First Person / Our modern family

July 13, 2013 – By Ellen V. Garbuny – Pittsburgh Post Gazette

Today at the gym, I was walking the track with a friend, sharing family  updates. I told her my son, in graduate school, is leaving soon for a summer  internship in West Africa. It is his first time traveling so far overseas, and  his trip is exciting and a little nerve-racking.

Instead of asking about the specifics of his internship, she asked, “But will  he see his son before he leaves?”

A simple question to me, a grandmother of a delightful 19-month-old boy, and  yet, it’s complicated.

Had she asked questions about his graduate program or internship, the answers  would be fairly straightforward. The question of “his son” is not, as he does  not consider our grandchild to be his son.

You see, my son is a sperm donor for a child who is being raised by two  loving mothers, one of whom has been a close family friend for more than a  decade. Deciding to be a donor, to give the gift of genetic material with which  to make a new life, is not a decision to make easily or lightly. Becoming a  donor meant pioneering a new understanding of family — for my son, the women  and everyone related to the three of them.

 

I Get to Define My Own Family

HuffingtonPost.com June 3, 2013 – By Amelia

When my oldest son was in kindergarten, he learned that not all families are like his. My husband and I have lived with our best friend, Katie, for the past 13 years. To our three boys, she is their Kiki: part third parent, part favorite aunt and by far their preferred reader of bedtime stories. One day, when I picked my son up from kindergarten, he looked positively glum.

“What’s wrong, baby?” I asked.

“Mom,” he said in his solemnest voice, “not everyone has a Kiki.”

I swallowed my laughter as only a parent can. “No, honey, not everyone has a Kiki. You’re a very lucky boy.”

“But Mom, it’s so sad!”

My son can’t imagine his life without his Kiki. To him, that was how a family is supposed to be set up: a mom, a dad and a Kiki. It’s not exactly the most conventional setup, but it was all he knew.

But my son’s questions didn’t stop there. He wanted to know exactly how everyone in our lives is connected to each other. It was important to him, and we gave him all the answers he wanted. The myriad of people he calls “aunt” and “uncle” are not actually his mom’s and dad’s brothers and sisters, but his Uncle Harold is in fact Mom’s brother.

He would often go through the family, declaring all the connections. One day, on another drive home from school, he was going through his grandparents.

“Grandma and Grandpa are Daddy’s mommy and daddy,” he said. “Papa is your daddy, and Sophie is Papa’s girlfriend.”

We had gone through all of this before, once leading to an interesting conversation about why Papa doesn’t have a wife or a husband. But this time, things went into a different direction.

“And you don’t have a mommy,” he told me.

I was shocked and glad that we were at a red light. My mother has been absent for most of my adulthood. The reasons for this are complicated and not worth going into, but if my mother were to walk into the room, none of my sons would have any idea who she is. And although I am used to this fact and accept it, actually hearing the words “you don’t have a mommy” threw me for a loop. In my son’s eyes, I had no mother. And what stopped me in my tracks was the fact that, for all intents and purposes, he was correct. I had never had a relationship with the woman who bore me that could be described as maternal. This truth had me so thrown that I couldn’t think of a response. My son didn’t need one and went on.

“Why isn’t Sophie your mommy?”

“We’ll, baby,” I started, gathering my thoughts, “I didn’t grow in her belly like you grew in mine.”

“But that doesn’t matter,” he insisted. We have friends who have adopted their children, so he knew that pregnancy isn’t compulsory for motherhood.

“Um, Sophie wasn’t there when I was growing up the way your mommy and daddy are for you,” I explained. This seemed to satisfy him, and he went on to another topic. My brain did not move along so easily.

My father and brother and my husband’s parents and sister don’t live in our city. They aren’t our go-to people for the daily support that keeps a family going. For that, we have a Kiki and those unofficial aunts and uncles, people we have been lucky enough to collect throughout the years, people who are not compelled to be in our lives by an accident of birth but choose to be there. They are our chosen family. Many of those people are LGBT, but they aren’t our chosen family because they are LGBT or in spite of it; they are our chosen family because they are good people, the kind of men and women who set good examples for our kids, the kind of people we want them to grow up to be.

Click here to read the entire article.

Letting Go of a Baby, but Not the Emotions

By KERRI MACDONALD – New York Times – May 10, 2013

In the days after Liam Pursley was born in April, the woman who carried him for nine months barely saw him.

