The
Unwanted Twin but Which One
is it?
Andrew Bolt, Herald Sun
Columnist
September, 2007
I
THOUGHT we at least checked
if people would make good
parents before we helped to
create their baby, Andrew
Bolt writes
Seems
not. Because see what selfish
souls we now make parents.
But
the easy bit is to damn the
two unnamed lesbians, who
are suing a Canberra obstetrician
for giving them two IVF babies
instead of one.
Easy
enough, when you consider
the effect this will probably
have on their twin daughters,
now aged three, and bound
to learn later of what their
mothers have been up to.
What
those girls will almost certainly
learn is that one of them
-- but which? -- was desperately
unwanted. So their own mothers
have said. Out loud. In a
court. On oath. In the papers.
So
cross are their parents at
having two children that they
are demanding $400,000 from
their obstetrician for having
two embryos implanted during
an IVF procedure instead of
the one the birth mother verbally
asked for just before she
was sedated.
How
will these girls feel to know
that far from being adored
from the start, cosseted by
the unconditional love all
children deserve, one at least
was so unwanted that her mothers
contemplated aborting her.
As
the weeping birth mother told
the court: "I remember
sitting on the couch and feeling
devastated, absolutely devastated.
"The
experience of my pregnancy
was so far removed from what
I had anticipated that I was
in relationship counselling,
in a great deal of pain, and
someone was suggesting that
(adoption) was an option."
Her
partner added that having
twins destroyed the parents'
relationship.
"She
(the birth mother) always
said that she had a big heart
filled with love.
"I
find (now) that she doesn't
have the same ability to love
that she used to and the same
capacity to, I guess, embrace
difference and issues as a
couple or as a team."
So
resentful have they been of
their extra daughter (again: which one?) that
even the bill for a routine
bit of baby equipment seemed
an insult to this couple,
despite their $120,000 a year
income. Said one: "It
was like the last frontier
of acceptance to spend hundreds
of dollars on a pram."
The
risk of the daughters learning
all this -- taking on this
guilt for just being born
-- is bad enough, even though
I'm sure their mothers tell
them they are loved, and mean
it.
But
the mere process of suing
the obstetrician may affect
the girls today.
People
who sue for damages have an
incentive to tally up their
grievances and to keep them
burning hotly until the judge
decides in their favour --
or not. The more hurt they
demonstrate, the more their
payout is likely to be.
How
do I resent thee? Let me count
the ways.
Rarely
have I heard of anyone suing
for damages and then, come
their day in court, saying
they've managed to get over
all their pain, after all.
So,
how much time have these mothers
spent discussing what a curse
it's been to have their twins?
How must this have affected
their behaviour, however unconsciously,
to girls who thrive on unstinting
love?
All
this is obvious enough, and
explains the widespread anger
at the mothers for cursing
their fate -- and doctor --
in having what most parents
regard as the awesome gift
of a child.
But
what also surprises me is
these mothers seemed unprepared
for -- and shocked by -- some
of parenthood's most basic
sacrifices.
It's
not just that their bond seems
to have been so weak. One
of the mothers also complained
that their relationship had
become mired in the everyday
tasks of raising children.
Hey!
Join the club, sister. But
love, you'll find, gets you
through.
And,
they added, having twins forced
them to change their plans,
especially the one of going
to England.
But
having children is like that.
Bang have gone my own daydreams
of dawdling on to another
country. My children need
the security of home.
Yes,
having twins can be harder
than having one child, but
I know several couples, personally,
who have also found it an
unexpected joy, and not the
devastation of their lives.
Planning on one child, they
found their hearts quite big
enough for two.
In
fact, you must wonder at the
mother who says one child
would have been heaven but
two is hell. Was she truly
ready for even the one?
And
here's where we should put
the tougher question: Who
decided these women should
have a child, anyway?
Having
a child was not a decision
for them alone, after all.
A sperm donor had to be found,
as well an obstetrician to
implant an egg fertilised
with the help of yet other
specialists. And the implantation
had to happen only after the
couple was judged suitable.
But
we don't actually check couples
wanting IVF with the rigour
that we do couples wanting
to adopt, although in both
cases we are handing over
a child.
In
the case of IVF, our attention
has slowly been steered away
from a careful consideration
of the best interests of the
children, and to the gratification
of the mother.
In
particular, IVF has become
a beacon issue for gay rights,
with the children too often
seeming to be a political
statement, rather than the
ultimate gift of love -- and
ultimate responsibility, too.
Lesbian
couples and single women in
Victoria can now can get IVF
treatment, although only if
the mother is medically infertile
-- a restriction that doesn't
apply in the ACT. But the
Victorian Law Reform Commission
has recommended that this
infertility requirement be
scrapped, which the Brumby
Government may do this year.
But
have we forgotten the children?
I
have been close to several
loving lesbian and gay couples.
But I'm not too blind to see
-- or too scared to say --
that some lesbian couples
I've met seem united more
by their politics of separatism
than their sexuality.
In
this case, I note the mothers
chose as their sperm donor
a Danish man, far away and
presumably without regular
contact with his children.
Is
this in the best interests
of his children? Should we
be deliberately creating babies
who can never really know
their father, or have his
love?
This,
too, makes me wonder how these
women came to be parents,
with the help of so many professionals.
Be
clear: I'm not accusing these
women of not loving their
children. I'm sure they do.
I'm also not saying they don't
deserve compensation for any
mistake their obstetrician
may have made. That is for
the judge to decide.
I'm
not even saying no lesbian
couples should have children.
All
I'm asking is whether this
case is healthy for this couple's
girls. And bugger the parents:
it's the children who must
come first.
They
are helpless and need our
love. So dry your selfish
tears and smile. Tell them
you adore them. Tell yourself,
and tell the world, too.
Join
Bolt's blog at www.blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/andrewbolt
bolta@heraldsun.com.au
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