Wednesday, January 31, 2007

The Tide is High

Finally, irrefutable proof that the January attempts were failures. No matter how bossy I am, there are just some things that I can’t force, and this is one of ‘em. I’m not going to pretend to be devil-may-care, because it totally sucks; now my charting is all screwed up, and I’m going to have to do math, and Quiet will have to miserably hide in his closet again, churning out Elf Magic. I did, however, receive some interesting words of support and advice from friends that made me want to punch them in the face at the time, but that I can now accept and ponder with a little space.

- If you’re going to be all tense about it, your body is going to react. RELAX. (yeah, right)

- There are all kinds of things that you haven’t even thought about that you’re just now realizing; maybe not getting pregnant right away is a good thing, because it gives you a little extra time to adjust to these new unexpected concerns and ideas. (TOTALLY true)

- Well, since you didn’t do such a good job at that ‘no drinking and no caffeine’ thing, maybe it’s for the best; that was a ‘trial run’. (admittedly being well-behaved is tougher than I thought)

I have to go and re-run the numbers for February and see what the schedule is going to look like. If only I was better at the basal body temperature thing. *sigh*

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

The 'Daddy' Debate

There are many people out there who are still, in this day and age, uncomfortable with the concept of a single woman raising a child ‘on her own’ (despite the fact that ‘on her own’ more commonly means, ‘with the assistance of loved ones, friends, family members, housemates, and kindly well-meaning strangers’). There are even more who cringe at the thought of a child raised in a household with members of the gay community. We like to scoff dismissively at these well-meaning yet misinformed or perhaps miseducated (yes, I just made that word up) ‘child advocates’, who argue that a child growing up in such an environment will certainly be permanently disabled in some horrible way.

I never thought that I would have fingers pointed at me, not for any of the above reasons, but for potentially psychologically damaging Alistair by not allowing him to call Quiet ‘Daddy’. As a member of various forums that support choosing single motherhood, I half-expected judgment and condemnation based on my choice of living with gay men, regardless of how supportive and understanding the women were about raising Alistair without a ‘traditional’ father. However, I was not prepared for the fiery debate that arose around use, or lack thereof, of the word ‘Dad’.

‘Dad’, derived from the more formal word ‘Father’, can mean many different things to many different people. At a very simple biological level it means to be the creator, or progenitor, the founder of a family line. But after that it gets messy. There are also step-dads, adoptive dads, grandpas-who-act-as-dads. There seems to be a split after the creation definition that can be best summed up by, ‘a man who exercises paternal care, performs the duties of a male parent, assume as one’s own, takes the responsibility of’ (www.dictionary.com). And here is where the argument occurred.

While Quiet has the dubious honor of seeding the garden, he is not the farmer. He’ll be a great farmhand, for sure, but he’s not going to be responsible for the watering and the fertilizing and the sowing and all kinds of other nice metaphors. In other words, he will not exercise paternal care or perform the duties of a male parent (that’s me), he will not assume Alistair as his own (no name on the birth certificate), and he will not take any responsibility (still just me). So while some argue that he should get the title of ‘Dad’ and to do anything else is cruel to Alistair, I disagree. Someone actually wrote that giving Loud and Quiet the title of Uncle ‘grosses me out’. What other title do we give, or take, when we have a familial relationship with a child that is outside the bonds of blood yet is very often stronger? How many of us are Aunties to our friends’ children, and damn proud of it?

I agree that Alistair will long for a man to call Daddy, and I truly hope that someday I will meet that person, not just for him but for me as well. I hope that we can adequately communicate to him the difference between a Father and a Donor, and that he does not resent us or feel unloved or rejected, because there is plenty of love waiting for him (err, or her, god forbid I have a girl and she reads this someday and is like, ‘Omg, I’m fine with the Dad issue, it’s the feelings of inadequacy over not being a boy that I have problems with). I just need to accept that I’m going to be defensive every 5 minutes the whole way through this thing, and for a long time after, that mistakes will certainly be made, and that I’ll just do my best to make the choices I think are right.

