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My
story begins a long time ago, but it is one that I share with others,
perhaps many hundreds of others. Our origin was forever to be a
secret. Many of us are in the dark about our beginning, but we don't
know it; only a few of us know the truth, and I am one of them.
Our parents were told never to tell. Most of us are walking around
believing that we are the offspring of the two parents who brought
us up. But there is a twist to our story. We are only biologically
related to our mothers. The man listed as father on our birth certificates
is the man who raised us, but is not our biological father. Our
fathers' identity remains a mystery.The truth was too terrifying
a burden to place on children who were born of such an unorthodox
procedure. But then, a few of us found out, some of us were told,
and we want to tell our stories.
I
am donor offspring
I belong to a group of people who are donor offspring, conceived
via artificial insemination from an anonymous sperm donor. In England
in the late 1940s my parents, faced with infertility, sought help
from the pioneering London gynaecologist Mary Barton. Then, she
was one of only two physicians brave enough to experiment with donor
insemination (DI), and aiding infertile couples to conceive and
give birth to the children they so badly wanted. The carefully orchestrated
procedure was not only successful in determining my own conception,
but also was responsible for the birth of my brother four-and-a-half
years later.
In
contrast to some reports of families with donor offspring, ours
was a relatively uneventful childhood. We were not aware that the
truth was being withheld from us. My parents had been advised not
to tell, and they kept their agreement. We never suspected that
we were not like every other family we knew. Friends and relatives
cooed over us as children, and even commented on how much we resembled
our mother and our father.
Disclosure
came when I was 22 and my brother 18, six months after the death
of my father. Our mother carefully and lovingly told us the story
of our beginning. Though originally loyal to our father's desire
that we should never know of the choice of DI, she felt that we
should know the truth after all. It was an immense surprise and
shock. I remember examining my hands and face in the mirror seeking
physical evidence of this new biological father's presence, and
being fascinated by the prospect that half of me was unknown. I
also felt sadness and frustration that I would never be able to
talk about this new revelation about my identity with the man whom
I had now discovered was my social father; but he was still my father.
I wanted to tell him how I admired him and my mother for the courage
that it took to chose DI, when the church and even the medical profession
had looked on this procedure with vitriol.
Years
passed and I followed the path life presented to me, moving to the
USA, obtaining a graduate degree in social work, working, marrying
and giving birth to a daughter. I had somehow incorporated the meaning
of this new part of me, and had grown to accept my birth origin.
I thought about it very little.
Who
am I?
Things gradually changed when my daughter was to reach the age of
majority. My job as a parent was shifting, and, as many do when
approaching middle age, I began to re-examine who I was, what was
important to me and where I was in my life. One half of my genetic
origin was still a mystery, and my daughter was about to start her
life as an adult, still not being able to identify one quarter of
her own biological background. Questions began to surface. What
genes do we carry that may be associated with disease? Am I a woman
who carries the BRCA1 gene? Women from Ashkenazi Jewish families
are more likely than other women to carry this gene that causes
an increase in the risk of breast cancer. I was raised as Anglican,
but was my donor father Jewish? It became important to me as a person,
and as a parent to my daughter to discover more.
My
quest
My quest began a little over a year ago, and what a surprising,
intense experience it has been. The Internet has been an invaluable
tool. It has allowed me to communicate with others involved, who
live across the globe. I have been amazed at how incredibly open
people have been in sharing such personal, detailed stories of their
own. Some stories have been poignant and sad; others more joyful.
Why do I want to know who my father was? I have come to realise
that every person has a need to know. To know one's family history,
to know where one fits, to know to which group one belongs, not
only to feel valued as an individual, but also to feel part of a
group.
These
encounters have forced me to ask fundamental questions of myself.
How comfortable am I admitting to others that I am the offspring
of an unknown sperm donor? Do I feel a stigma? Did I choose my helping
profession because at an unconscious level I wanted to resolve my
own personal issues around being a donor offspring? Or, as someone
who is relatively healthy and stable as a person, did I want to
reach out to help less able people, struggling with their own issues
of identity?
Who
is my donor father?
Who is my donor father, if he is still alive? He is a man about
whom I am immensely curious. Is he a person who has been happy with
his life? Has he pursued a professional career as I have? Is he
creatively talented, and did he gravitate towards the arts in his
life as I have? What made him laugh and gave him pleasure? Would
he be proud of the offspring he created? Is he a parent to children
he raised, who are half-siblings of mine? Would he like to meet
me, and would he be pleased to know that he contributed to making
me the person that I am? More links The fact that a British journalist
was preparing a television documentary on the history of artificial
insemination in England (Witness: Secret Fathers) led me to hear
of another offspring conceived at Mary Barton's clinic, besides
my brother and me. I happened to be in England on holiday when the
programme was aired, and was both nervous and fascinated to meet
him. Though strangers to each other, we talked openly about the
unidentified sperm that contributed to our existence, and the feelings
we had on first being told that a turkey baster had helped give
us life. The meeting was profound and I wanted him to meet my brother.
Strangely enough, a month to the day after this first encounter,
the three of us were together. We had begun to brainstorm the idea
that a website might be set up where DNA profiles of donor offspring
could be posted. People might find half-siblings, and perhaps through
this, their donor fathers. We three sent in our blood samples for
DNA testing to begin the process. We share a father The results
of the DNA testing were a revelation. I was overjoyed to find out
that I am indeed a full sibling of my brother, even though he was
conceived four-and-a-half years after me. But imagine my utter amazement
and incredulity to discover that both of us are half-siblings of
the only other man that we knew to have been conceived at Mary Barton's
clinic! We all three share the same donor father! The odds of making
this discovery must be infinitesimal. They also suggest that the
clinic donor pool was pretty small. It is a disquieting fact that
back 1940s some champion donors contributed to the births of over
100 children. So, how many other half-siblings do we have? We will
never know. Do I want to meet and get to know my half-siblings?
Yes. Perhaps when we meet we should all wear little blue jackets
like Paddington Bear so that we can identify each other. (Ironically
enough, one of the most respected and prolific donors sent his samples
to Mary Barton's clinic via Paddington Station!) Most of us are
ignorant of the fact that we are not the sons and daughters of the
father listed on our birth certificates. But for the few of us who
do know, perhaps some of us may find each other, and some of us
may even find out more about our donor fathers. I feel enriched
I have evolved to a place where it is important to me to continue
my quest. I feel enriched by what I have discovered so far. The
story is on going. I do not know my donor father's identity, and
may never know it. But I am enjoying getting to know our new half-sibling,
and I want to keep in contact with others involved. I keep adding
to my stork file as each new piece of the puzzle falls into place.
I know that some parts of it may never be finished. But I'm willing
to be open to wherever the quest takes me. In the meantime I feel
secure in myself, and am profoundly glad of the fact that my parents
gave me life and that I am here.
Janice
Stevens Botsford, Michigan, USA January, 2000
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