Search This Blog

Saturday, September 5, 2020

Momentum and Possibilities

 Wow...the ball is rolling.  More and more people are advocating for DC/NPE/MPE people.  (Donor conception/not parent expected/misattributed parentage experience).  This is very exciting.  It has been such a Herculean effort to get people interested in what life is really like for people in these situations.

Some great websites:

* npecounseling.org

* donordeceived.org

https://www.facebook.com/RighToKnowUs/

Relevant podcasts:

* Everything's Relative

* Sex, Lies & the Truth

* Three Makes Baby

3rd Annual Michigan Psychological Association Health Psychology Symposium

* I will be presenting either a talk or a poster to explain the realities of donor conceived people and ethical issues of donor conceptions.

23andme is working on getting media attention in Michigan, in particular about my family DNA story.

Court cases  There are more people issuing court cases in their states, e.g. for fertility fraud.

The circumstances of donor conceived people have been intentionally kept in the dark for so long.  It is exhilarating to see all of the work people are doing to bring forward the realities of being donor conceived so that practices can become more ethical and take into consideration our needs and rights.




Saturday, April 18, 2020

Free Bioethics Course about Reproductive Technologies

Harvard is offering a free 10 week online class about the Ethics of Reproductive Technologies starting May 12, 2020. Free to audit or $99 for a Certificate. I'm glad to see that there is so much interest in this and people can learn more about it!

https://online-learning.harvard.edu/course/bioethics-law-medicine-and-ethics-reproductive-technologies-and-genetics?delta=1&fbclid=IwAR2SVnI_0Xg8dIgDR0lMqanraFjihuDZC8rTLa7tbtvo-H4r2crOxqeifNs

Friday, December 20, 2019

United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child - 11/19/19

Donor and surrogate conceived people had a forum at the 30th Anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child at the United Nations on November 19th, 2019 in Geneva.  Their voices were heard.

Historically, decisions about donor conceived people have been made without the consideration of their rights and needs.  The practice has been shrouded in secrecy and shame.  More donor and surrogate conceived people are finding out about their true origins and speaking up about how it affects them and what the best practices are to meet their needs.

Donor and surrogate conceived people have a right to:
1) Know their identity
2) Have a relationship with or know their family
3) Not be bought or sold

"NOT ABOUT THEM WITHOUT THEM."  Don't make decisions about donor and surrogate conceived people without taking into account their rights and needs from their perspective.


Here are the links to the speeches:

https://www.donorkinderen.com/united-nations-2019

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3PTiHF4egBG2KaSTYLDZUpIY_f1-BYy2&app=desktop#menu

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

Family!

We had our 2nd bigger gathering of our Heemsoth sperm donor family and it was amazing!

A little history first.  My sister and I (full siblings) found our first half-brother on 23andme in October 2014.  Then we found our half-sister.  It was the four of us for a long time.  We became HSC, the Half Sibling Club, named by our creative half-sister.  We all met in California.  Then the other half-siblings started rolling in.  We are now up to 46 half-siblings in our Hank Heemsoth group.  Four of them have passed away.  Some of them haven't responded.  Some of our group are struggling with adapting to this situation and/or have delicate family situations.  Some of us have fully accepted it.

After meeting the HSC, I met three more of my half-sisters.  We had our first big gathering in the summer of 2018, with 11 half-siblings, their families, and quite a few Heemsoths at the gathering.  It was also amazing.  Having the Heemsoths there to share family history, pictures, stories about Hank and the family was invaluable.  It made Hank seem more real.

This summer's gathering profoundly affected me in a different way.  It felt like we were family.  The comfort level grew.  We had Friday night and all of Saturday together...met at a brewery Friday night, hung out at a lake beach area Saturday, and then sat around the campfire Saturday night...12 siblings and our families.  We did things that families do...picnic, some of the next generation went paddleboarding, the youngest kids played in the sand and water, we made smores.  And we laughed together!!  A lot!  It was so much fun.  My brother lovingly picked on me for being "old".  (Remember the age spread of the siblings is 30 years, and our kids have a 31 year age spread and still going.  I am one of the older sperm donor siblings.)  It was a real family feeling.  We missed each other when we parted.  The language changed...we were brothers and sisters, nieces and nephews (without the "half" word preceding it).  We were family!

When we first meet up, we are nervous.  Most of us have expressed that, and I have felt it too.  In a practical sense, we are strangers.  We've never met each other before.  We've only recently connected through the DNA sites and had mostly online conversations.  And yet, something connects us.  We share our paternal genetics.  We look at each other and see who looks alike.  As you would imagine, there is a range of appearances because of the random draw of Hank's genes combined with our different mother's genes.  But there are so many likenesses!  When you look at our baby and toddler pictures, some of us could be twins.  A lot of us have olive skin and hazel eyes, the same nose, etc.  We also compare other traits.  The majority of us are introverts by nature.  Most of us love animals.  There is a tendency for aptitude with science/engineering abilities...

What an amazing gathering of introverts!  We are family!

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Albert Frantz

Albert Frantz.  We met at the Donor Conception Ethics conference in NYC and have shared with each other since our life journeys and the impact of donor conception on our lives. 

I honor Albert as a great man who has confronted his donor conception journey and created brilliant offerings to help people understand the experience of being donor conceived.  He presents solutions regarding the needs and rights of the people created from donor conception.

Thank you to Albert for his amazing speech at the United Nations Geneva Peace Week 2018 about the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child, and his brilliant TED talk about identity and ethics related to donor conception.  Please watch Albert's brilliant work...here are the links:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vkHtquzQho&feature=youtu.be

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PligpIZzT98

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Anger

A friend of mine mentioned that it was difficult to be around sperm donor offspring because they are so angry.  It got me thinking about anger.  I said to myself "I'm not angry any more, just upset" at how the whole sperm donor business is run.  I'm not angry!  But...the more I thought about it...the more my old well of anger resurfaced.  I am angry!

