J
jessykt
Guest
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>Anomie</b></i> jsjohnson: Is a lifetime of recurrent lung infections which eventually lead to an early death really the gift of life that you want to give to someone. Your unborn child doesn't have the ability to decide if they would want this life for themself. So please reconsider having more biological children if you and your spouse are carriers of the cystic fibrosis gene and instead choose to adopt a sick child who doesn't have loving parents to care for them. Help to ease suffering in the world as opposed to creating it.</end quote>
Honestly, I think you feel guilty about your daughter having cf. That's understandable, and it's common for parents who have a child with a genetic illness. But if everyone took Human Development and learned about how many things can go wrong during pregnancy and development, no one would be here!
And yes, your child doesn't ask to be born with cf, but as musclemania put it much more eloquently, we ALL suffer from something. Some may suffer in ways we think are unimaginable and some we wonder why they even think they are suffering.
Believe me, I've have my moments of depression because I live with cf, but there are many, many more people who suffer much worse.
I do hope, though, that you aren't expressing these opinions openly in front of your daughter. You WILL take away her hope and her dreams, her plans. They used to automatically give us all a death sentence; they told my parents I wouldn't live to be a teenager. And guess what? I didn't strive toward any kind of greatness, expecting to die, because they told me that. If she doesn't hear directly how candid you are in your feelings about cf, it will show in your attitude and your actions with her-kids ARE intuitive and smart. If you think she has nothing but a death sentence and you aren't shy about that, that's exactly what it will be.
Honestly, I think you feel guilty about your daughter having cf. That's understandable, and it's common for parents who have a child with a genetic illness. But if everyone took Human Development and learned about how many things can go wrong during pregnancy and development, no one would be here!
And yes, your child doesn't ask to be born with cf, but as musclemania put it much more eloquently, we ALL suffer from something. Some may suffer in ways we think are unimaginable and some we wonder why they even think they are suffering.
Believe me, I've have my moments of depression because I live with cf, but there are many, many more people who suffer much worse.
I do hope, though, that you aren't expressing these opinions openly in front of your daughter. You WILL take away her hope and her dreams, her plans. They used to automatically give us all a death sentence; they told my parents I wouldn't live to be a teenager. And guess what? I didn't strive toward any kind of greatness, expecting to die, because they told me that. If she doesn't hear directly how candid you are in your feelings about cf, it will show in your attitude and your actions with her-kids ARE intuitive and smart. If you think she has nothing but a death sentence and you aren't shy about that, that's exactly what it will be.