Roads to Family by Rachel HS Ginocchio MPH
Author:Rachel HS Ginocchio, MPH [Ginocchio, Rachel HS]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Middle Grade, Middle Grades, Nonfiction, Family, Assisted Reproduction, Alternative Family, Family Structures, Parenthood, Sexuality, Gender, LGBTQIA+, Nontraditional Family, Reproduction, Sexual Reproduction, Adoption, Child Adoption, Adoption Agency, Fertility, Pregnancy, Infertility, IVF, In Vitro Fertilization, ICSI, Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection, Surrogacy, Gestational Surrogacy, Genetic Surrogacy, Surrogates, Surrogacy Agency, Gestational Carrier, Sperm Donation, Sperm Donor, Cryobank, Sperm Bank, Sperm, Uterus, Egg Bank, Embryo Bank, Egg Adoption, Embryo Adoption, Gay, Lesbian, Transgender, Birth, Insemination, IUI, ICI, Fertility Clinic, Fertility Awareness Method, Ovulation, Ovaries, DNA, Ovulation-Menstruation Cycle, Gestation, Fetus, Embryologist, Genetic Testing, Donor Agreement, Donor Profile, Donor-Concieved, Donor Siblings, Genetic Siblings, Unknown Donor, Known Donor, Identity Release Donor, Egg Retrieval, Open Adoption, Closed Adoption, Birth Parents, C-section, Cesarean Section, Communications Agreement, Fostering, Foster Care, Birth Certificate, Multiples, Twins, Birth Control, Ancestry
ISBN: 9781728485911
Publisher: Lerner Publishing Group
Published: 2023-01-02T00:00:00+00:00
A Gestational Surrogateâs Perspective
Emily gave birth to her daughter, Alexis, as a result of donor insemination. Emilyâs amazing experience with assisted reproduction inspired her to become a gestational carrier. That way she could be pregnant (which she loved) and help other LGBTQIA+ people create families.
Since Emily didnât know anyone looking for a gestational surrogate, she joined a website designed to help surrogates and intended parents find one another. She wrote a short blurb about herself, her family, her career, and why she wanted to be a gestational carrier. Her hope was to find someone she connected with. She wasnât looking for a best friend or to have day-to-day involvement in anyoneâs life, but she wanted it to feel like more than a business transaction. Emily knew that gestational surrogacy would connect the two families for the rest of their lives, and she hoped that she and the intended parents would become friends.
Through the website, she discovered a lesbian couple, Nancy and Hillary. Emily and her wife, Elaine, got to know Hillary and Nancy through emails, phone calls, and video chats. Emily also learned why Hillary and Nancy needed a gestational carrier. They had successfully created embryos with their eggs and a friendâs sperm, but they both had a medical condition that prevented them from safely carrying a pregnancy.
After about two weeks of communicating back and forth, they all felt as though they were a great fit for one another. They chose not to work with a surrogacy agency. Instead, they decided to do an independent surrogacy. Emily, Nancy, and Hillary liked the idea of working directly with one another to coordinate all the surrogacy activities themselves.
Though they did everything perfectly, Emilyâs first try at surrogacy ended with a negative pregnancy test and great disappointment. But Hillary and Nancy wanted to try again, and they were able to do so a few months later. This time, nine months after the embryo transfer, Emily gave birth to Charles. Emily recovered from her scheduled C-section in one room, and Nancy and Hillary got their own hospital room, right next door. Emily pumped breast milk for Hillary and Nancy to feed to Charles with a bottle. Extended family popped in and out of both rooms. They talked, laughed, and took turns holding baby Charles.
The two families remain close. They FaceTime, exchange holiday cards and birthday gifts, and have visited each other several times. Alexis (eleven) and Charles (nine) do not see each other as siblingsâtheir relationship is more like that of cousins.
Emily felt so successful as a surrogate that toward the end of her pregnancy, Emily began her own gestational carrier agency. Over the next seven years, she helped hundreds of intended parents and carriers with their surrogacy process.
Emily has been asked a lot of questions about surrogacy. One that comes up repeatedly is, How can you give up your baby? Emily knows that when people ask this, they donât usually intend to be insensitive, hurtful, or judgmental. Often they are just curious. So whenever Emily answers, she always tries to do it in a way thatâs educational.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Personalized inhaled bacteriophage therapy for treatment of multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis by unknow(177895)
CONSORT 2025 statement: updated guideline for reporting randomized trials by unknow(86375)
Critical evaluation of the ProfiLER-02 study design and outcomes by Vivek Subbiah & Razelle Kurzrock(85959)
Cardiac gene therapy makes a comeback by Oliver J. Müller & Susanne Hille & Anca Kliesow Remes(85762)
Whisky: Malt Whiskies of Scotland (Collins Little Books) by dominic roskrow(74442)
Unveiling the design rules for tunable emission in graphene quantum dots: A high-throughput TDDFT and machine learning perspective by Şener Özönder & Mustafa Coşkun Özdemir & Caner Ünlü(50894)
A yeast-based oral therapeutic delivers immune checkpoint inhibitors to reduce intestinal tumor burden by unknow(40265)
Covalent hitchhikers guide proteins to the nucleus by Alexander F. Russell & Madeline F. Currie & Champak Chatterjee(40217)
Meet the Authors: Christopher R. Mansfield and Emily R. Derbyshire by Christopher R. Mansfield & Emily R. Derbyshire(40098)
Alkaline-earth metals promote propane dehydrogenation with carbon dioxide through geometric effects: Altering the reaction pathway by unknow(32736)
Induced iron vacancies boosting FeOOH loaded on sustainable Fenton-like collagen fiber membrane for efficient removal of emerging contaminants by unknow(32509)
Efficient electric-field-assisted photochemical conversion of methane to n-propanol exclusively over penetrated TiO2Ti hollow fibers by Guanghui Feng(32454)
Bi2SiO5 nanosheets as piezo-photocatalyst for efficient degradation of 2,4-Dichlorophenol by Hangyu Shi & Yifu Li & Lishan Zhang & Guoguan Liu & Qian Zhang & Xuan Ru & Shan Zhong(32391)
A novel NDIPTA organic heterojunction photocatalyst with built-in electric field for efficient hydrogen production by Jiahui Yang & Baojun Ma & Yongfa Zhu(32364)
Enhanced conversion of methane to liquid-phase oxygenates via hollow ferrite nanotube@horseradish peroxidase based photoenzymatic catalysis by Jun Duan & Shiying Fan & Xinyong Li & Shaomin Liu(32333)
Ordered macroporous superstructure of defective carbon adorned with tiny cobalt sulfide for selective electrocatalytic hydrogenation of cinnamaldehyde by Xiao-Shi Yuan & Sheng-Hua Zhou & San-Mei Wang & Wenbo Wei & Xiaofang Li & Xin-Tao Wu & Qi-Long Zhu(32260)
What's Done in Darkness by Kayla Perrin(27152)
Topological analysis of non-conjugated ethylene oxide cored dendrimers decorated with tetraphenylethylene: Insights from degree-based descriptors using the polynomial approach by A Theertha Nair & D Antony Xavier & Annmaria Baby & S Akhila(26532)
Investigation of mechanical and self-healing properties of hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene functionalized with 2-ureido-4-pyrimidinone by Mohsen Kazazi & Mehran Hayaty & Ali Mousaviazar(26460)