If you aren’t telling your donor conceived child they are donor conceived,
please consider not telling strangers on the internet either. If you post – even in a private Facebook group
-- are you posting under your own name? If
so, everyone in there knows who you are.
Anyone can look up who your children are and where you live and where you
work and where your kids go to school. A
woman just posted in a private 5000 person (!) Facebook group a photo of her donor conceived son side
by side with his half-sibling and stated that he is currently unaware the other
boy is his brother. He doesn't even know that he is donor conceived. She plans to
tell him but doesn’t know when. I'm not sure what backstory she gave him for who his brother was and why they traveled 3000 miles to meet him.
A quick Google search later and I know her son’s full name, date of
birth, home address, where he goes to school, and what grade he is in. He's a minor with no social media accounts.
Now, I’m not going to do anything with this information. The only thing I would gain by contacting
family members (whose contact information is all too easy to find) would
be the ability to brag about how good I am at looking things up on the internet,
which is clearly what I'm already doing here. But PLEASE reconsider posting online about secrets you wish to keep. I'm not the only person on the internet.
Let’s say you’ve learned your lesson and have started posting under a pseudonym. Did you keep the same Facebook account and
just change how the name appears? Are
you posting under an alias or username you have used on other sites? Is your account linked to an email address
that is in your name? Or to an email
address that you’ve used on another account that is linked to your name? If the answer to any of these questions is yes, then
everything you post is being linked back to your name. And not in a fancy only-NSA-and-Zuckerberg-will-know-who-I-am way but in a randos-can-look-me-up-on-pipl way. The woman I mentioned above uses the same username
for Facebook, Pinterest, TripAdvisor and travel forums, her defunct blog and Twitter
accounts, and – drum roll please -- multiple donor/sibling websites.
If her son ever does a Google search on his mother, the fact that he is donor conceived will be one of the first things he learns. He is already nearly 13.
I’m really not sure what my goal is in writing this post. I don’t actually want parents to get better at keeping
secrets from their children. I want them
to realize that they CAN’T keep secrets from their children. They suck at it. Even if they don’t post about it online, they probably
confided in someone. Even in they didn’t, they might announce it themselves in a fit of something. Or it’ll come out with a DNA test. Please tell
your kids who their biological parents are.
They’ll find out regardless, and it’s in their best interest for it to come from someone who has their best interests at heart. And it's in your best interest for
them to continue thinking they can trust you.
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