T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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202.1 | A few thoughts | TWEED::B_REINKE | Down with bench Biology | Fri Feb 13 1987 16:23 | 10 |
| My younger sister thought for a long time that she could not
have a child. If I had been able to I would have offered to
have a baby for her. Not for someone that I was not personally
close to.
Four of my five kids had biological mothers that gave them up
at birth for adoption. I think they showed great courage and
love and I try to remember to thank them in my heart often.
Bonnie
|
202.2 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Fri Feb 13 1987 16:33 | 4 |
| I agree with Bonnie; I might be able to do it for someone I really
cared for who couldn't have children, but never for pay.
G
|
202.3 | Friends Only | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Sun Feb 15 1987 23:49 | 24 |
| When in school, I got to know several gay couples very well. One
of the relationships has been extremely stable, and one half ("John")
is a very ... well, he strikes me as the ideal parent type, certainly
more so than _I_ am. When Massachusetts had the huge scene barring
homosexuals from foster-parenthood, he was very distraught.
Like I said, he s the kind of person who would be a great parent,
and could probably be very happy raising eight kids of both sexes.
So the upshot is that I told him that if he and his SO decide they
really want children, I'd donate my body and genes. I still feel
that way, and am willing to carry a child that is half _mine_ for
either/both of them. The important factors for me are: 1) they
can't have a child on their own, 2) legislation still bars them
from parenthood via adoption etc, 3) they are _very_ good friends
of mine, and 4) "John" and his SO are more likely to do well with
the child than I am.
I am not sure I hope it ever happens; the idea of a little _person_
coming out of _MY BODY!!!_ is pretty eerie for this youngster, and
whether or not I raise him/her/it, that's a huge and very public
undertaking. Still, "John" without a kid? I can't imagine it.
Lee
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202.4 | No | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Mon Feb 16 1987 10:40 | 11 |
| I personally could never give away a baby that I carried for 9 months
inside my body. I respect others for being able to recognize that
choice, and appreciate the difference it could make in someone else's
life - a gay couple, or infertile woman. But, I realize I would
not be capable of it.
I wonder if some of the women who changed their minds after the
baby was born were as honest with themselves?
Lorna
|
202.5 | "Surrogate" Supporter | CSC32::JOHNS | | Mon Feb 16 1987 10:43 | 12 |
| RE: .3 Good for you, Lee!
I would not become a surrogate due to my own circumstances and the
fact that I would find it very difficult to give up a child. However,
if I felt it necessary, I would hire a surrogate. I am a strong
supporter of the availability of surrogates and their use, and I
would promote support groups for these women.
Carol
|
202.6 | | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Mon Feb 16 1987 11:23 | 17 |
| Surrogate mothering, albeit with slightly different conception
methods, has been used for a long time to help close relatives
who were childless. She grew up in a fairly isolated Appalachian
community where children were a very important part of life. From
the way she describes the family attitude it seems that between
sisters or close women friends this was quite socially acceptable
and brought the women involved closer to each other.n It's an
appealing idea to me. I could be a surrogate for a close friend,
but I don't think I could give birth to a child and never see it
again.
In our situation, my SO will probably have our children, because
of economic and health reasons. From my perspective, this is
similar to using a surrogate parent.
maureen
|
202.7 | Surrogating? | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Mon Feb 16 1987 11:56 | 13 |
| I personally wouldn't be a surrogate mother.....but I think the
concept is great for people who cannot have children. I like Bonnie's
idea of being close to the person and not just choose strangers to
have children for.......I think it must be harder to not know the
people.
I do believe also that "gays" should be allowed to adopt children
or be foster parents. Just because people are gay doesn't mean
they aren't good parents.
bs
|
202.8 | | ESPN::HENDRICKS | Holly | Wed Feb 18 1987 09:42 | 37 |
| This is a little bit off the topic, but did anybody see the wonderful
program on channel 2 sometime in January about gay couples as adoptive
parents/natural parents? It was produced by a woman named Aimee Sands
for WGBH, but I can't remember the exact name of it. "We are Family",
maybe??
