Anonymous wrote:I would do this no questions asked. And I would never feel like the mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP...that was quite a boundary she crossed asking you. I'm sorry you were put in this situation. I imagine the fear of tension if you say no makes it uncomfortable at best.
That said, you still have to say no if you aren't comfortable. She was dealt a crummy hand of cards but it's not your job to fix it if you aren't 100% on board.
What "boundary" did she cross? She asked OP. There's no indication that OP ever discussed this before with her sister. OP should absolutely feel free to say no, but the sister did not do anything wrong by asking.
In the LGBTQ community, it is very common for people to ask family members to donate gametes. I'm a lesbian going through IVF with a donor from a sperm bank because I do not want to ask family, but there are a lot of great arguments that using a friend or family donor is the most child-centered way to do things.
See how you are already trivializing the attachment? It’s a no for me
I’m trivializing the attachment by saying “gametes” instead of “egg and sperm”? Okay…
Absolutely. Donating eggs is not nutting in a cup. Egg retrieval is extremely taxing emotionally and physically. Trying to trivialize and dehumanize this contribution as if the sexes are interchangeable is complete disrespect
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP...that was quite a boundary she crossed asking you. I'm sorry you were put in this situation. I imagine the fear of tension if you say no makes it uncomfortable at best.
That said, you still have to say no if you aren't comfortable. She was dealt a crummy hand of cards but it's not your job to fix it if you aren't 100% on board.
What "boundary" did she cross? She asked OP. There's no indication that OP ever discussed this before with her sister. OP should absolutely feel free to say no, but the sister did not do anything wrong by asking.
In the LGBTQ community, it is very common for people to ask family members to donate gametes. I'm a lesbian going through IVF with a donor from a sperm bank because I do not want to ask family, but there are a lot of great arguments that using a friend or family donor is the most child-centered way to do things.
And that isn’t a good thing. It’s an unrecoverable boundary violation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP...that was quite a boundary she crossed asking you. I'm sorry you were put in this situation. I imagine the fear of tension if you say no makes it uncomfortable at best.
That said, you still have to say no if you aren't comfortable. She was dealt a crummy hand of cards but it's not your job to fix it if you aren't 100% on board.
What "boundary" did she cross? She asked OP. There's no indication that OP ever discussed this before with her sister. OP should absolutely feel free to say no, but the sister did not do anything wrong by asking.
In the LGBTQ community, it is very common for people to ask family members to donate gametes. I'm a lesbian going through IVF with a donor from a sperm bank because I do not want to ask family, but there are a lot of great arguments that using a friend or family donor is the most child-centered way to do things.
See how you are already trivializing the attachment? It’s a no for me
I’m trivializing the attachment by saying “gametes” instead of “egg and sperm”? Okay…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have a sister. If I did, I think I would do this for her.
I would not think the egg would make her child my child.
I know so many siblings who have kids who look similar. My good friend has sons and her sister has one daughter. When you look at the cousins, they look like siblings.
You would never forget that the child came from your egg. It’s not like lending some eggs so she can bake a cake.
I think OP should feel comfortable saying no. But I’m not sure this is true. My mom had an identical twin and I don’t think of her or her kids as my other mom or siblings.
Agreed. And why does it matter if you “never forget”? You are still not the mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do this no questions asked. And I would never feel like the mom.
How do you know?
I just know it wouldn’t bother me. Siblings already share DNA and the baby would still be half of the husband’s. The kids would already see me as an aunt, so there already would be a relationship there even if I didn’t donate eggs.
I’ve known quite a few sisters who donated eggs to their gay brothers so that the brother could have a child related to both them and their partner.
So you've never had your own kid and can't honestly say.
I have 3 kids!
And you want your 4th to be raised by your sister while you watch from the sidelines? What if the baby resents you later for doing it?
People are so weird. Parenthood is about so much more than genetic material. The genetic relationship isn’t nothing but our relationships with our parents are built over moments, days, years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have a sister. If I did, I think I would do this for her.
I would not think the egg would make her child my child.
I know so many siblings who have kids who look similar. My good friend has sons and her sister has one daughter. When you look at the cousins, they look like siblings.
You would never forget that the child came from your egg. It’s not like lending some eggs so she can bake a cake.
I think OP should feel comfortable saying no. But I’m not sure this is true. My mom had an identical twin and I don’t think of her or her kids as my other mom or siblings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do this no questions asked. And I would never feel like the mom.
How do you know?
I just know it wouldn’t bother me. Siblings already share DNA and the baby would still be half of the husband’s. The kids would already see me as an aunt, so there already would be a relationship there even if I didn’t donate eggs.
I’ve known quite a few sisters who donated eggs to their gay brothers so that the brother could have a child related to both them and their partner.
So you've never had your own kid and can't honestly say.
I have 3 kids!
And you want your 4th to be raised by your sister while you watch from the sidelines? What if the baby resents you later for doing it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP...that was quite a boundary she crossed asking you. I'm sorry you were put in this situation. I imagine the fear of tension if you say no makes it uncomfortable at best.
That said, you still have to say no if you aren't comfortable. She was dealt a crummy hand of cards but it's not your job to fix it if you aren't 100% on board.
What "boundary" did she cross? She asked OP. There's no indication that OP ever discussed this before with her sister. OP should absolutely feel free to say no, but the sister did not do anything wrong by asking.
In the LGBTQ community, it is very common for people to ask family members to donate gametes. I'm a lesbian going through IVF with a donor from a sperm bank because I do not want to ask family, but there are a lot of great arguments that using a friend or family donor is the most child-centered way to do things.
And that isn’t a good thing. It’s an unrecoverable boundary violation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP...that was quite a boundary she crossed asking you. I'm sorry you were put in this situation. I imagine the fear of tension if you say no makes it uncomfortable at best.
That said, you still have to say no if you aren't comfortable. She was dealt a crummy hand of cards but it's not your job to fix it if you aren't 100% on board.
What "boundary" did she cross? She asked OP. There's no indication that OP ever discussed this before with her sister. OP should absolutely feel free to say no, but the sister did not do anything wrong by asking.
In the LGBTQ community, it is very common for people to ask family members to donate gametes. I'm a lesbian going through IVF with a donor from a sperm bank because I do not want to ask family, but there are a lot of great arguments that using a friend or family donor is the most child-centered way to do things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have a sister. If I did, I think I would do this for her.
I would not think the egg would make her child my child.
I know so many siblings who have kids who look similar. My good friend has sons and her sister has one daughter. When you look at the cousins, they look like siblings.
You would never forget that the child came from your egg. It’s not like lending some eggs so she can bake a cake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After multiple failed IVF treatments, the doctors have told my sister that there is no way she will have a biological child. She is devastated. Her fertility specialist recommends she use a donor egg. She asked me if I would be the donor so that she could have a genetic connection to the child. I feel for her and want to help, but I’m not entirely comfortable with the idea of being the egg donor. Has anyone been there, done that? How do you navigate the whole, “my mom is my aunt and my aunt is my mom” thing? Is it weird seeing a child who is genetically yours but who you are not directly raising? How does that change your family relationships?
Kind of like grandparents? 25% rather than 50%, but otherwise the same…