Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

She doesn’t know she’s not their biological child

- By Carolyn Hax Email Carolyn Hax at tellme@washpost.com.

Dear Carolyn: Both my brother and his wife were unable to have children, so they conceived in vitro using a donated sperm and egg, although my sister-in-law carried my niece and gave birth to her. She is now a young teenager.

My niece has no idea she is not biological­ly related to any of us. They had originally planned to tell her when she was 8, but through the years my brother and sister-inlaw have had serious problems, from alcohol abuse to medical issues, so the issue was left alone.

There are many people who know, including friends, family, co-workers, etc. My best estimate is 50. I know it’s not my place to tell her, but I am afraid she will find out and become distraught or develop horrible feelings of betrayal. She already has fought serious emotional issues due to her parents’ actions, and I’m not sure how well she will handle it, even coming from her parents.

My brother has been sober for a year, but they can’t come up with a plan to tell her, and the longer they wait the more hesitant they become. I’m not sure what I can do, but it makes me anxious. Even my children are

asking when their cousin will be told. Any advice?

— Nervous Aunt

Dear Nervous Aunt: Alienation, secrets, adolescenc­e, alcohol — it could be the setup for a “What could possibly go wrong?” joke if it weren’t so achingly real. But here’s the thing: Everything wrong with this scenario has already happened. Your niece is old enough and has been for a while to know a secret about herself that everyone knows but her. Everyone. So it’s already too late.

The main risk in your not intervenin­g is that she will find out ... too late-er? It will be worse if she finds out from someone other than her parents, yes. But this is common knowledge. Frustratin­g, but boundaries often are.

And while the magnitude of her potential sense of betrayal likely also grows with each passing year she goes untold — and the more years she has to look back upon as fraudulent when she finally finds out — that’s also informatio­n already at your brother’s and his wife’s disposal.

So please try to do the one thing that likely seems hardest right now: Let go. Lean hard on the reality that it’s not your household, not your secret, not your child. Counsel your children accordingl­y: “I know it’s heavy to know this. But it’s their family’s business. Our only job is to love her and stay out of it.”

Except for this: Any and every time your brother brings it up to you, urge them to consult with a therapist and get this done. A session or three. They can get names from their (or any local) fertility clinic. It’s all the “plan” they need.

If your niece is angry at all of you upon finding out, own it: “I love you and I’m sorry I let you down.” I, not we — times 50, I hope.

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