Friday, January 26, 2007

Managing Expecations

Anyone who knows me at all knows that this is something I've had a problem with ever since I was a small child. Part of the problem is, I am an exuberant person; I like to get excited about things, I like to make a big deal out of stuff, I love drama and heck, if you can’t celebrate the small stuff then what’s the point to it all? Here’s the problem, and I’ve run into it time and time again; rarely does anything work out exactly like you want it to, or hope it will. Sometimes, people let you down or circumstances come up that are outside anyone’s control, and there’s just nothing you can do about it. That trip to see the new Eddie Murphy movie ‘The Golden Child’ gets cancelled because Dad won’t let you drive in the storm (seriously, I’m kind of glad on that one); spa plans are changed because your best friend suddenly has an extra $150 in monthly healthcare expenses.

Sometimes the let down is little, and then sometimes it’s crushing. Cancelling a flight to see a loved one is the latter, while, well, there are all sorts of everyday things that can happen to change anticipated plans. No matter how many times it happens, or how big or small, I am never ready for it. It’s one of the things I will really have to work at as a parent, because everyone knows nothing EVER goes according to plan when there is a little person involved. I got a taste of this as a kindergarten teacher; I’d plan some big event, party or field trip, and at some point I would realize that the kids just didn’t care, or that it didn’t matter to them like I thought it would, and all my work and planning was in vain (well, not in vain, but it felt like it at the time because I'm such a sucky baby).

I am having difficulty managing my expectations. I want to be pregnant. I don’t want to have to try for months and months, I don’t want to have to go through this awful wait time after time, I don’t want my hopes to be crushed again and again. I had a dream last night that I got my period (don’t you hate those? I was in some sort of public school bathroom and didn’t have a change of clothes, it was awful), and I woke up at 3 am in a panic. I’m on Late Day Four and yes, I couldn’t help it, I did another pregnancy test. Yes, it was negative again. I know I sound like a petulant child (especially to those women who have been trying for ever, they’re probably snorting and rolling their eyes right now), but this isn’t a pony or an ice cream or a massage, this is Alistair. I want him/her. Now.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

How the Tables Have Turned

How many of us gals can remember being young and in love, maybe 17 or 18 tender years of age, and experiencing that sickening feeling when your period is late? The desperation, the silent prayers offered up (even though you are in no way religious), the promises to be more careful and then, at last, the supreme relief and sudden lightening of a burden when, finally, you see the telltale signs of a baby-less existence. I can remember my father’s threats about pre-marital sex and its dangers, which totally ignored STDs but instead focused solely on how pregnancy could ruin my life, get me kicked out of the house, disowned from the family.
And now, here I am today, breathless and fidgety with anticipation that maybe, just maybe, there’s a chance, 20% of 20%, (0.04, I think, if my math is right), because I was suppose to get my period yesterday and did not. Nor did I get it last night. Hoping beyond hoping, I told myself I’d wait until 3:00 this afternoon, no, 2:00, to try the HPT.
Well, I just blew that goal out of the window. Proving myself to really be that impatient, I just went and did it. And it was negative. There’s a very clear, solid negative line mocking me right now.
How many times will I go through this before going totally insane? Again, how do women do this month in and out, year after year? I would have bet money right up until the moment I saw that line that it had taken, especially after the past few days where I’ve been sleeping 12-14 hours on average and still feel exhausted, been absent-minded, sensitive to ‘normal’ smells, all those things that I have to now chalk up to – psychosomatic symptoms? I’ve read of that happening, where you want it so bad that you convince your body to give off the common signs. So next step I guess is waiting a few more days to see if I get my period and then, if not, redo the test in a week to see if hormone levels have risen any. And NOT get my hopes up that it was a false negative. Oops, too late. 0.04, that's still a chance!

Monday, January 22, 2007

The Loneliest Number

I don’t care if I’m part of a demographic revolution and should be all excited that I’m even allowed to buy a house by myself, it’s still lonely out here. It’s even lonelier when your ex from many years ago who you of course are still in love with because he was totally The One starts calling you repeatedly out of the blue, only to finally tell you, ‘Oops, sorry, didn’t mean to get your hopes up, was just being friendly’. Well, screw you, pal. Me and my baby dreams are doing just fine without your commitment-phobic swimmers. And my dining room is a really pretty color.
Tomorrow I will likely get my period, and then after that comes the February attempt. I’m set for the disappointment tomorrow – hey, it wasn’t a bad first try!