Anyway, there were three stories portrayed in this hour long-show.
The first was about a family in New York City--the mother is straight,
and the father is gay and lives with his lover. They have two adolescent
daughters who live part time with each parent.
The second story portrayed a lesbian couple in the Boston area, one of
whom is deaf and the other is Asian. They adopted a deaf black boy,
one of the deaf woman's students who had no family.
The third story is about my friend Tom Hermann and his lover Jeremy
who live in rural New Hampshire, and who have had a number of foster
children over the years. They currently have a 16 year old foster
son who has been with them since he was picked up for armed robbery.
In each case, the children are doing well, being challenged, and
getting a great deal of love. The children all talk about what
it means to have parents/guardians who are gay.
The program is interspersed with quotes from "concerned citizens"
in Massachusetts and New Hampshire who are trying to ban gay people
from becoming foster parents--makes quite a juxtaposition.
One of the reasons that this show was so good is that the crew went
into the homes of these people, and filmed 20+ hours of each family's
day to day lives and then distilled it into an hour-long show.
I recommend it highly for anyone interested in the issues of gay
parenting and/or surrogate mothers. Can anybody verify the title of
the show?
|
202.9 | holly said it best | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Feb 18 1987 10:32 | 11 |
| re .8:
Yes the title was "We are Family".
It was excellent.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
202.10 | at least partly on topic :-) | FIDGET::CORWIN | Jill Corwin | Thu Feb 19 1987 15:26 | 28 |
| re .8, .9
I also saw the "We are Family" special. I meant to put a note in here earlier,
but, as usual, I didn't get around to it.
It was indeed an excellent show, and did a good job of demonstrating that
family is family, regardless of the sexual preferences of the parents. What
matters is the love the parents/guardians have for the children, and for each
other.
What really got me ticked off were the "concerned citizens". I'm not sure,
but I was under the impression these were people involved in politics, who had
more "clout" than an average citizen. But perhaps it was good to have them
mixed in, because it made them seem more ridiculous when you see how happy
the families are.
re surrogate mothering:
I am in favor of allowing surrogate mothering to take place, and along with
that, allowing "simple adoption" of children by friends/relatives without
the need for expensive legalities. (Note: I have no experience in either
circumstance).
I don't know if I could be a surrogate mother; I've never been a mother at
all. I could see it being a lot easier to give a child to my sister than
to a stranger, though.
Jill
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202.11 | they can't breed, you know... | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Feb 19 1987 16:13 | 15 |
| re .10:
The only politician I remember being interviewed was a member of
the New Hampshire legislature. She was almost a comical stereotype.
A woman in her 60's spouting statements like "They [homosexuals]
have to prosthelytize, since they can't breed", along with the veiled
accusations of pedophilia, etc.
If it weren't so sad, it would be hilarious.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
202.12 | not for it | CELICA::QUIRIY | Christine | Thu Feb 19 1987 17:24 | 23 |
|
I've been thinking about this one...
I have a difficult time with surrogate mothering. Personally, I'm against it,
but I wouldn't say it shouldn't be allowed.
I don't think I could carry a baby for a stranger for 9 months and then give it
up. Maybe (if the world were an ideal place) I could do it for a very close
friend or for one of my sisters. But, the question is irrelevant for me since
I've had my tubes tied and won't be making any of my own little people.
The reason I'm against it is because I'm pro-adoption. I've never had any
children, so I don't know how beautiful the experience can be. I can understand
the desire to make one with someone I love (that's really "making" love isn't
it?) and I can imagine the overwhelming emotions that accompany each try at
"planting the seed", and the happiness at finding it has sprouted and taken
root. But, I know that I can love any little baby, or any child, so if I ever
get to the point where I can financially support a child, and am certain that I
will be responsible enough to raise a child, I'll adopt. Maybe I've seen too
many pictures of starving children, homeless children, or abandoned children,
but I know I'd feel guilty if I made my own.
CQ
|
202.13 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71, DTN 381-2525, WRU #338 | Thu Feb 19 1987 18:19 | 24 |
|
Firstly let me say that I have particular views on the *technique* of
surrogate mothering.
