Anonymous wrote:Would anyone here tell their kids when and if they experienced smoking pot? alcohol before age 21? The list goes on and on. I just think, as long as you love your kid, whether it be 100% yours, a donor egg, or adopted, just love them. If for some reason they ask, and, they are old enough and mature enough, perhaps. It just seems to me to be a Pandora's Box.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP you quoted and I agree that a young child could blurt out this kind of information, but we believe the risks that she will tell someone and later regret the decision are much less than the risks if we were not to tell at all or if we were to delay telling until she is older. With that said, I don't believe anyone in our extended family would view or treat our child differently upon learning that she was conceived with a donor egg.
But she might also tell it to her teacher, friends in kindergarten and beyond... I also sort of disagree that it's solely DC secret to tell or not tell. It is your and your husband's secret as well.
I am not advocating telling or not telling - I really have no dog in this fight (will stop at children I already have rather than move to DE). I was just compelled to comment because I feel that there is a lot of pressure on parents to tell with medical records and destroyed relationships pointed out over and over again, while potential negatives are pretty much ignored.
If this is your big concern, then I would just teach her the concepts of "private"--things we only discuss with Mommy and Daddy, vs. "public"--things we share indiscriminately. Kids can master this at a surprisingly young age. You could still reliably tell many kids by age 7 or 8, which is young enough for it to be part of their identity, rather than having it change their view of who they are.
For us, the driving question was how I felt about the worst-case scenario at either end: Would I rather risk complete alienation from my child or complete alienation from my family, and I chose to tell my kid. I wanted to be a mom more than I wanted to be a sister or a daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a completely different situation if you already have a biological child. Especially, a young biological child from the same marriage. This is why I have ruled out donor eggs.
To me, this really isn't any different than having a mix of biological and adopted children, a la Brangelina. I am my parents' biological child, while my younger brother was adopted after my mother experienced secondary infertility. What a great story to be able to tell the adopted or donor child about how very badly he/she was wanted and what great lengths you went to to bring him/her into the family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP you quoted and I agree that a young child could blurt out this kind of information, but we believe the risks that she will tell someone and later regret the decision are much less than the risks if we were not to tell at all or if we were to delay telling until she is older. With that said, I don't believe anyone in our extended family would view or treat our child differently upon learning that she was conceived with a donor egg.
But she might also tell it to her teacher, friends in kindergarten and beyond... I also sort of disagree that it's solely DC secret to tell or not tell. It is your and your husband's secret as well.
I am not advocating telling or not telling - I really have no dog in this fight (will stop at children I already have rather than move to DE). I was just compelled to comment because I feel that there is a lot of pressure on parents to tell with medical records and destroyed relationships pointed out over and over again, while potential negatives are pretty much ignored.
Anonymous wrote:I am the PP you quoted and I agree that a young child could blurt out this kind of information, but we believe the risks that she will tell someone and later regret the decision are much less than the risks if we were not to tell at all or if we were to delay telling until she is older. With that said, I don't believe anyone in our extended family would view or treat our child differently upon learning that she was conceived with a donor egg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're using donor eggs and plan to tell from a very young age. I think there are actually some good children's books that cover this issue.
On the other hand, we *don't* plan to tell our parents, friends or any other relatives. The way we look at it, this will be our DC's secret to tell or not tell.
It's not that simple. If you tell the child when she is little (as you plan) she might blurt it out in front of people whom, were she more mature, she would definitively choose not to tell.
Anonymous wrote:We're using donor eggs and plan to tell from a very young age. I think there are actually some good children's books that cover this issue.
On the other hand, we *don't* plan to tell our parents, friends or any other relatives. The way we look at it, this will be our DC's secret to tell or not tell.