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While jack and Fiona were in gymnastics class yesterday, I sat and read some articles about egg donation and surrogacy. Coincidentally, I also had a brief texting conversation with my good friend who is going through infertility currently, wanting to have a baby of her own. She is at a crossroads entering the next phase of infertility treatments. The first is IVF, invitro-fertilization. To do IVF you have to first have an embryo to transfer. An embryo is created from sperm from a man and ovum from a woman. The sperm or ovum can be retrieved from the couple trying to get pregnant, or from a combination of donated sperm and or ovum. In my case I ended up needed to use a donated ovum and my husband’s sperm. This was after years of trying with my own eggs- my own genetic material. In one of the articles, there was an account of a young lady who thought her mom was brave for doing what she did to have kids. For using a donated egg to have her daughter, and this daughter wanted to donate her own eggs to another family, so they could have kids. There are many negative stories out there about egg donation and surrogacy. It makes the conversation I will soon have with Jack and Fiona about their birth story that much harder and scarier. I would be devastated if my kids were mad at me for all the things, I did in order for them to be alive. I love them so much and I can’t imagine our relationship being any better or us being any closer. There was one article I read about a study that was done that said moms who used donated eggs lack confidence in parenting ability. I have many questions about the study- how many people did they study, were these first-time moms or was this their second child, is there a standard of parenting that they graded these women on? It doesn’t make much sense that just because a woman uses a donated egg, she’s different as a mother than someone who used her own egg. Egg donation is a gift- it is the gift of life. I think that parents who struggle to have a family might be more attentive to their children because they really wanted their kids.
Yesterday, when we got home from gymnastics, I listened to Jack and Fiona talking and playing. I looked into their eyes and wondered if they ever wonder if I’m really their biological mom. I observed myself, how I interact with them. I saw how patient I am with them. It was like I was looking in a window at myself as a mom. I could see how much I cared about my children. How much time and energy I give them. Looking back, to when they were babies, I gave it my all. I don’t think there’s any way that by telling them their whole birth story could put a dent in our relationship. But you never know and that’s a chance I have to take to be completely honest and open with my children. They deserve to know the whole story.
They are turning five next month. I decided last night a perfect way to tell them their birth story is to make a book. Something they can keep in their rooms and we can refer to it as they learn more about science and know what sperm and eggs really are. When they are old enough to understand what a uterus is. This will be years away, but the professionals say age five is the best age to start the conversation.
I think when I realized I was going to need IVF, then an egg donor, then a surrogate, my biggest fears were what will people think? And what will my kids think? I was insecure about these things and I’m still insecure. But the more I write about it, the more I face the facts of what I have done to become a parent, the easier it seems to have the conversation. The more I feel like I can let go- I can’t change anything now, and I don’t want to live a lie. That seems to be the biggest complaint from adults who find out their parents used egg/sperm donors, that their parents never told them until they were older. Or never told them and they just found out through coincidence, like a DNA test.
I read that in the 60’s and 70’s when parents had to use sperm donors, they were told to have sex with their partner at the same time as the fertility treatments. That way they could always think that maybe the child was theirs genetically. It was never talked about and the children were never told. I think that’s so crazy. But I fantasized about that same thing myself for a while. Fiona and I look very much alike. We have the same color eyes, and everyone always says we look so much alike. I thought maybe they had an old embryo with my egg and transferred that on accident. But why would I fantasize about that? Why would that come in my mind and why would that be “better”? My own genetics are nothing to be proud of. Mental illness plagues both sides of my lineage. It’s shocking how many of us have depression, anxiety, my uncle is schizophrenic. I told this to my therapist one day, but she didn’t like that I said that stuff.
Dark Quiet Mornings
During my years of infertility, I had insomnia. (“My years of infertility”, like those years were a sickness.) But the truth is, I’ve always suffered from insomnia, even when I was a little girl. My bedroom windows looked just like my kitchen windows do, this morning. Dark, with my reflection, shiny black asphalt outside, damp, cold, ground. Always the damp, cold ground? My house quiet, like the one I’m in now. Everyone else sleeping or off to work already, then and now.
Then I thought about my yard, the ponies and the chickens. I can never get the image of the big, frozen, cat I found one morning. There was frost covering the ground. I had woken up extra early. As the sun rose, I put on my jeans and boots and took a walk. I went right outside our fence, right before the field. There it was. I can remember its grey frozen, fur.
In my life now, as a woman who is close to fifty, I can’t go for a morning walk because I have children sleeping. During my infertility period, I would take a walk with my dog. If it was still dark, like it is now, I would carry a flashlight up the trail. By the time I turned around it would be light. Sometimes I would imagine zombies or serial killers hiding behind the trees in the dark. Then I would tell myself I was being paranoid. I knew that there were coyotes, owls, mice, racoons, squirrels, slugs, ants, spiders, and other earthly creatures. I found comfort in that and it helped me get through the insomnia, the fatigue.
Now I start my morning, first I wake up with the song, “Blaze and the Monster machines” ringing in my head. Over and over it goes. I try to make myself count sheep, but my mouth is dry, and my lips are chapped. So, I try to write my book in my head. That’s O.K., except I’m entertaining the hamster wheel. Which reminds me of the time when I was a little girl and I couldn’t sleep. It was still dark out, again, like it is this morning. I went to check on my hamster and I saw tan in a bowl on the shelf that was collecting rain water from our leaking roof. It was my little hamster. He had escaped his cage and drown.
Back to now, when I wake up in the early morning with insomnia I run through a list in my mind. What I have to do today with the kids. How many times I need to drive them somewhere? What appointments we have? I figure out what I have to do and what time I can go to bed tonight. Because I know I’m going to be so tired and barely make it, but there will be so much that other people will need from me. My purpose.
When I started writing this, I was thinking about how everything’s always the same and I was the same person before I went through infertility and now. I still had insomnia. I still loved spending time alone. But I just realized my purpose in life changed. Our purpose in life changes all the time. Now my main purpose in life is to take care of Jack and Fiona. Plus, so many more things, but I feel like I’m in survival mode. When I was a kid, it was experiencing mode. When Jack and Fiona were babies it was easier for me to be in experiencing mode. I could take a day off and stay home. I just took care of them, when they started crawling and walking there were so many activities we could do, they would be interested in everything, or cry or go to sleep. I had time alone still. Quiet time. Non-driving days.
Now, Jack and Fiona go through periods of quiet play, but more often they need so much attention. They want to talk or show me something, mostly they just want something from me-food, love, discipline.
I still love book time, when they love the story and are fully engaged. And quiet! Now though, sometimes Jack starts acting badly, but it’s mostly because he’s over tired and really just wants to go to bed. Fiona always loves Storytime.
It’s almost 7:00, and I don’t know how much time I have left. I hung up two pieces of white paper and opened all my notebooks to clean white paper. I might run in my studio and make some marks. I will be much more relaxed and readier to just experience life today. Get into the Zen of driving around town.
I hear them talking. Change of plans. It’s make breakfast time.