Friday, January 19, 2007

The First Clue

There have been a few subtle clues that lead me to believe the first month of attempts have failed. Despite the fact that I have been extremely absent-minded (that whole putting-the-dirty-laundry-into-the-dryer-without-washing-it-first was great) and somewhat, well, stupid, I have been moody enough for no reason this week to suggest that my little friend is going to be visiting on Tuesday. I don’t have any weird unexplained breast tenderness, which my sister says was her first sign, and, well, I’m more irritable than an atheist hungry fat girl in tight pants sweating through a Catholic mass. The stupidity and absent-mindedness can be explained away by work stress and lack of fish in my diet, but the crying jags (three so far this week) are more PMS than Preggers, I think.

*sigh*

I soooooooooooo wanted to be one of those people who gets it right the first time. Yes, everything IS a competition to me.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

The People in My Neighborhood

I lived for years in a series of crappy low-rent apartments that had regularly scheduled bug sprayings, so I was never close to any of my neighbors. Mostly because they were either despondent families in-between homes, or surly party-all night college students, but mostly because in crappy apartment complexes no one wants to know anyone else (especially the weird family who sat around naked in their living room that overlooked the main road). When I moved into my first home I was very excited to do community things and swap recipes and lend sugar, only to discover that the neighborhood I was in wasn’t a ‘do things’ kind of group. I tried, unsuccessfully, to organize several events, including a multi-family yard sale and a cul-de-sac barbecue. The only one who put anything out the morning of the yard sale was my crazy neighbor who apparently bought every single made-for-tv item ever invented, broke them, then tried to unload them on unsuspecting suckers. She had the ThighMaster, I swear. And the barbecue idea didn’t go over so well, mainly because many of my neighbors had limited English skills and weren’t sure what I was trying to do, or potentially because some sort of crack house had recently been established on the street and we were all a bit fearful of going outside anytime.
So it’s safe to say I had low expectations when I bought my current home just before Thanksgiving. I figured if I was lucky I might have a bearable relationship with the neighbor on each side, or know their first names and how many children/pets they had, or at least be able to tell the difference between the two. What I didn’t expect was to see bright and shiny faces on my doorstep today, smiling broadly with hands extended, welcoming me and introducing themselves. And it’s happened before! Sometimes when I’m outside, unsuspectingly unloading groceries or checking the mail, people cross the street to say ‘hi’, or wave as they drive past, or send their children across the lawn to offer me orange slices (that last one sounds weird, but it’s totally true, I just figured it was some suburban cult thing and graciously yet tentatively ate one polite segment).
It’s sad how excited I got when I met today’s neighbors, a lovely young couple with an adorable 5-month old. And the husband is totally hot. The wife is a doctor, how cool is that? Is it shameful that I want to be friends because I can already picture myself calling her and asking her about Alistair’s latest sniffle? The worst part was, I was definitely NOT at my best. Please remember I work from home, and although I do not yet have a child I certainly look like I do. Ashamedly I will admit that the food smears and questionable stains on my clothes are all my own doing, and that my hair looks this way because I wear a headset for conference calls and then scratch my head around it when I’m thinking, so it gets these awesome bumpy knots that stick out and make me look like a mental patient. Did I mention I have been wearing these pants since Monday, and they are unfashionable brown corduroys? Or that my t-shirt says, ‘I know what boys like’? Also I had most certainly not brushed my teeth, so the whole time I was talking to them I kept putting my hand in front of my mouth.
To make a long story short, they were very cool and did not stammer or shriek or raise any eyebrows when I explained that I was a single woman attempting to get pregnant living with two gay men. This may seem like a lot of information to give out when first meeting someone, but I like to be very upfront about it, to gauge reactions of those I see as Future Babysitters and Prospective Dinner Party Attendees. It turns out they are Canadian, like myself, so maybe that’s why they seemed so damn open-minded. Crazy Liberals, just can’t shock ‘em. Anyhow, I was like a school girl on a first date, and stuttered and stammered and waved my hands a lot and basically was a dirty, incompetent mess, which is how I am most of the time anyhow, so at least they met the real me. And I offered to babysit (see, always thinking).

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

The Constant State of Guilt and Uncertainty

How do women do this for months and months and even years and years? To live in this constant state of anxiety, doubt, concern, and hope/dread is torturous. And I’ve been doing it for one whole week.

