azurelunatic: Seated baby in incubator shell with electrodes.  (Cyteen)
Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 ([personal profile] azurelunatic) wrote2009-10-26 03:33 pm
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Writer's Block: Ohhh, baby

If your best friend asked you OR your partner to help you conceive a child, would you consider it? How do you think it would affect your friendship and your relationship?

Submitted By [info]moho2987


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Since I first saw this, I've been trying to imagine a scenario where a theoretical* best friend would come up to me and a theoretical male partner and say, "Hey, I hear you've been trying to get her knocked up; anything I can do to help you?"

That could indeed cause some weirdness.


*I mean, I have a best friend already, but attempting to imagine him saying this is to laugh hysterically.

Watch out, feeling tangenty

[identity profile] amiga500.livejournal.com 2009-10-27 03:55 am (UTC)(link)
I'd consider surrogacy for someone I loved, and that's despite hating being pregnant. A little part of me would like to give birth again, and do it right this time. I'm not so sure about egg donation, as the hormones scare me. In a surrogate situation, I'd want to keep things pretty standard, except maybe for the actual insemination. My egg and womb, your choice of sperm. I do donate milk, on an ongoing basis, and that's much, much easier, but it's a lot more gratifying than I would have expected. Two little boys get noms from me, and I love it.

I do have a friend who'd like a kid but who's unlikely to get knocked up without a lot of work (I think this is maybe the best and worst thing about gay sex; no babies, ever). Two other male friends have been willing to at least consider acting as donors for her, so long as they were both clear on the terms of the agreement, and knew each other well enough to think she'd be a good mother. I was surprised how easily they'd consider the idea.

About my husband being a sperm donor? Not so sure. I'd definitely want any potential mother to know his family background well enough to know what she was getting into, and I'd want to know that it wouldn't fuck with his head too much, which would probably rule it out entirely.

Probably wouldn't accept help this way, since I was never rabid about having kids. I'd definitely take donor milk if needed, though.

Re: Watch out, feeling tangenty

[identity profile] iroshi.livejournal.com 2009-10-28 09:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Actually, I always felt a lot LESS crazy when I was pregnant. Until that last pregnancy where my joints just up and decided to get all wiggly, but that was the body failing, not the brain. The brain is still willing, but the body don't like it no more.

Seriously, that's why I thought my brainpan might work better on birth control pills, because they mildly simulate pregnancy to convince your body not to loose any more eggs. However, the pills made me more crazy. Pregnancy, on the other hand, always stabilized my mood *greatly*.

YMMV, of course, since we're different kinds of crazy. I started to say "vastly different", but that's really not quite so true. I think it's a lot the same kind of crazy, just differently structured.