parents

When surrogacy goes wrong.

 

They might be gay. They might be single. They might have fertility problems. This subject, in all its incarnations, comes up often on Mamamia. We’ve heard from infertile women looking for eggs. We’ve heard from women who have donated their eggs. We’ve heard from a gay couple who have three beautiful children who were born via donor eggs and surrogates.

There was the controversy over Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban’s reference to the woman who carried their baby daughter as a ‘gestational carrier’. And in NSW, commercial surrogacy is now illegal. If you find someone who WANTS to carry your child or donate their eggs to you, that’s OK (after extensive counselling) but they cannot be paid.

This week, a story has come out about Queensland’s first surrogate mother who donated her eggs and carried a baby for two gay friends. She now regrets her decision. Not because they’re gay but because she feels like she’s given up her child. Tellingly, they never had counselling because at the time they were trying to conceive, surrogacy in Queensland was illegal. Now it’s not.

The Herald Sun reports:

AS Queensland’s first child born under the state’s surrogacy laws, Connor Harris’s arrival was a moment of unbridled happiness for proud parents Bentley and Matt Harris.

Bentley (left) and Matt Harris with their son Connor (via news.com.au)

For his biological mother “Rosie” (not her real name), there has been nothing but heartache and regret since that historic day last May 11 when she gave him up. “As soon as the baby was born it all changed,” the married friend of the couple said. “I was crying in hospital when he was having his first bath, I couldn’t watch, I thought what the hell have I done? I never thought having a child and giving him away would make me feel like this. I regret everything, I don’t regret Connor, I regret the decision very much, I just wish I’d never done it.”

Matt said things changed after Connor was born, with Rosie wanting to be called b-ma (biological mother) instead of auntie Rosie as agreed before the birth. “We went into this just wanting to be parents and not having a third parent,” he said.

The Harris’s dream of having a family became officially true when they were granted legal parentage of Connor last October.

The gay couple are both listed as Connor’s parents on his birth certificate after Rosie agreed to legally transfer parentage in court. Bentley said he and Matt would explain to Connor who his biological mother was when he was old enough.

The recent legalisation of surrogacy in Queensland and the publicity surrounding Conor’s birth and his mother’s regrets has predictably  provoked an independent group called Kid’s Rights Count (a branch of the Australian Christian Lobby) to release the following press release:

Same sex surrogacy ‘harms both mother and baby. The Bligh government is guilty of creating a new stolen

generation’

The first birthday of  Queensland’s first surrogate baby, Connor Harris, was no cause for celebration, Dr David van Gend, spokesman for the Family Council of Queensland said today.

 

“The Bligh government is guilty of creating a new stolen generation –removing babies from their birth-mother on the grounds of meeting the emotional needs of homosexual men.

“Certainly Bentley Harris and his male partner are having their emotional needs met, but baby Connor is not.  Bentley tells us, ‘I come home from work and I look forward to seeing Connor every single day’. But too bad about a baby’s birthright and deep emotional need to see his mother, and know her touch and her love.

“And too bad about the deep emotional mess caused to a birth mother who has to relinquish the baby she has carried in her womb, labored to give birth, held on her breast and loved.

“Same-sex surrogacy messes with nature and harms both the surrogate mother and the baby. It must be banned again.

“The only hope in Queensland is that the opposition has vowed, in writing, to repeal surrogacy for single people and same-sex couples – as a violation of the right of a child to enter life with the possibility of both a Mum and a Dad.

Read more of the press release here 

Ugh. My support for same-sex surrogacy remains. My support for surrogacy remains. And contrary to this farcical and plainly anti-gay agenda-driven press release, legal surrogacy would have PREVENTED the situation that happened above.

Conor’s biological mother did not have counselling. None of the individuals involved in this surrogacy arrangement did. Which is a disaster and has proven to be such. It simply proves to me that legislation cannot stop people from making decisions about their fertility. When abortion was illegal, women still had them. And they died or were horribly injured. If surrogacy is illegal, people will still do it but at a much higher emotional (and physical) risk because there is no independent infrastructure there to support them – with tests, with counselling and with expert advice.

What do you think about surrogacy and state governments becoming involved in decisions about how people can have children?