However I am vehemently opposed to the financial aspects, which to me
border very closely on "selling babies". [As a partial aside an attempt
was made a couple of years ago by one of the major American surrogate
agencies to recruit mothers in Britain - they even found one - but the
government rapidly ruled the process illegal if *any* money changed
hands, also the mother was granted a legal right to rescind the contract
without penalty for a short time after the birth of the child - after
that nothing much was heard of the process]
So in relation to the current court battle: I think the fees should
be strictly limited to paying the mothers legitimate, audited, expenses.
And I think she should have a period after the birth - say a month -
during which she could decide to keep the infant. That would have resolved
the current mess without recourse to a knock-down drag-out legal battle
(or should I say media circus). It's her baby, she wants it, she should
be allowed to keep it!
As for the TV special - yes that was a good program.
/. Ian .\
|
202.14 | Even beyond the contract... | JETSAM::HANAUER | Mike...Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Thu Feb 19 1987 22:26 | 6 |
| Who was the biological father of this child.
Isn't this a factor?
~Mike
|
202.15 | Mildred | HBO::HENDRICKS | Holly | Fri Feb 20 1987 08:27 | 12 |
| re .10 The "concerned citizen" was Mildred - something, I don't
know her last name. She is a member of the NH state legislature,
and unfortunately is gathering quite a following.
Tom Hermann was pleased with the juxtaposition of her views
and the sequences of the parents and children, though, and felt
that it put her views in a useful perspective.
(One of the people I watched the show with said "Imagine letting HER
be a parent!)
|
202.16 | I always thought it would be other way around! | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Fri Feb 20 1987 09:52 | 4 |
| The program also pointed out that NH does NOT have any law against gay
foster parenting while the MA does.
- Vikas
|
202.17 | Contract and beyond.... | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Fri Feb 20 1987 12:48 | 18 |
| re:14
Mike,
I have to say that's why I'm not too sure about surrogating
mothering....when the woman changes her mind what about the father?
He should have rights too - It's almost like a divorce/custody battle
not an adoption.....both people gave life to that little person
so if the mother changes her mind she can't shut out the BIOLOGICAL
father out of this little person's life....and what about the
NON-BIOLOGICAL father......maybe he really doesn't want this little
person as much as the biological father and the non-biological
mother....so there is alot of feelings going on here and that's
why I'm not sure surrogating works.......it's a good concept on
paper but when your dealing with emotions not so good.
Bobbi
|
202.18 | Babies for sale?? | LYMPH::MUNSON | | Fri Feb 20 1987 16:25 | 17 |
| Babies (or for that matter, people) are not commodities. It seems
to me that wanting a baby *of one's own genes* in the face of some
infertility problem has overtones of possession, of considering
a child to be an offshoot of oneself rather than a small miracle.
Surrogate motherhood (for payment!) is the buying and selling of a
baby, and I don't think that people who are willing to do this have
an attitude which can provide an appropriate atmosphere for helping
a little life into the world.
God (and anybody else with the ability to read) knows that there
are plenty of otherwise "unwanted" babies up for adoption, and
that giving the already living ones a home, a family, and a hope
for the future is a more reasonable way to spend money on this
already overcrowded planet.
Joanne
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202.19 | there's too many people on this planet already | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Fri Feb 20 1987 16:46 | 6 |
| I personally agree with .18. There *are* too many people on this
planet already. I wouldn't be or hire a surrogate mother. However,
I really do not care what others do. I feel that each person has to
figure out this complex matter for his or herself.
-Ellen
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202.20 | 9 months 'In Vitero?' | SED750::KORMAN | TGIF | Fri Mar 06 1987 06:35 | 5 |
| I know it can't be done _yet_, but how do people feel about an 'artificial'
surrogate, ie producing a baby entirely 'in vitero', using an appropriate pair
of gametes??
Dave
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202.21 | Wouldn't it be nice to have that choice? | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Sat Mar 07 1987 14:33 | 1 |
|
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202.22 | Perhaps I'm odd but..... | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Sun Mar 08 1987 10:43 | 13 |
| re .20
I kind of wonder what kind of people would come from an artificial
womb. A baby listens to the mother's internal noises and to her
voice and to the other voices and noises from outside of the womb.