Every single thing I do is now, ‘Am I or aren’t I?’ If I’m painting and headily breathing in the fumes, I worry. If I have two glasses of wine at a wedding reception, I’m panicked (but the pleasant buzz helps). When I lift something heavy, when I eat rare meat or fish or something with a blurry expiration date, I think, ‘What if?’ I know it’s like a million years too early for any of these things to possibly affect anything potentially growing inside me, but it’s that first step on a slippery slope of things to come, where around every corner lurks future guilt about something I didn’t do correctly at the beginning.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Baby Names I Would Use if I Didn't Love My Child

The following is a list of some 'alternative' baby names that I really like, yet I would never really consider using. Namely because I'm pretty sure the kid would be beat up, hate me forever, and end up living in a refrigerator box with a sock curtain. But how cool would it be...

Draegan
Jace
Stryker
Arragon
Dexter
Kade
Devon
Lucien/Lucius
Cooper

Please keep in mind, if you have actually named your child this (or, one of the above is your name), I really think that's tremendously cool and yay for you, please don't be insulted and try to find my house to punch me in the eye. I am envious of people who get creative with names (unless it results in Pilot Inspektor), and wish I wasn't so darn White/Christian with the names I've got picked out. Which, by the way, you will never ever see listed here because I don't want everyone taking my name like they did when I was considering 'Jake'.
FYI, there are also some cool girl's names, but since I've had my girl name picked out for like 10 years and there is no other, I haven't really looked at kooky girl names.

FAS, Implantation, and Still Waiting

My worries today centered on an upcoming wedding in Myrtle Beach this weekend. I have developed a somewhat notorious reputation for my inspirational drinking records at weddings, and I suddenly clued in that this might not be a good think to do on Saturday 'just in case'. Those three little words now follow a lot of things; I shouldn't over-do the exercise routine, this Pepsi on my desk right now shouldn't be drunk, I better have some more leafy greens, I probably shouldn’t start a meth habit, all 'just in case'. I've only started trying like five minutes ago and chances are nothing has happened yet (unless I'm that 1/5, fingers crossed!), but, you know, I would rather be safe than sorry.
So this topic led to several discussions about FAS and fetal development and what was safe, when.
It appears that unless I’m a raging alcoholic, a drink or two won’t hurt, especially not at this stage. But do I want to take that chance? Is a delicious Dirty Martini, frosty Margarita, or icy Pinot Grigio really worth permanently disabling my future child? Don’t get me wrong, I understand the seriousness of this matter and am committed to being a good mother, but I just really, really like to drink, so it’s a struggle.
In addition to not really knowing anything other than old wives’ tales and back-alley myths about what could or could not hurt a fetus, I also learned that I had forgotten everything I learned in Sex Ed about fertilization; I forgot about the little Egg Journey that happens before implantation in The Garden of the Womb. It’s such a nice thought; the happy little fertilized egg strolling along the tube for a few days, tra-la-la!, deciding if it’s going to move into the uterus and hang out for nine months. Just think, that Egg is rolling along right now as I type, waving its good-byes, and maybe, just maybe picking out a place to stay for a while.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

The Third and Final January Attempt

I'm an old pro at this by now. I get the delivery, make the deposit, point my toes at the ceiling, lickety-split. The third and final attempt for the month of January has been made, and now it's just the waiting game, also known as the Devil's Arithmetic; one day plus one day plus one day... you get the idea. Today is the 10th, which means I should know in lucky # 13 days whether or not this crazy thing worked. If not, I go on to February attempts. If February isn't Alistair's month, I try March. And if March doesn't work? Well, then I start to worry and consider fertility testing.
I'm not going to go through drugs or any weird assisted insemination stuff though; I figure if I can't do it on my own, then there is a little Chinese girl out there who really needs a Mommy*. I'm not worried, not yet. The gals in my family are notoriously fertile, and several of my cousins came into this world just shy of nine months after a Catholic wedding ceremony. I'm banking on this, since my statistics aren't great; normal conception rates are estimated at 20%/month, and that's not factoring in my age or the fact I'm shooting it in myself. Plus I have no clue what my fertility or Quiet's is, whether the eggs or the swimmers are punctual or fighters.


*Did you know that I actually would NOT be allowed to adopt a baby from China? While I am within the age range and income level, because I am single most agencies will not let me adopt. If they can get past that, then the fact that I live with homosexuals makes me an unfit mother. And apparently, according to the CCAA (China's Center of Adoption Affairs) as of December 2006, you can't be too fat, either. Seriously. There is a BMI maximum. I actually would not be allowed to adopt from Korea. So despite my income, family support, and Teaching degree, I could not give one of these orphans a home. And judging by some of the other blogs I've read, a lot of people seem to think that's ok. *sigh* This world still has such a long way to go.