Initially, after finding out about being a sperm donor offspring, right after my dad passed away, I was so angry at my dad for not telling us about it.  We had a relationship based on a lie our whole lives.  I couldn't talk to him about it.  I felt I would have loved him more if we could have had an open and honest relationship.  He was a great, caring man who would do anything for you.  He was a product of his time, when a lot of things weren't talked about.  I try to understand where he was coming from.  The doctor did tell my parents that it was best not to tell anyone, including us.  My dad thought he was doing what was best based on doctor's advice.  But it did interfere with our relationship...the reserve, hidden innuendos.  I knew he had secrets, just never imagined this scenario.  Those first two years after he passed I was intensely angry with him, rather than being able to grieve his loss.

Anger now...I can understand why sperm donor offspring are angry.  People assume that we should be grateful for being conceived from a sperm donor because otherwise we wouldn't be alive....existential debt.  Yet, there are those of us who have had difficult lives and complicated relationships, and times when we wished we weren't alive.  Is that normal for the general population too?  I don't know what the statistics are.  Who knows if sperm donor offspring are more likely to have troubled feelings and thoughts about not being alive.  But that element does exist.

Anger about the sperm donor industry.  Yes, absolutely.  Doctors playing god with people's lives, the lies and deceit, eugenics...how does one deal with having 45 half-siblings and knowing that there are hundreds (or thousands) more out there...  Some sperm donor offspring are angry, and it is difficult to hear their anger and be around it...but it is real...and with good reason.  It is reality.

As for me, I do have a well of anger and a well of sadness inside of myself.  I choose to ignore them and live my life, but they are there, and can be opened back up.  I choose not to focus on the anger now, but rather advocacy for change.  However, the root of wanting to make change is the anger.  Yes, sperm donor offspring are angry.  I am angry!

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Identity Matters

#identitymatters

Some thoughts about identity...growing up not knowing your true identity...but knowing that things don't add up.

Our parents were told not to tell anyone about mixing donor sperm with the dad's sperm.  So, it starts with the parents not knowing with certainty the true biological father and our true genetic identity.  Create confusion...genealogical bewilderment.  Create the belief that the social father could be the biological father...confusion in the family relationships.

My parents didn't know for sure, but according to mom, they suspected that the sperm donor was our biological father.  Indeed he was.  As often happens in gamete donor families, the biologically related parent, in this case the mother, feels more like the "real" parent.  Mothers can become more domineering/entitled in the parental role.  There is a power differential in the couple's relationship.  It can't be talked about, so it is brewing under the surface.  In donor gamete families, there seem to be a lot of divorces, emotionally distant fathers, fathers leaving the family or dying early.  Not sure what the statistics are on this compared to all families, but it would be an interesting research project.

As the donor offspring, you know things don't add up.  You wonder about the arguments behind closed doors.  You wonder why your dad asks you if he should divorce your mother, you tell him yes, but he doesn't do it.  You wonder about the strange comments, e.g. your dad saying that somewhere in his Jewish background there is Native American blood...huh?  What is going on here?  Confusion...

As the donor offspring, you wonder why your body is conveying one thing, but your parents are telling you something else about who you are.  Confusion.  For example, my parents were told that I had a high IQ and needed to go to a school for the gifted.  My parents chose to keep me where I was in school, which I believe did limit my growth and potential.  Another example, as many teenagers/young adults do, I questioned my religious/faith/spiritual beliefs and decided that my parents were hypocritical in their religious practices and I rejected my Jewish upbringing.  Turns out genetically I'm only half Jewish anyway.  My parents were city people; I'm a country girl.

It was never okay in my family to be who I really was.  I was not accepted for who I was, didn't fit into the family in a lot of ways.  There is an underlying sense of shame, when you are not okay for who you are.  You have no idea what the basis for this is...the secret, genetic donation that helped create you and the family.

When I talk about my parents here, I want to emphasize that they were good people, they were doing the best they could in the circumstances of their lives.  This is not to condemn them.  I share these things to make a point about the effects of the confusion of unknown genetic factors in the family and how that impacts the family relationships and identity of those conceived in this way and raised in confused families.

I had a lot of identity confusion.  My body was telling me I was one person and my parents were telling me I was someone else.  They had a strong need to make me fit into the family, so that it wouldn't be apparent to others that there were differences, so that others didn't question that perhaps I wasn't totally biologically connected to the family.  My parents worked very hard at fitting a square peg in a round hole...trying to mold me in their likeness.  I had a lot of confusion, anger, depression growing up.  I withdrew.  Neighbors were able to abuse me because I didn't know how to assert myself.  I never knew "what I wanted to do when I grew up."  As an adult, I changed majors in school frequently, went back to college several times, switched jobs every couple of years due to lack of passion for what I was doing and boredom, had trouble maintaining lasting relationships.  My life has not been a straight journey.  I have been all over the place and tried so many things, trying to resolve myself.

My apologies about the meandering babbling in this post, but the point is to convey the identity confusion of growing up in a family that doesn't know your true identity and the personal impact of not knowing who you really are.

A message to parents of gamete donated people...please accept your children for who they are, both in ways they are like you and aspects that are not like you.  Accept, embrace, and encourage them to flourish for who they are in their own right.  No shame. Tell your children early on, in age appropriate ways, who they are and allow them to know their genetic relatives as a part of who they are.  This is their life story.

#identitymatters  When intentionally creating people from a gamete donor, the parents and/or the physician doing the procedure know who the donor is.  The offspring have a right to know their true identity and who they are genetically connected to.  Identity matters!