Liam spent most of his time with his mother and father, Jamie and Jacob Pursley. His surrogate mother, Kristen Broome, stayed in a separate hospital room, trying to navigate the swirl of emotions.

“I held him and cried,” Ms. Broome said of the first time she saw Liam, about an hour after he was born. “I cried because I realized he was not mine and I had zero connection. It was an amazing emotion. I did not hold him again until almost 36 hours later; I had zero urge to.”

That made reality easier.

In an essay she plans to publish soon on her blog, Ms. Broome, 24, writes: “I have been asked more times than I can count how I felt when I gave Liam away. My first response is always that I didn’t give Liam away; he was never mine to give.”

Click here to read the entire article.

Making a Child, Minus the Couple

February 8, 2013
New York Times
By ABBY ELLIN

Rachel Hope is 5-foot-9 and likes yoga, dance and martial arts. A real estate developer and freelance writer in Los Angeles, Ms. Hope, 41, is seeking a man who lives near her, is healthy and fit, and “has his financial stuff together,” she said. Parker Williams, the 42-year-old founder of QTheory, a charity auction company also in Los Angeles, would seem like a good candidate. A 6-foot-2 former model who loves animals, Mr. Williams is athletic, easygoing, compassionate and organized.

Neither Ms. Hope nor Mr. Williams is interested in a romantic liaison. But they both want a child, and they’re in serious discussions about having, and raising, one together. Never mind that Mr. Williams is gay and that the two did not know of each other’s existence until last October, when they met on Modamily.com, a Web site for people looking to share parenting arrangements.

Mr. Williams and Ms. Hope are among a new breed of online daters, looking not for love but rather a partner with whom to build a decidedly non-nuclear family. And several social networks, including PollenTree.com, Coparents.com, Co-ParentMatch.com, and MyAlternativeFamily.com, as well as Modamily, have sprung up over the past few years to help them.

“While some people have chosen to be a single parent, many more people look at scheduling and the financial pressures and the lack of an emotional partner and decide that single parenting is too daunting and wouldn’t be good for them or the child,” said Darren Spedale, 38, the founder of Family by Design, a free parenting partnership site officially introduced in early January. “If you can share the support and the ups and downs with someone, it makes it a much more interesting parenting option.”

 
Click here to read the entire article.

One Year Since DADT Repeal; Lesbian and Gay Parent Servicemembers Tell Their Stories

Mombian.com – September 20, 2012

Today marks one year since the repeal of the U.S. military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (DADT) policy forbidding lesbians and gay men from serving openly.  That was, without a doubt, one of the biggest steps towards LGBT equality in our history—but LGBT servicemembers still do not have equal rights. LGBT parents in the military are among those continuing to tell their stories and inspire change.

One of the problems is the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which means that even when same-sex couples are legally wed, the military will not provide the spouse with the benefits and support it gives to opposite-sex spouses, as I’ve written before. The other problem is that the military still does not permit transgender people to serve.

Here are some of the stories of LGBT parents in the military. I am inspired by their strength and infuriated by the injustice they face. Among all the inequalities—from a lack of spousal health insurance to the inability of a same-sex spouse to shop on base—what hits me hardest is the months of separation some of these families face when the servicemember is stationed overseas. If same-sex spouses were recognized, the military would pay for the spouses and child(ren) to join them. As it is, they must endure months apart with only brief visits over several years. I miss my son when I am away for a few days on a business trip; I can’t imagine what these families must feel.

Read their stories, and reflect on how far we have come—but how far we have yet to go.

Click here to read the entire article.

WHAT’S AT STAKE? My Dreams, My Love and My Family

Ricky Cortez – September 12, 2012

My family means everything to me.  Like many that have had a difficult journey creating their family, it means more than I could have possibly imagined.  I am so blessed my dreams have been answered and I have the honor of being a parent to the most amazing child I have ever come in contact with.  I look forward to the opportunity to expand my family further in the future, but I may encounter more difficulty than previously imagined.  Please take a moment to read on as this is an important decision for me and my family;  a decision that could change my life and the lives of over two million children in families like mine.

 

This country is going through a very difficult time and no one person or one administration will be able to solve every problem in the next four years.  And while you can debate the current administration’s record and decide on its successes and its failures, there is no denying that it has extended rights and protections to my family that we did not have four years ago. My family is finally getting basic rights and protections that all American families have. Many of these rights were not included in the original constitution, but like the abolition of slavery, women’s suffrage and freedom of speech they have been added to be in alignment with contemporary notions of equality and civil rights for all Americans.  This fair and equal treatment is what gives America the title, “The Land of the Free.”