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

The Second Attempt - January

Well, I did a little better with the Second Attempt. I didn't knock anything over, at least. Well, nothing important, anyway. And it was less traumatic, and I breathed through my mouth, and I figured out a much more comfortable position. It was still pretty freaky though, and I felt bad because Quiet has a cold and is miserable, and here I was, 'Fill 'er up, please!', throwing an empty cup at him.

My worry for today is paying for college, because I watched a Lifetime move where this family has to use the college fund for mom's medical bills (she gets really fat, then develops diabetes and finally has a heart attack). How much is college tuition now? What if Alistair wants to go out-of-state? What if I start one of those Education-specific funds, but he/she doesn't want to go to college? Quiet told me to shut the hell up and wait 20 years. But those are the things that people don't think about until too late. I think part of my constant wake-up-in-the-middle-of-the-night panic is the fact that no matter how great my friends or housemates or family are, it's all up to me. That's what it comes down to. My child's ultimate success or failure in this world, his/her basic comforts (bacon, shelter, Skechers), all of that is my financial responsibility.

Monday, January 8, 2007

The First Attempt - January

A good, stable, work-from home job, check. A plan for child care, check. A savings account for Alistair, check. A cup full of goo from one of my best friends sitting on my nightstand beside a sterile syringe, check. And then, reality check...

When people ask how you intend to become pregnant on your own, they don’t really want to know the answer. They may want to know if you are using a service, or a known donor, or elf magic, but they really do not want to know any of the details. They may think they do, but trust me, they do NOT. Nine times out of ten you will hear the words ‘turkey baster’ followed by a giggle if you are having this conversation. If you really think that a turkey baster is the solution, please go read somewhere else.

In medical terms what is used is known as a ‘needle-less syringe’, basically a needle without the sharp pointy part that makes me hyperventilate and faint. You should also have some sort of sterile collection cup. After much searching and embarrassment, I found both these items quite reasonably. I bought a box of individually wrapped sterile cups online, and found the syringes by asking my pharmacist (I think I panicked and said I used them for baby medicine), they were a mere 25 cents each but they are kept behind the counter. Luckily I didn’t look like a meth junkie.

I had a date in my head of when to start because it was after my most recent dive trip (I don’t trust the statistics on diving and babies, and better safe than sorry). Then I used the very handy ovulation calendar at BabyZone.com to help figure out when the time would be ideal. I bought a basal thermometer but couldn’t ever remember to check my temperature before getting out of bed to pee, let alone remember to graph it, so gave up. Luckily I’m very regular and have never in my life skipped a period, so the plain ol’ calendar was the way to go. I talked a lot about my cervical mucus in polite dinner conversation, which made everyone very happy.

It should have happened like this; a pixie or fairy or something similar flies into my room and hands me a fetchingly pretty little bag of magic dust or petals, which I sprinkle over myself or ingest, and then ta-da! I am pregnant. That is not how it happened. Instead, Loud stared, in abject horror and in total disbelief, as Quiet tried to make some pixie dust for me. When he couldn’t take the silent judging any longer the embarrassed and frustrated Donor finally went and hid in the closet (insert joke here) to complete his task. Meanwhile, I was hiding in my own room, terrified and trying not to think about what was going on in the room below me. Quiet crept up the stairs with his magical gift, set it outside my door, hollered, ‘Special delivery!’ and ran. I froze. Then I went and got it, and panicked. What was the right position? It didn’t look like very much. Was it really his, or was it some cruel joke and it was Loud’s, or tapioca? Had all his blood tests really been ok? I set the cup on the nightstand, then promptly knocked it off. Swearing like a sailor I almost fell off the bed collecting it again (luckily the lid was on tight), got a syringe, and started to fill it. My favorite part was when I gagged taking off the lid; by this point, I was realizing what a terrible idea the whole thing was and how stupid we were to think we could pull it off. I had flashbacks to articles I’d read of how cold and clinical insemination was as opposed to the ‘natural and loving’ way to make a baby, and had to wholeheartedly agree. After making my deposit (which felt to me like it instantly all dumped right back out), I tried various creative ways of keeping my hips elevated which I’m sure would have looked hilarious to the casual bystander. I had read that having an orgasm immediately afterwards was ideal because the cervix would dip into the vaginal pool, a visual image that I compared to my inner workings going for a nice swim. I was so incredibly distracted that I could barely pull it off. I tried to lay horizontal as long as I could like I was in The Handmaid's Tale, which was probably 15 minutes, and then couldn’t wait any longer to pee.

