Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personally, I would not consider a donor egg baby to be my grandchild would not want to know.
You are a horrible person.
Why doesn't she have the right to that feeling?
It is not her biological grand child. you can't force love.
I am sure the mother supports her daughter but if she doesn't love the child as her own you can't force that, can you?
Really that is awful. I suppose if knowing it's a donor egg would make the Op's mom love the baby less - it is better to find that out now. Op would then have plenty of time to place distance between herself and that so called "grandmother".
It is not her biological grandchild. You can't force a grandparent to adopt a grandchild other than falling in love.
It may happen or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personally, I would not consider a donor egg baby to be my grandchild would not want to know.
You are a horrible person.
Why doesn't she have the right to that feeling?
It is not her biological grand child. you can't force love.
I am sure the mother supports her daughter but if she doesn't love the child as her own you can't force that, can you?
Really that is awful. I suppose if knowing it's a donor egg would make the Op's mom love the baby less - it is better to find that out now. Op would then have plenty of time to place distance between herself and that so called "grandmother".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personally, I would not consider a donor egg baby to be my grandchild would not want to know.
You are a horrible person.
Why doesn't she have the right to that feeling?
It is not her biological grand child. you can't force love.
I am sure the mother supports her daughter but if she doesn't love the child as her own you can't force that, can you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personally, I would not consider a donor egg baby to be my grandchild would not want to know.
You are a horrible person.
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I would not consider a donor egg baby to be my grandchild would not want to know.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. As I read these suggestions, I'm also realizing that I'm concerned she will tell people. I plan to tell only a small group of people -- I am going to let everyone else assume it's my egg (I'm youngish) until the child is old enough to start telling people herself, if she chooses to. My mom has no filter or discretion. If she's thinking about something, she says it. Which means everyone in my hometown and extended family and every person she sits next to on a plane will know my business. I always dislike that, but it is particularly bothersome to me when it's about something that I feel strong emotions about, like this.
I probably should not have told her donor egg was an option since I don't actually trust how she will deal with the news, but that ship has already sailed.
Anonymous wrote:Just tell her and be done with it!
Anonymous wrote:I am pregnant with a baby created by using donor eggs. My mom knew I'd move to donor eggs if my own didn't work, but so far she hasn't asked whose eggs we used. She seems to be assuming I used mine because she has made comments about genetics. I want to eventually tell her the truth because I am not going to keep this a secret from my child, but I'm honestly not ready to have that conversation yet. I'm still really sad that I couldn't use my eggs and I'm not ready to deal with my mom's sadness about it (and she will be sad).
I'm seeing her this weekend. If she asks, is there anything I can say to side step the issue? I don't want to lie to her -- I just want to kick it down the road a bit.
I'm thinking something along the lines of, "you know, I don't really want to think about what I had to do to make this baby right now. I just want to celebrate that I'm pregnant. There will be plenty if time to talk about genes later." Or something like that. Suggestions?