 

What’s at stake for me in this election is my family.  I can’t imagine not having the love of my life and my child by my side as I look to expand my family.   Romney / Ryan intends to challenge my family’s rights and protections and take those protections away from me, not just on an individual state level, but on a national level.  The GOP has a history of voting YES to banning gay adoption.  If this happens on a federal level it could remove the freedom I have to adopt. Depending on the state the child was born in could effect if I get to take the child home or could possibly disqualify me from adopting my child after he has been in my home for 6-12 months.  To all the parents, I ask, “Could you imagine your child being taking from your home?”  Government should not have the right to take that basic freedom away, merely due to the sex of the person I love and share my life with.

 

Currently, I can not be discriminated against because of sexual orientation when looking for a job. My health insurer can not turn me or my family away because of my sexual orientation.  My partner can visit me in most hospitals in America and can make medical decisions for my family and me.  Imagine your loved one being in an accident or near death and not being allowed to see them in the hospital, just because your family is traveling though a state that does not recognize your relationship. Imagine being assaulted while walking down the street just because you were holding hands with your loved one.  Finally, protections are in place to protect my well being and my family. That could all be erased. I can’t imagine the government taking away my ability to adopt, get a job, provide health care or make medical decisions for my family.  These are basic rights that should be protected by our government not eliminated.

 

Romney / Ryan have voted YES on a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage.  They have voted YES on banning gay adoptions.  They have voted NO on enforcing against anti-gay hate crimes. Romney opposes laws like ENDA, which would make it a federal crime to discriminate in employment based on sexual orientation. Romney / Ryan have a history of voting to make my family invalid, unattainable and unprotected.

 

 

A vote for Romney / Ryan could take away basic human rights, rights afforded to all tax paying citizens in this country.  A vote for Romney / Ryan could take away my future child.  A vote for Romney / Ryan could take away my rights with the love of my life.  A vote for Romney / Ryan is a vote against my family.   I understand there are so many other factors, but I searched long and hard and could not find a reason to have a person in my life that would make that vote.

 

When you go to vote on Tuesday, November 6, 2012, please remember your vote could take away my family’s basic rights. Would you want those rights taken away from you? Please re-read this and put yourself in my shoes. If you have children in your life, imagine your life without them. Imagine your life without your family. For those who still actively decide to vote for Romney / Ryan, I will continue to pray for your well being, but know that you are voting to potentially destroy mine. What’s at stake? My dreams, my love and my family.

 

 

I wish there were more choices on both sides.

I wish there were better records on both sides.

I wish that a vote on either side would not affect my family so greatly, but it will.

 

I am not asking you to vote for anyone.

I am asking that you DO NOT vote for an administration that would take away the rights that protect my family.

I am asking you to take the opportunity to do something for civil rights by NOT voting for Romney / Ryan.

 

Please don’t vote to take my dreams, my love or my family away from me and the two million children raised in families like mine.

 

*** Please share my story, make it yours and/or use it as a template to tell your story. ***

 

 

Sincerely,

Ricky

 

www.AFutureTogether.com

Gay dads, 12 kids are officially a family

by Karina Bland – Aug. 11, 2012 – The Republic

Steven and Roger Ham, gay men raising 12 children adopted from foster care,  were recently named to Esquire magazine’s list of the 10 best dads of  2012. But the two had no idea until it was pointed out to them.

They’re a little busy.

Steven spent six years at home taking care of the growing family. In January,  he went back to work full time now  that Olivia, the youngest, is 3 and eager to go to preschool like her  siblings.

Roger, who works as a school-bus driver and had the summer off, took 11 of  the kids on a three-week, 4,248-mile road trip that involved four DVD players,  three iPads, a 11/2-pound dog named Zeus and a tiny  orange kitten that Elizabeth, 13, found recently.

Vanessa, 17, the oldest, bailed out of the 15-passenger van at their first stop in  Las Vegas. She opted for a sibling-free visit with Steven’s brother and his wife  while the rest of the clan headed up the West Coast, camping near beaches along  the way to Washington state to visit family, and then back to San Diego.

The family appeared in a story last year in The Arizona Republic  chronicling the dads’ efforts to adopt in Arizona.

Roger and Steven, partners for almost 19 years, have pieced together their  large family here in Arizona, where two men can’t marry and where conservative  lawmakers have tried a half-dozen times to keep single people, including gays  and lesbians, from adopting foster children. Last year, lawmakers passed a bill  that moved married couples to the top of the waiting list for adoptions.

