Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never put my body through pregnancy. I adopted my kids.
This is nothing to brag about.
Not the poster you were responding to, but I’m always glad to see people choose adoption.
Adoption is more often than not a traumatic experience for the adoptee & birth mother.
…As if leaving babies and young children to be raised within a state’s foster care system (or the overseas equivalent, etc?) is the better option here?
By choose adoption, I mean when people choose to adopt. There are a lot of babies and kids who need loving homes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never put my body through pregnancy. I adopted my kids.
This is nothing to brag about.
Not the poster you were responding to, but I’m always glad to see people choose adoption.
Adoption is more often than not a traumatic experience for the adoptee & birth mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never put my body through pregnancy. I adopted my kids.
This is nothing to brag about.
Not the poster you were responding to, but I’m always glad to see people choose adoption.
Adoption is more often than not a traumatic experience for the adoptee & birth mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never put my body through pregnancy. I adopted my kids.
This is nothing to brag about.
Not the poster you were responding to, but I’m always glad to see people choose adoption.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never put my body through pregnancy. I adopted my kids.
This is nothing to brag about.
Anonymous wrote:I would never put my body through pregnancy. I adopted my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In England surrogacy can be voluntary but cannot be compensated (beyond medical costs). I do think that removes the risk of women being coerced due to economic circumstances, although I think that is more likely is poorer countries than in the US.
same in the US. Its state by state but I think all states require that "comp" be actually just related to the hardship of surrogacy. As someone who had a child by surrogate - it was an enormous blessing - I cannot have kids do to a deformed uterus I was born with - and the fact that someone chose to help me is the biggest gift I can imagine getting.
I cant fathom asking someone to do that just cause you dont want stretch marks or cant fit it in your schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don’t have any medical reason to do so. I just don’t want to be pregnant again, gain weight and have to try to lose it again. have my body change permanently, give birth etc.
And I can easily afford a surrogate.
Would you do it in my situation?
Why would anyone deliberately cause trauma to a newborn by taking her from her mother?
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t have any medical reason to do so. I just don’t want to be pregnant again, gain weight and have to try to lose it again. have my body change permanently, give birth etc.
And I can easily afford a surrogate.
Would you do it in my situation?
Anonymous wrote:In England surrogacy can be voluntary but cannot be compensated (beyond medical costs). I do think that removes the risk of women being coerced due to economic circumstances, although I think that is more likely is poorer countries than in the US.
Anonymous wrote:Surrogacy is rich women using poor women and all surrogacy should be illegal.
Anonymous wrote:sure why not. you are going to outsource raising your baby anyway. just try to remember what your baby looks like in case you forget
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Surrogacy is rich women using poor women and all surrogacy should be illegal.
SurrogacyCapitalism is rich women using poor women and allsurrogacycapitalism should be illegal.
Lady, if you pay other women to scrub your toilets then you’re in no position to get sanctimonious about surrogacy.