So I learned some good lessons about being better prepared, using the ladies’ room beforehand, breathing through my mouth, keeping my eyes closed as much as possible, and trying to think happy thoughts. I have also got to stop thinking about my chances of this actually working, not stress about it, stop constantly talking about it, and mostly quit beating myself up over it. Most importantly I am NOT allowed to go try the pregnancy test I’ve already bought because I am so incredibly impatient.

I’m going to try again tonight, and tomorrow, and then that will be it for the January Attempt. Then I just wait until the 21st, the earliest date for an accurate home pregnancy test, or if I’m too cheap hang out and see if I get my period. Fingers crossed…

The Daddy Donor

If you have read the Back Story you know that I had two choices for a Daddy Donor; Friend 1 or Friend 2. We'll call them Loud and Quiet. Loud was more outgoing and open to the idea of throwing some material my way (literally, I’m sure), while Quiet was more introspective and unsure about the whole thing. It all came down to the best recipe for Good Babymaking 101. Loud and I have way too much in common; we’re both, uh, loud for one thing. And outgoing. And stubborn, and selfish, and confident, and sloppy. Quiet, on the other hand, is, well, quiet. He’s more comfortable napping on the couch than rocking it at the clubs. He’s also very artistic, and smart, and easy going, and did I mention quiet? The hope is that all those qualities will balance out mine. If I had used Loud, the kid would have popped out, criticized the doctor, and then immediately left home.

So the next adventure was convincing Quiet that this was something he wanted to do. I don’t think I ever succeeded at that, but he did eventually cave in and agree to be the Daddy Donor. To clarify, neither he nor Loud will ever be referred to as The Daddy. They will both be uncles, and are thrilled at the thought, but Quiet is a Donor and nothing more. There will be no Daddy on the birth certificate, no legal or financial responsibility from him in any way. He’s merely helping out a friend in need. It’s still scary for him, though, and understandably – never in a million years did he think he would father a child in any way, so had never considered the possibility. It freaks him out immensely, as it does me and Loud, but I’m sure there are all kinds of other sides to it that I can’t even imagine. I’m just immensely grateful, and proud, and overcome that someone could make the sacrifice to live with me and help raise the little bugger, let alone give a part of themselves to the effort.

We’ve already thought about the world around us and how they will be told. I think the smartest thing to do is go with the Immaculate Conception story, either that or the Stork/Cabbage Patch thing. Our families mostly know; mine knows every detail, of course, because I can’t keep anything to myself to save my life. They are thrilled and excited, and reacted astoundingly well to the idea, which both confused and pleased me. Loud’s family knows also, because much like me he can’t keep anything a secret. I’m not sure if anyone in Quiet’s family knows, because he’s not a talker like we are and he’s got a more difficult story to explain. But Loud’s mom is excited, and wrote me a very touching letter of advice listing different things that her children shoved in their noses or fell out of while growing up. I’m already defensive and irritated about strangers pressing me for information about Alistair’s parentage and he/she hasn’t even been conceived. What I think I’ll try to do is say I used a donor, not say who it is, and try to leave it at that. If strangers try to ask for details I’ll tell them it’s very personal and to leave me the hell alone. I think it would just be too confusing to try to explain who Quiet is and what the relationship will be and how that will work. People already have a difficult time understanding how the three of us can live together (and yet, it would be perfectly clear if I was living with a straight married couple, right?).

As far as explaining to Alistair who his Daddy is, that will be horribly simple. He does not have one. He will be told about Quiet as his biological provider when he is old enough to understand, probably in bits and pieces here and there; we made the decision we did not want to start his/her life with lying. But unless I meet someone, fall in love, get married, and they adopt Alistair, for now he is fatherless. Sad but true. He will, however, have some very loving and involved uncles, tons of extended family members, and lots and lots of positive role models (both male and female). There are still people out there who think choosing single motherhood is selfish, and even cruel. Do they understand that I may be choosing single motherhood, but that I would never have chosen to not have a Daddy? My ideal family always included that person, and his absence does not mean that I have purposefully chosen this life. But a Daddy can be a lot of different things, and maybe sometimes, a lot of different people.

