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Bill
Cordray is a 52 year old American who found out 15 years ago that
he had been conceived through donor insemination. Since then he
has been in contact with many infertility and adoption organisations
in the world with an interest in open records and identity, including
visits to Canada and Australia. He is a regular contributor to internet
newsgroups and recently responded to an enquirer who was uncertain
about the importance of telling children...
As
a person conceived through DI, I believe it is essential to tell
the child for several reasons. First, I believe it should be the
child's right to know the truth about his conception. Second, it
is extremely difficult to maintain such a vital secret for the lifetime
of the child/adult without resorting to a tangled web of deceptions.
Third, the effects of keeping a secret probably will damage your
relationship with your child and have a significant impact on his
ability to trust you. Fourth, most children are a great deal more
perceptive than most parents credit and will perceive that some
kind of information is being withheld from them. They will start
to think that they are somehow to blame for whatever is being withheld
or will even fantasize, as I did at an early age, that the mother
had an affair. Fifth, although their may be some similarity between
the husband and the child, these will be outweighed by the many
differences inherited from the donor, which will become more apparent
at a later age when the teenager develops into a unique individual.
Sixth, the strain of keeping a secret might be greater than you
would ever expect and cause significant stress in your marriage.
If it dissolves, the odds that the truth will be revealed in damaging
ways will be much greater.
Your
child will also need considerable support in understanding his identity.
It will be extremely difficult to give him the nurturing he has
the right to expect if you can not be honest with him about his
conception. I believe you will have much greater fears as a parent
with a secret that may come out at any time than you would as a
parent who has shown the child that you have profound respect for
his dignity by telling him the truth. What words you use or explanations
you give is far less important than the love you show by your honesty.
I have known adoptees (and people like me who were conceived through
DI) who were told as adults. They deeply resented being deceived
for so long and felt betrayed. More significant than that, however,
is the sense that they knew all along that something important was
kept from them all their childhood years and that this secret kept
their family from being close. So I encourage you to accept DI with
the understanding of the child's need to know the truth. I can reassure
you that there are many DI families that have done so and that their
children have no significant emotional traumas nor are they obsessed
with the identity of the donor.
The
key is honesty and the willingness to ask for support. DI-support
groups, whether through e-mail or through local meetings are essential.
I believe that family counsellors are also great support for both
of you and your child. It is perhaps more difficult to parent a
DI child or an adoptee so there should be no shame attached in asking
for such help. By the time you need this help, I am certain it will
be more readily available than it is now. In the fifteen years since
I found out the truth, society has changed dramatically from then:
at that time no one disclosed, it was never discussed in public,
no DI support groups existed, e-mail newsgroups had not been invented,
there were no identity-release donors, and no counsellors had any
experience with DI families. Within a few years, we will see greater
social acceptance of DI, more information available about the donors,
more DI support groups, and many more counselors with a wealth of
experience with DI families. I also expect to see few couples who
question the need to disclose. I wish you well in your decision.
The only thing you have to fear is fear itself.
You
might believe that secrets do no damage and feel justified in doing
so out of a sense of protecting the child. In reality, such protection
is harmful to the child and the family members who engage in it.
That was the case for myself and my family as well as for those
thirty or more DI adoptees who have told me their stories. It is
a little disconcerting trying to convince DI parents about our confusion,
trying to understand our sense that something is being withheld
from us. We have ample evidence that this was the case in the long
period of time when it was believed that adoptees should never know
the truth. Most adoptive parents would now consider such a secret
unthinkable and adoption counsellors actively encourage disclosure.
I think that within ten years or so disclosure will become the norm
as more DI conceived people get involved in telling our stories
and the general public becomes more informed about infertility.
It was the numerous books written by adoptees and birthparents that
convinced adoptive parents to disclose and it will be so for DI
as well. So please don't think I'm accusing any of you, I'm just
trying to tell you my experiences with secrecy, hoping that you
won't suffer through the tremendous struggles my parents went through
trying to "protect" me from reality. When I was finally informed,
at age 37, I could not understand why they felt it was such a terrible
thing. I felt nothing but sympathy for the unnecessary pain they
created for themselves. The truth is a lot less frightening than
our fears.
E-mail:
Bcor84@aol.com
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