Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Having Children As Transgender Parents...


Guest Nicodeme

Recommended Posts

Guest Nicodeme

(Apologies if a similar topic already exists; I looked around and didn't find any.)

My fiance (an androgyne, but as I found out recently, she fully intends to transition) and I (well, it says what I am over on the left) were planning on having children, and we still plan on it. I had assumed I could put up with being a "woman" for a little while longer so we can get married and at least bring one kid into the world before we started transitioning...but as I'm starting to realize, three to five years (I'm 17, and planned on having our first when I'm 20-23) is starting to look like an unbearably long time for me to hold out, and I don't want the risk of infertility holding Ryan back from doing what she needs to do to be happy.

I know that going on testosterone doesn't carry quite as much of a guarantee of making me infertile as estrogen would for Ryan (and I know it would take about 6 months for that to happen for her; but with T I've heard of guys ceasing to menstruate after just the first shot) but the slim chance that it might...terrifies me. I want to transition. Badly. But at the same time I really want to be able to have children with Ryan...and I know that if I lose that I'll be too crushed to benefit from transition anyway. And I know that even if I do stay fertile, testosterone will affect my eggs, and seeing as nobody quite knows whether it has negative effects yet, it's another risk I'm not quite willing to take.

I looked into having my eggs saved for later, but seeing as egg harvesting carries with it the risk of infertility (counterintuitive much?) as a result of possibly damaging my ovaries, and the fact that I'd have to essentially make myself go through a bout of fake menopause (my mom's going through menopause right now; I'm pretty darn sure I don't want to do that for another 30 years.) and take a plethora of...*sigh*...estrogens...is obviously really off-putting. And if my ovaries are too damaged from taking T, I couldn't maintain a pregnancy to save my own life. (Let alone make a new one!)

So it's looking like the only option I have is to wait, and if Ryan can't wait to transition, we can bank her sperm for later. I'm open to the idea of adoption, and I was planning on that eventually anyway, (if agencies don't turn us away for being trans, at least, which I can't help but think some might :/) but it's really important to me that I have at least one biological child with Ryan, because...I just really want to see kids with her pretty face and know they're ours. Which I know is a sentiment that might have triggered a few eyerolls. Haha.

She can help me wait out the handful of years, and I've told her that I want her to do a little "genetic safekeeping" before she transitions, so we have that established...but I'm hoping to make sure there isn't an alternative (surrogates and IVF are right out, because we probably could never afford it, and I have personal issues with the idea) that I've missed...and also to find out a little more about what's involved in banking sperm. I'm doing a little research right now, but if any women here have done it, some words of advice would be very much appreciated. The same for any guys here who've had kids. (Well, been the one to bear the kids, I mean.)

Thanks so much in advance to all of you for whatever help you might be able to offer.

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

Donno

Not many have had to face this in exactly the same way you two are. Harvesting eggs and freezing sperm may work just fine. Some fertility doc is gonna have a wonderful time working with two transpeople!

Good luck and let us know what you find out?

Lizzy

Link to comment
Guest CharlieRose

Hey, I responded to this idea at length in another post. I'll link to it: http://www.lauras-playground.com/forums/in...c=15059&hl=

Basically, going on testosterone does have a gradual effect on your fertility over time, but it can actually take quite a while. Many people who've been on testosterone, even for a matter of 3-5 years, have gone off again and had their periods come back. Basically being on testosterone artificially induces a very PCOS-like condition. (That's polycystic ovaries) It can make conceiving harder, perhaps even requiring fertility treatment, but it won't necessarily make you infertile.

Link to comment
Guest i is Sam :-)

What about estrogen blockers? would they make you infertile? I mean if you came off them again. And perhaps low doses of T would have less of an effect or at least take longer to become a problem. That might be a compromise you could cope with. And you could at least have top surgery if you really wanted, obviously it's not ideal but plenty of women for whatever reason don't breast feed. Your child would be just fine on formula. They wouldn't have the protection of your immune system, I don't know if you can get them immunised earlier if you aren't breast feeding. Obviously you need to talk to doctors and therapists about this, but you aren't necessarily completely out of options.

Link to comment
Guest ChalenAustin

I'm sensing a trend here?

We need a club name! I'm thinking the Seahorse Club or something with seahrose in it.

Nicodeme, PM me sometime, for real. We should talk.

Link to comment
Guest Nicodeme
I'm sensing a trend here?

We need a club name! I'm thinking the Seahorse Club or something with seahrose in it.

Nicodeme, PM me sometime, for real. We should talk.

Now I'm going to be doodling seahorses with soul patches in my adventure log. XD

And I'll be sure to PM you!

Some fertility doc is gonna have a wonderful time working with two transpeople!

Especially since we're both downright crazy! :D

Hey, I responded to this idea at length in another post. I'll link to it: http://www.lauras-playground.com/forums/in...c=15059&hl=

Basically, going on testosterone does have a gradual effect on your fertility over time, but it can actually take quite a while. Many people who've been on testosterone, even for a matter of 3-5 years, have gone off again and had their periods come back. Basically being on testosterone artificially induces a very PCOS-like condition. (That's polycystic ovaries) It can make conceiving harder, perhaps even requiring fertility treatment, but it won't necessarily make you infertile.

