The Morning Call

Donor-conceived children should be told

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2022 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: I have read advice in your column suggesting that it is wisest to tell children about their adoption starting very young. My 6-year-old twin grandchild­ren have never been told that their momma’s eggs came from an egg donor.

The parents are now divorced but are very friendly.

Should they tell the kids? Their momma carried them and gave birth to them.

— Wondering

Dear Wondering: As with children who join their families through adoption, parents should also tell children who were conceived through donation their true birth story — ideally starting when the children are pre-verbal.

This gives parents lots of practice in telling the story and normalizes it for everyone.

What parents should not do is treat this as a mystery or a family secret. Families are made in many different ways, and children are capable of understand­ing this because they see it in their own world.

Kids notice that not all families are the same. For instance, your grandkids’ folks are divorced — but the parents and kids are still in a family together.

Not knowing the truth and then finding out later can prove genuinely traumatic for people — who upon learning that their birth is the result of sperm or egg donation can struggle understand­ing their identity and wonder why nobody ever told them.

Because these parents are divorced, they should both talk to the twins about the very happy way they came into the world. They should answer all questions as they arise. Even though some donorconce­ived people eventually meet their biological relations, they know their parents are the people who raised them.

There are a number of charming children’s books describing this process.

One I like is, “The

Pea that was Me: An Egg-Donation Story,” by Kimberly KlugerBell (2012, CreateSpac­e Independen­t).

Dear Amy: My wife and I have two young children. One is in preschool, and the other is in first grade. My wife and I both work.

I recently found a basketball league of other dads that I’d like to join. The games are one evening a week.

I haven’t approached my wife about doing this, but I’m nervous about it. She works really hard, and I don’t want her to feel like I’m abandoning her.

What do you think?

— Nervous Dad

Dear Dad: Parenting younger children is often about divide and conquer.

You and your wife should both find something besides work that engages and connects you with other adults.

You should approach her with the idea that if she can hold down the fort one weeknight, you will take another night.

If your wife is overwhelme­d by this idea, you might be able to find a pickup game on a Saturday or Sunday, and either take the kids with you, or engage someone to play with the kids while you are playing with the dads.

Dear Amy: Your recent response to a letter from “Feeling Guilty,” which concerned salary discussion­s and disclosure of compensati­on in the workplace, was woefully incomplete.

Companies may have a policy against salary discussion­s or at least a culture of nondisclos­ure.

Just because salary discussion­s are protected by law does not mean that such conversati­ons are appropriat­e. There are legitimate reasons why salary increases are provided for some but not others.

If the letter writer shares this personal informatio­n in an effort to help the co-worker, it may backfire.

— Disappoint­ed

Dear Disappoint­ed: In my (admittedly limited) experience, most companies have a “culture of nondisclos­ure.” That’s because it is in the company’s interest for co-workers to keep their compensati­on a secret.

“Feeling Guilty” reported that her colleague confided that she (the colleague) hadn’t received a raise during her entire career with the company.

Feeling Guilty, who had received several raises, could encourage her colleague to look for another job by stating that others have received raises, without disclosing specifics.

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