my "genesis". My mental health, self-identity and self-confidence is just fine. It actually never occurred to me that my "genesis" is a source of self-confidence. My self-confidence comes from other things. I'm sure when I was a kid it came from knowing my parents love me more than anything in the world. Never remember being interested in much else.
Your parents never told stories about the day of your birth? I know all about mine (i.e. what my mom was doing when she went into labor, how they had to rush her to the hospital, how her labor was 45 minutes). It seems weird to have never been told the details of your grand entrance into this world. Also, what about if you have a DD and she starts asking things like "Mom, was your pregnancy like this?" Might get awkward to reveal that, uh, you were never pregnant. Kids deserve the truth. It doesn't need to be elaborate but just not telling seems like it could come back to bite you at a later date.
Do you know all about your birth because your parents told you, or because you asked them? I suspect that if you have never been told about it, it wouldn't seem weird to you.
I have a super close relationship with my mom, and I honestly never asked her about her pregnancy with me, labor or delivery. She never spoke about it to me either. I am 40. It just never came up.
So if you found out you were adopted or carried by a GS how would you feel?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid's 'genesis' story is very important to their development - 'lying' or essentially lying by omission about it is detrimental to their mental health, self-identity and self-confidence and relationship with their parents.
Did you read that in a book? Or did you actually find a live person whose life was ruined because the parents never told him they used a gestational carrier?
My parents never talked to me about my "genesis". My mental health, self-identity and self-confidence is just fine. It actually never occurred to me that my "genesis" is a source of self-confidence. My self-confidence comes from other things. I'm sure when I was a kid it came from knowing my parents love me more than anything in the world. Never remember being interested in much else.
Your parents never told stories about the day of your birth? I know all about mine (i.e. what my mom was doing when she went into labor, how they had to rush her to the hospital, how her labor was 45 minutes). It seems weird to have never been told the details of your grand entrance into this world. Also, what about if you have a DD and she starts asking things like "Mom, was your pregnancy like this?" Might get awkward to reveal that, uh, you were never pregnant. Kids deserve the truth. It doesn't need to be elaborate but just not telling seems like it could come back to bite you at a later date.
Do you know all about your birth because your parents told you, or because you asked them? I suspect that if you have never been told about it, it wouldn't seem weird to you.
I have a super close relationship with my mom, and I honestly never asked her about her pregnancy with me, labor or delivery. She never spoke about it to me either. I am 40. It just never came up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid's 'genesis' story is very important to their development - 'lying' or essentially lying by omission about it is detrimental to their mental health, self-identity and self-confidence and relationship with their parents.
Did you read that in a book? Or did you actually find a live person whose life was ruined because the parents never told him they used a gestational carrier?
My parents never talked to me about my "genesis". My mental health, self-identity and self-confidence is just fine. It actually never occurred to me that my "genesis" is a source of self-confidence. My self-confidence comes from other things. I'm sure when I was a kid it came from knowing my parents love me more than anything in the world. Never remember being interested in much else.
Your parents never told stories about the day of your birth? I know all about mine (i.e. what my mom was doing when she went into labor, how they had to rush her to the hospital, how her labor was 45 minutes). It seems weird to have never been told the details of your grand entrance into this world. Also, what about if you have a DD and she starts asking things like "Mom, was your pregnancy like this?" Might get awkward to reveal that, uh, you were never pregnant. Kids deserve the truth. It doesn't need to be elaborate but just not telling seems like it could come back to bite you at a later date.