Communicating and Providing for Children Today


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Jul
02
By: kathy2 | Discussion (0)

Image courtesy of The InsiderTMZ.com

started reporting this morning that the late Michael Jackson is not the “real” father of “his” children.    I put those words in quotations, because they seem like contradictory words to have in a single headline–how can they be his if he is not their father?

Jackson is listed as the father on all three of his children’s birth certificates.  But if it is true, as TMZ and other media outlets are reporting, that Jackson’s children were conceived with both donated sperm and donated eggs, and then carried to birth (in the case of the older 2) by Jackson’s ex-wife Debbie Rowe… then so what?

Here’s what I don’t understand.  Jackson is the legal father of all three children.  Rowe is the legal mother of two of the children.  What difference does it make whose sperm and eggs were used?  We’re talking about donors here, not birthmothers or biological parents.

I have friends who are a lesbian couple, and who have a toddler son.  The boy was concieved by artificial insemination with sperm from a donor.  They are still his mothers.  The donor can’t just show up one day and decide that he’s their father.  He has signed away any legal rights to be part of this baby’s life. 

My sister has asked me to be a surrogate for a baby she wants to conceive with her egg and her husband’s sperm (she can make babies, she just can’t carry them).  If I do that, the child will be hers, even if I carry it to term.  Why wouldn’t the reverse be true? 

As an adoptive mother, I know better than most how many different ways there are in which to create a family.  Michael Jackson wanted those children, he claimed them, his name is on the birth certificate, and they are his legal heirs. 

Michael Jackson was a strange and troubled man in many ways, but I don’t think there’s any doubt that he loved his children…as only a father could.



Apr
14
By: kathy2 | Discussion (0)

This idea works for everyone, because it really doesn’t have anything to do with Easter.  And even if you don’t celebrate Easter, or you’ll celebrate it this coming Sunday instead of yesterday, the ingredients for this activity are cheap and will soon be cheaper, as egg-coloring kits go on clearance all over. 

Kids love to color and decorate eggs.  They make intricate designs with that white wax crayon, then wait patiently while holding an egg half in one color, only to turn it and hold it patiently half in another color.  And if your house is anything like ours, your kids like to color hard-boiled eggs much more than they like to eat them. 

But seeing how cheap eggs, vinegar, and dyeing kits are, why not stock upon these supplies and color some eggs at other times of the year, too?  For example, if you only use the red and blue tablets, you can have red, white and blue eggs for Independence Day.  Then if, kids don’t eat them, you can make egg salad or deviled eggs from them for that family picnic. 

How about orange and green colored eggs for Halloween?  Brown and yellow for Thanksgiving?  Red and green for Christmas?  Purple and pink for Valentine’s?  Purple and green for Mardi Gras?  Even if they don’t eat them all, you still haven’t spent very much money, and they get potentially hours of enjoyment decorating them. 

So, the next time you’re at the store, pick up a few of those egg coloring kits on clearance.  Pull them out in the middle of summer for some special occasion, or for now reason at all.  It will give your kids a creative, inexpensive activity, and bring a little more color into everyone’s life.



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