How do we know what importance these have to the developing child's
personality.
Also I can't help but feel that even if all these parts of the
prenatal environment could be duplicated there is a type of
almost psychic bonding or communication that could not be duplicated.
|
202.23 | Assume child perfectly normal | SED750::KORMAN | TGIF | Mon Mar 09 1987 11:40 | 8 |
| re .-1
I think you are probably right, so let's assume that all the technical problems
could be overcome - what about the moral ones (if indeed there are any if the
restultant being was perfectly normal)?
DK
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202.24 | would you want to be a Gamma? | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Mar 10 1987 16:42 | 9 |
| re .23:
Let's all (re)read _Brave_New_World_ by Aldous Huxley.
/
( ___
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/
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202.25 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Wed Mar 11 1987 13:09 | 99 |
|
This was in AP news today.
Incidentally in view of the publicity the American court case is
attracting, note that British law doesn't allow either the surrogate
mother, nor the adopting couple to be identified, even after the case
is settled. [comments, anybody?]
/. Ian .\
=========
Associated Press Wed 11-MAR-1987 12:27 Britain-Surrogate
Court Allows Couple To Adopt Child Of Surrogate Mother
LONDON (AP) - A judge said today a married couple can adopt a
2-year-old girl born to the husband and a surrogate mother who
received a $7,500 fee.
The girl had been living with her natural father and his wife since
she was two days old and was "thriving ... (in a) loving, normal,
parent-child relationship," said High Court Judge Sir John Latey.
He said the natural mother did not oppose the adoption.
Latey said he had been asked by Attorney General Sir Michael Havers
to clarify how existing laws affect the adoption of children by
surrogate mothers.
A 1985 law prohibits agencies from recruiting women to have babies
for other people but does not prevent a woman from being paid for
bearing a child for others.
A 1958 law prohibits "the making of payments in return for consent
to adoption" and is "a bar to adoption unless the court authorizes
such payments."
Latey said that although the couple paid the woman $1,500 before
birth and $6,000 afterwards, that did not disqualify them from
adopting the girl.
He said he accepted that the surrogate mother was not motivated by
financial gain. He said she had originally agreed to bear a child
for $15,000, but then refused to accept the second $7,500
installment.
Latey said the natural mother testified that she wanted to help a
childless couple because she had children of her own and
"sympathized greatly with any couple who were unable to have
children of their own."
He said the couple had tried unsuccessfully to adopt a child in
Britain and abroad.
Latey said the father had sexual intercourse with the surrogate
mother on several occasions.
"It was in no sense a love affair," Latey said. "It was physical
congress with the sole purpose of procreating a child. As soon as
there was conception, intercourse ceased."
The judge noted that the man's wife at first opposed the
arrangement, but then "acquiesced and later supported it." Now that
they have a child, "there is no doubt that their marriage is solid
and stable," Latey said.
He said the couple and the surrogate mother did not draw up a
written contract and described the surrogate arrangement as "one of
trust which was fully honored on both sides."
Only after the child was born did the couple and the mother think
about the legality of adoption, he said.
The couple and surrogate mother were not identified in court.
Latey warned other couples that "before they go down the path of
surrogacy they should know, and know fully, what it may entail. It
is not a primrose path."
Latey previously heard the "Baby Cotton" case which led to the 1985
law barring agencies from recruiting women to have babies for other
people.
At the time, Latey ruled that "Baby Cotton," a child from a
"commercial" surrogate mother, be handed over to her natural father
and his wife.
The couple had paid $16,000 to a British surrogate parenting agency,
and the surrogate mother, Kim Cotton, 28, was reported to have
received $8,400.
In the United States, a Hackensack, N.J., judge is hearing a
landmark case in which surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead refuses
to hand over the child she agreed to bear for $10,000 for William
and Elizabeth Stern.
|
202.26 | | WHOARU::HARDING | | Tue Mar 24 1987 12:50 | 10 |
| RE: 20
Just a thought. How would one like to know that their natural
mother was a plastic tube, the act of conception was an eye
dropper with sperm and egg from unknown donors.