After the story, the pair got calls from journalists around the globe and  accolades from human-rights groups.

The publicity even garnered Steven, 44, and Roger, 48, two spots among 10  fathers “who showed us how it’s done” in an issue of Esquire dedicated to  fatherhood.

Amid all this, they also got a phone call from Washington state that would  bring their family even a little bit closer.

Click here to read the complete article.

How and Why I Am Outspoken

By Ella Robinson – From The Family Equality Council Website – June 19, 2012

I have had a very public and unusual opportunity to speak up in support of my gay Dads: we all went on the Today show together. It was after Dad was elected the 9thEpiscopal Bishop of New Hampshire and I accompanied him, and his then partner (now husband) Mark to chat with Matt Lauer. I was there to dispel the misconceptions that he “abandoned his wife and kids to shack up with a gay lover” as certain newspaper headlines had proclaimed throughout his Bishop Election process. Truth was, my sister and I couldn’t have gotten rid of him if we tried! He has been such a devoted and committed father to us from the day we were born, through the divorce, childhood into adolescents and now as adults. By becoming the first openly gay Bishop, our little family was thrown into the spotlight in a major way, and I couldn’t have been more proud.

That is the ‘Bishop’ side of the story though. I like sharing the Dad side – the side of the story that focuses on the overwhelming love I felt growing up with Dad and Mark, way before any Bishop talk occurred. Their relationship, which started when I was 7 years old, was such an important example of what a loving, committed relationship should look like that I never thought to question it. I never knew to be embarrassed if someone looked at our family differently, or to worry if my friend coming to my Dad’s with me for the weekend would be uncomfortable. I just knew we’d have fun, watch The Golden Girls and play some board games (competitively). I credit Dad and Mark for giving me the tools to know how to talk about having gay parents when I was out in the world, and doing their part to make it easier for me whenever they could. I look back now in awe that at a very young age, I had such confidence in the love and strength of my family to not let anyone tell me differently.

To read the entire article, click here.

Breathe Papa, Breathe

by Anthony M. Brown –

My two year old is a shaman. Nicholas is the light of my husband’s and my life since he graced us with his presence in 2009. He recently had his first semi-serious fall. I say semi-serious because I don’t have a frame of reference for this, thankfully. He took a tumble and cut his forehead. It was clear that he was going to need stitches and, as he bled on my husband’s shoulder and we ran to get a cab to visit the Urgent Care in our neighborhood, I was beside myself. Until this moment, I didn’t understand just how emotional your child hurting themselves is for the parent.

I was still upset when we arrived at our destination and Nicholas saw my fear. He looked right into my eyes and, with a sweeping hand gesture, said, “Breathe Papa, breathe, breathe.”

I had no choice but to laugh, cry and hug him all at the same time. But I calmed down. And this proud papa can thank his little guru of a toddler for that.

For Obama, It’s About the Children

May 12, 2012, 4:43 pm

New York Times

By KENJI YOSHINO

In a historic interview last week, President Obama announced his support for same-sex marriage. As he discussed his journey toward that position, the president sounded many familiar themes, like the importance of distinguishing between civil and religious marriage and of living up to American ideals of fairness. At the core of his narrative, however, was a relatively novel element — an affirmation of gay couples as parents.

The president repeatedly attributed his “evolution” to his contact not only with gay couples but also with their children. He described thinking about staff members “who are incredibly committed, in monogamous relationships, same-sex relationships, who are raising kids together.” He discussed meeting same-sex couples and seeing “how caring they are, how much love they have in their hearts — how they’re taking care of their kids.”

Later in the interview, he wondered whether opponents of same-sex marriage had “had the experience that I have had in seeing same-sex couples who are as committed, as monogamous, as responsible — as loving a group of parents as any heterosexual couple that I know. And in some cases, more so.” Indeed, except for his marquee declaration that “same-sex couples should be able to get married,” the president never spoke of “gay and lesbian couples” or “same-sex couples” without alluding to the children of those couples.

The president’s invocation of children as a reason to support same-sex marriage is striking. His position may be controversial among some gay individuals, who, like some straight individuals, do not want their right to marry to be linked in any way to procreation. Yet a strong justification for the president’s stance can be found in the argument it implicitly seeks to rebut. Traditionally, the well-being of children has appeared squarely on the other side of the ledger, functioning as the prime secular argument against same-sex marriage.

Click here to read the entire article.