The Back Story

I began seriously considering 'alternative' options for motherhood just before hitting my 30's. Through college I was a serial monogamist, but then hit a dry spell when I entered the work force. I had a few casual affairs, but nothing serious. I always knew I wanted to be a mother, and would never even have considered not having at least one child. I had just bought my own little house, was in a stable job, and had heard the expression ‘your eggs are getting old’ for the first time. I sat down and wrote out a budget, then in the autumn of 2001 I went and bought my first copy of ‘Parenting’ magazine. I was scared, excited, nervous, and oddly confident. The only thing holding me back was the Father Factor.

I have always been open to the idea of adopting, and am always impressed by parents who open up their homes and hearts to foster children. However, I wanted to experience the full gamut of motherhood; I wanted to know what it was to create life, to carry that life inside you and feel it grow, to go through the pain of labor and at last hold your flesh and blood warm in your arms as the ultimate reward. I have never had a selfish need to recreate myself, or carry on my line, or mold an idealized copy of myself; it is deeper than that. On the same note, my reasons for wanting a child were very, very simple; the instinctual need to feed, clothe, and love a small person. I have encountered other single women who had less altruistic reasons. Some are lonely, and feel a child will fill a void left by a relative or significant other. Some crave love and attention, and expect a child to provide that to them. Some want a friend and companion, some want a pet, some feel a need to prove something, some want a trophy. A handful, like me, find themselves getting really defensive when asked this question, because we know we shouldn’t have to explain ourselves. No one questions a married woman’s motivation. But I wanted a child, I wanted my own, and I didn’t have a Daddy.

I have always been nervous about the idea of an unknown donor. I have heard nightmare stories of the expense, and the hassles of timing. A small part of me admits that I would prefer a good-looking Daddy Donor, and a bigger part isn’t shy about wanting some intelligence to go along with it. There were a couple issues for me that I couldn’t get over. I was already going to be denying a child a father, guilt that I would always and forever have to live with, every day. But for a child to never know who their father is? If I could avoid that, I would. In addition, although I have never had any medical issues nor know anyone who has, I was suddenly very concerned with having access to the Daddy Donor’s full medical past. What if Baby X had some strange exotic illness, and if I had only known that Daddy Donor’s Aunt Margaret had the same thing, and we could have treated more efficiently and effectively with that knowledge? Yes, a stretch, I admit, but I like to worry about stupid stuff.

So I needed someone I knew, but then there were ALL sorts of complications that went along with that. I had a friend from high school, a recently out gay man who would have happily agreed to be Donor Daddy, and who I had in fact discussed the possibility with many times. The catch was, he also loved children and had always wanted a family, and very much wanted to play an active role in parenting. This would have been extremely difficult since we live in two different countries, plus the legalities of it were daunting. In a very precious and unexpectedly tender moment, my father asked me to consider utilizing someone else, since he worried I would someday be in a custody battle and he would not want to lose his grandbaby.

I thought about my options for a few months, and then something else unexpected happened – I met someone. In July of 2002 I was at a friend’s wedding and was introduced to the man I later thought I would one day marry. We dated for just over a year, and talked a lot about the family we would have. When we broke up in September of 2003 it was devastating. I was single again, and my eggs were even older. I mourned for way too long, did some casual dating again, and started hanging out with some new friends. By the summer of 2005 I was practically living with my new friends, a couple I had met through work. We got along terrifically, had a million things in common, and the fact that they were two gay men might have raised a few eyebrows but didn’t bother us one bit. Friend 1, then a coworker and still a coworker today, is a big-hearted loud-mouth who knows it all and does it all. Friend 2, his partner, is an easy-going homebody and the best girlfriend a girl could have (except he doesn’t like getting pedicures). We settled into a comfortable routine, and the Baby X conversation eventually came up.

Last spring, 2006, we all had a very serious talk. We were more than friends by that point, we were family. The Boys, as my friends and family took to calling them, made the ultimate sacrifice and committed to helping me raise Baby X, immediately nicknamed ‘Alistair’. We started talking to a real estate agent about selling our individual homes to relocate to a new quad-friendly location, and wrote up a one-year plan to begin. Six months later we had scrapped the one-year plan, since things moved a little quicker than expected with the housing market, and by January of 2007 the three of us were in a new house and ready to try for a fourth.