https://starinhereye.wordpress.com/2015/12/08/a-lonely-love/What we are saying when we say we want healthy children is that we don't want children who aren't. And why is that ok?
As if human worth is determined by how smart or rub or conventionally successful our children will become.
Re: A counterpoint to "as long as it's healthy."
However, I feel this is an answer always in response to asinine questions such as "don't you want a girl/boy?" Etc. I think this became a generic response so people would stop harassing soon to be parents.
Also, while a parent will love their child unconditionally, I don't think it is wrong to wish that your child is healthy for their long term well being. I will love and care for my child exactly as they are born, but that doesn't mean I don't hope they are born without major diseases that will cause them pain and/or suffering.
To me, this doesn't include disabilities or conditions that don't actually effect health, such as autism, deafness, learning disabilities, etc....
I feel similarly to questions we get (probably because we're a same-sex couple) as to "do you want your child to be gay/trans?"
Do I WANT that for my child? No. I know what a hard life it is, and though it's getting easier, I do NOT want my child to face the discrimination and hateful comments I have faced in my life. Will I LOVE my child if he or she is gay or transgender? Of course, and grateful that I'll have my own experience and friends' experiences to guide him or her through some of the pain and struggle. But I don't wish that for my child...I want my children to have as happy a life as possible, and just as life is easier if you're straight and cisgender, it's also easier if you are not disabled.
Married: 1/2008 ~ DD#1: 3/2012
TTC #2: Started 4/2014 BFP 7/30/15 MC 8/3/15 BFP 9/4/2015 EDD 5/16/2016
I will love my child no matter what obstacles they may face health-wise, but I don't think there is anything wrong with hoping that they'll be, at the very least, happier and healthier than I am.
We need, instead, to change what the definition of "normal" is, and that can't happen if everyone puts their heads down and thanks their lucky stars for fitting in to the pre-established dictates of normalcy.
I know we don't want our kids to suffer, but the best way to accomplish that, I think, is by allowing them to be what they will be and to not hope for them to be different than they are, but to do our best to make the world a place they feel comfortable in.
I totally agree that we need to teach acceptance though.
@emma+karen I can't believe people ask you that!
For us... No diagnosis would change how we feel about our baby or the pregnancy. If we were to find out our baby had special needs we wouldn't terminate the pregnancy.
And I have a girlfriend who has a daughter with special needs and her kid is amazing! Born perfectly HEALTHY... Normal heart, no organ problems, perfect brain function, etc. no needed drastic surgeries to save her life, etc. just a chromosomal abnormalities that caused a larger skull, bent fingers, and delayed learning. Her baby nursed immediately and got to go home like any normal healthy kid from the hospital in a few days. Even special needs children can be "happy and healthy" so I think everyone's "interpretation of the statement might be slightly different based on personal opinion, judgment, and life experiences (biased).
I don't get any extra testing done bc my insurance won't pay for it and bc it wouldn't matter anyways if my child had something going on (unless they could fix it right now but typically it's down syndrome, etc). I'm not going to love my child any different and in my opinion, if my child (for instance) has down syndrome, that's the plan for it's life and it doesn't make it unhealthy. Either way my children are perfect to me. I'd say that even if this one was born with an eyeball in the middle of its forehead.
Been married since 2009.
Unicornuate Uterus (yes I menstruate glitter)
Several MCs
DD born 2013 (our miracle "you can't have babies" baby!)
If those things don't happen then they don't happen. What I can control in this life is very limited, and the baby will grow up to become its own person and make its own choices and steer the course of its own independent life. That's fine. That's as it should be. Whatever comes will be accepted and dealt with appropriately.
But yes, of course I hope for the best. Who honestly wishes otherwise?
A daycare I worked in in college had a baby who lived with his two moms most the time but the donor was actually involved too and was Dad. Dad didn't have a partner but wanted children but didn't want to parent alone. So the three of them had that solution. It had to be explained to each new worker so no one got confused or stuck their foot in their mouth. Dad was actually a good friend of a mutual friend so I ran into him at her wedding last summer. Small world.
Married: 1/2008 ~ DD#1: 3/2012
TTC #2: Started 4/2014 BFP 7/30/15 MC 8/3/15 BFP 9/4/2015 EDD 5/16/2016