Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry you’re going through this!
From a perspective of someone on the other side, unless she is incredibly clueless and insensitive then I guarantee you she’s thought about it but decided against offering. Watching a family member deal with infertility makes you think, man, is there anything I can do to help? But for many women it is still way too weird to think about someone else raising your genetic child. I know for me I’d feel really uncomfortable knowing I was the kids biological mom and I’d be scrutinizing every parenting decision my SIL made. And this is exactly why I haven’t offered!
There are people who totally feel differently but I think they’d have offered by now.
I wish you lots of luck and hope this isn’t offensive in any way!
Anonymous wrote:I would do this for my sister - it wouldn't be an issue. I would easily and happily say yes, and I don't even have eggs already retrieved and in storage. I'm sorry some of you don't have sisters you can count on
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine had my mom ask me. The answer was no regardless but if your family isnt messy maybe that’s an avenue
Not the OP, but why was your answer no? Knowing what I know now about infertility I wouldn't hesitate to help my sibling if I had one.
Anonymous wrote:If she hasnt specifically mentioned that she plans to donate the eggs she had frozen, then it’s very presumptuous of you to assume they are available for the asking.
Imagine if this were vehicles instead of eggs. If your sister has four cars and she drives two but kept two in the garage, you wouldn’t ask her if you could have one or buy one, would you??? No, of course not. Now—if she said “I’m about to go sell one of my cars that’s been in the garage” and you wanted to be considered as a potential buyer, then it makes sense to speak up. Common sense.
And that’s just cars.
With eggs, it’s a lot more emotional and they are genetically connected.
This is a bad idea, OP.
If you really feel the need to ask, at least ask as a hypothetical like “have you ever considered egg donation?” Or “someone asked the other day if I had ever asked you about being a donor and I told them we’d never talked about it. Do you think it’s weird crust we haven’t talked about that before?” Then if she doesn’t take the cue to ask more questions or offer, you will know she doesn’t want any part of this. Let her take the graceful exit without feeling like you’ve cornered her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do this for my sister - it wouldn't be an issue. I would easily and happily say yes, and I don't even have eggs already retrieved and in storage. I'm sorry some of you don't have sisters you can count on
Girl no one has to give their eggs away to be considered “reliable” as a sister
Seriously that person is nuts. And I don’t believe she’s the sister, I think she’s the infertile one.
Anonymous wrote:If she hasn’t offered, the only thing you can do is mention you are considering donor eggs and let her connect the dots. I would not ask. It could cause a permanent rupture.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t agree with these people saying not to ask or just say something like you’re considering egg donation. You guys will get past it if the asking is weird, but if you never ask you’ll always wonder.
Anonymous wrote:While I think you assume this would be a tidy situation if she said yes, there are so many potential pitfalls for the future.
What if the child has special needs? Even though nobody’s “fault” you may feel resentful of your sister.
What if the child is a superstar genius or athlete? Your sister might feel resentful because her kids aren’t.
When it comes to biology, it can be quite difficult to separate logic from emotion. We used donor gametes and while we considered asking relatives, I am 10000% glad we didn’t.