Seriously what this is doing is making woman baby factories.
dave
|
202.27 | | LATEXS::MINOW | I need a vacation | Tue Mar 24 1987 16:08 | 9 |
| re: .26
> Just a thought. How would one like to know that their natural
> mother was a plastic tube, the act of conception was an eye
> dropper with sperm and egg from unknown donors.
Consider the alternative.
Martin
|
202.28 | support zero population growth | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Playing with Fire | Tue Mar 24 1987 21:40 | 4 |
| I find this distressing from a completely different viewpoint. The
world is full of already born childern who are starving to death
or being abused. Why must there be a way to produce more until we
can take care of those already born? Liesl
|
202.29 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Wed Mar 25 1987 08:10 | 9 |
| RE .28 Pity more of the abused and starving children aren't
up for adoption. How do you go about convincing their
parents to give them up ? Monetary inducements ? Then
you're back to charges of "slavery". If two people
badly want a child then let them pursue whatever poss-
ibilities exist. Surrogacy is certainly no less expensive
than adoption, with the benefit of the child posessing
the same genes as the parent(s). I don't say this *should*
make a difference, only that it often does.
|
202.30 | Churn 'em out | ULTRA::ZURKO | UI:Where the rubber meets the road | Wed Mar 25 1987 11:40 | 12 |
| re: .26
I thought that women had been oppressed for so long because they
were considered baby factories. I guess that means I see your statement
as nothing new. If only the women who want to make babies make babies,
and that ones that don't want to don't, it sounds more equitable
(this is a single narrow statement about a complex problem).
Let's reinstate communities and tribal families, so that children
can be nurtured and shared by those who want to! Or perhaps the
three adult family? (tangent alert :-))
Mez
|
202.31 | How I was conceived aint important | JETSAM::HANAUER | Mike...Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Wed Mar 25 1987 12:18 | 6 |
| If I found out I was conceived in a test tube or in some other "non
conventional" manner, that would make me very happy.
I would then know that I must have been wanted very much.
~Mike
|
202.32 | better than being "a mistake" | ULTRA::NYLANDER | | Wed Mar 25 1987 13:21 | 10 |
|
I agree with .31.
So many people I have talked with have said, "Our last child was
a mistake." I think it would be much worse to find out later
in life that I had been a mistake, due to failure of birth control
or whatever, than to find out I had been conceived technologically.
Alison
|
202.33 | There are kids available! | CELICA::QUIRIY | Christine | Wed Mar 25 1987 16:22 | 12 |
|
Re: .29
There are already more children of disadvantageous circumstances up for
adoption than there are people who want to adopt them. Most people want
babies (not children), and the younger the better. And, most people want
babies of their same skin color or ethnic background.
I don't see what difference any of it makes, nor do I see any benefit to
me or the kid in having my genes.
CQ
|
202.34 | There are kids but a match may not be easy | TWEED::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed Mar 25 1987 16:35 | 28 |
| re .33
Most of the kids who need adoptive homes are kids that are
referred to as special needs. They tend to be older - a lot
of them are teenagers, or handicapped - Down's syndrome kids
are fairly common, or sibling groups, or kids that have suffered
serious emotional damage due to disruptive homelife, or usually
a combination of several of these.
It takes a very unusual person if they have had no previous
parenting experience to be able to successfully parent these
kids. Many of them are *very* emotionally needy. They "act out"
a lot - which is a polite way to say that they fight with you,
steal, run away, bed wet, etc. etc.
Every infertile couple is not necessarily an ideal candidate
for these kids. It takes a lot more than love and a desire to
be a parent.
Our four adoptive children were quite easy compaired to what I am
talking about. We had some close friends who went through the agony
of a failed adoption of a trouble nine year old boy. They were
both trained as child psychologists but had had no other children.
While I would strongly encourage and support anyone who wishes to
adopt, no one should be critcised because they are not willing to
take on an older or handicapped child.
Bonnie
|