Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/articles/alysa-liu-dad-became-single-204408791.html
I wish more men considered this route. As of now, women are mostly the ones going this route. I think men should seriously consider doing so as well.
I don't. Women should not do it either.
Plenty of research finds that kids in single parent households on average have worse outcomes in life, controlling for income.
The only group which does OK is girls who are raised by single parent mothers.
Children deserve both a mother and a father.
Actually, this isn't true. Studies have shown that children raised in single mother by choice households do just as well as children from 2 parent households. The issue is single parent by circumstance. Most issues there come from financial stress, relocation, and parental conflict.
Source: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32940489/
Personally, if I could do it over again, I would have been a SMBC. I'm a divorced mom, and I already find it easier parenting without a man than with one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, it's wrong to bring a child into the world without intending for it to have a mother. A child losing their mother is a tragedy, so to plan it that way is just monstrous.
I agree. But I agree the same is true of women who bring a child into the world via surrogacy without intending for it to have a father.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/articles/alysa-liu-dad-became-single-204408791.html
I wish more men considered this route. As of now, women are mostly the ones going this route. I think men should seriously consider doing so as well.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/articles/alysa-liu-dad-became-single-204408791.html
I wish more men considered this route. As of now, women are mostly the ones going this route. I think men should seriously consider doing so as well.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/articles/alysa-liu-dad-became-single-204408791.html
I wish more men considered this route. As of now, women are mostly the ones going this route. I think men should seriously consider doing so as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, it's wrong to bring a child into the world without intending for it to have a mother. A child losing their mother is a tragedy, so to plan it that way is just monstrous.
I agree. But I agree the same is true of women who bring a child into the world via surrogacy without intending for it to have a father.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/articles/alysa-liu-dad-became-single-204408791.html
I wish more men considered this route. As of now, women are mostly the ones going this route. I think men should seriously consider doing so as well.
I don't. Women should not do it either.
Plenty of research finds that kids in single parent households on average have worse outcomes in life, controlling for income.
The only group which does OK is girls who are raised by single parent mothers.
Children deserve both a mother and a father.
Actually, this isn't true. Studies have shown that children raised in single mother by choice households do just as well as children from 2 parent households. The issue is single parent by circumstance. Most issues there come from financial stress, relocation, and parental conflict.
Source: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32940489/
Personally, if I could do it over again, I would have been a SMBC. I'm a divorced mom, and I already find it easier parenting without a man than with one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So other articles dispute this. "Their mother, Yan Qingxin "Mary", continued to serve as their legal guardian after she and Arthur divorced." They in fact have a mother.
But she's only their surrogate, not their egg donor?
She is neither. She is not their biological mother nor their surrogate, nor their adoptive mother.
She has been a mother figure in their life and has legal guardianship during periods then the father was away.
Interesting. Sounds like she deserves some credit for being his backstop. My initial thought was, how does anyone run a law firm and raise 5 kids alone? The answer seems to be that they don't. They have people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So other articles dispute this. "Their mother, Yan Qingxin "Mary", continued to serve as their legal guardian after she and Arthur divorced." They in fact have a mother.
But she's only their surrogate, not their egg donor?
She is neither. She is not their biological mother nor their surrogate, nor their adoptive mother.
She has been a mother figure in their life and has legal guardianship during periods then the father was away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So other articles dispute this. "Their mother, Yan Qingxin "Mary", continued to serve as their legal guardian after she and Arthur divorced." They in fact have a mother.
But she's only their surrogate, not their egg donor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, it's wrong to bring a child into the world without intending for it to have a mother. A child losing their mother is a tragedy, so to plan it that way is just monstrous.
I agree. But I agree the same is true of women who bring a child into the world via surrogacy without intending for it to have a father.
Anonymous wrote:So other articles dispute this. "Their mother, Yan Qingxin "Mary", continued to serve as their legal guardian after she and Arthur divorced." They in fact have a mother.