Thank you so much for the links and information. I do hope to be on a relatively low dose to at least get my voice to change to something passable pitchwise (which I don't think will take too terribly long; my brother's voice dropped about two octaves in six months when puberty hit.) without putting too much strain on my system. And to mimize that crash from a lack of testosterone, 'cause from what I've been reading, it sucks. (And I'm sure the return of normal female hormone levels wouldn't help...PMS should be considered a form of biological warfare!)

Though you do mention in that other post that my uterus could atrophy a little...which is disconcerting. I'll put it on my to-do list to approach my mom about seeing an OBGYN (they raised the age of requirement from 18 to 21 and I'm a virgin, so she didn't see the point in getting me one yet) so I can talk to someone with more in-depth knowledge, and probably experience, on the subject. (I'm going to have to start seeing one once I'm on hormones, anyway.)

Oh, and as for freezing an actual ovary (in reference to the other post,) I think it's actually a lot more expensive than banking sperm. And the success rate seems to be much slimmer than freezing just eggs. I think only three or four successful pregnancies were created with that method. At least, that's what I read while reading up on alternatives for people who get endometriosis. (My mom had it, so I'm already at higher risk, and I was trying to find out if T would increase it even more; but apparently it's one of the treatments, so I'm guessing it serves to prevent it.)

What about estrogen blockers? would they make you infertile? I mean if you came off them again. And perhaps low doses of T would have less of an effect or at least take longer to become a problem. That might be a compromise you could cope with. And you could at least have top surgery if you really wanted, obviously it's not ideal but plenty of women for whatever reason don't breast feed. Your child would be just fine on formula. They wouldn't have the protection of your immune system, I don't know if you can get them immunised earlier if you aren't breast feeding. Obviously you need to talk to doctors and therapists about this, but you aren't necessarily completely out of options.

I thought of estrogen blockers. But if androgen blockers will bring about sterility, I figure the same would happen to me with estrogen blockers. That, and I don't think it's actually healthy to block one sex hormone if you're not replacing it with another. Estrogen and testosterone help keep...well, pretty much every system running correctly, it seems.

I'm going to see a few local gender therapists to ask what they know as far as reproductive options, and to see if they would be inclined to write a letter for surgery before hormones. Most surgeons seem to want you on T before top surgery for (arbitrary) reasons like "changes in musculature" or "gauging your feelings," though. And I think I have to wait until June at the earliest to get surgery anyway. (As I'll be 18.) Even for a reduction. I asked my doctor if she could recommend anyone for a breast reduction and she said the chances of someone willing to operate on me are slim just because of my age. (Which is stupid because it's going to be a far more invasive surgery to make my ribcage convex again, you know?)

And my research on sperm banking is turning up some banks being incredibly cheap (at least, cheap for cryonics, I imagine) and others being outrageously expensive. There's like, 4 in my state. So I'll find out what they charge and discuss it with Ryan again when I get the chance.

Link to comment
Guest DisDwarf

I'm a female trapped in a male body... and I want kids very very much. yeah I've got mother instincts LOL.

I think about transition a lot, not that I've the money for it, but I feel the need for it, but I feel that my responsibility as a female is to do everything possible to have kids and raise them, even if that means making me unhappy. So because I want kids the natural way (have found sperm banks on my area but prefer not to be depended on them), I hope I can start a family before transition, have my kids, and only then transition if I still feel the need for it (probably will).

But I'm 28 years old, with no experience in relationships (never had one and im a virgin too) so I wonder if my idea is unrealistic. Oh, and I've no job too, which I think is necessary in order to have a family and feed kids (I want as many as possible, LOL, maybe 4 or 5!) oh and it's also necessary for funding the transition.... Do you think it's do-able to do all these life-changing things in a few years so that I could transition when I'll be about 32-33? well maybe 35 or 36... what is the average age of transition anyway? the more I wait the more life in my correct gender I lose... perhaps I should just bank sperm and forget about all that stuff. too undecided!

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...
Guest Nicodeme

Actually, Fairfax Cryobank apparently has among the lowest storage costs in the country. (If you live in the US, that is...) So you can probably do a little banking there before you meet someone so you can finally get your transition underway.

Here's a link for you to check out. You might be able to find others with similar pricing, too.

http://www.fairfaxcryobank.com/

(hopefully that link's allowed. :X)

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 233 Guests (See full list)

    • awkward-yet-sweet
    • JessicaMW
    • ClaireBloom
    • JenniferB
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.1k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,093
    • Most Online
      8,356

    gizgizgizzie
    Newest Member
    gizgizgizzie
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Angelo christoper
      Angelo christoper
      (38 years old)
    2. Joslynn
      Joslynn
      (61 years old)
    3. Kaltia_Atlas
      Kaltia_Atlas
    4. Rika_Lil
      Rika_Lil
      (40 years old)
    5. Summerluv
      Summerluv
      (19 years old)
  • Posts

    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Well, here's the big questions:  What does it mean to be masculine?  What does it mean to be a woman?    I've been around a lot of rule-bending in those areas.  There's all sorts of "traditional" views about what men and women do.  Men work on mechanical things, defend/protect, earn a living, play rough sports, etc.  Women cook and clean, are gentle and nurturing, value aesthetics over function, etc.   Yet, my very "masculine" industrial-manager husband cooks just as well as any Betty Crocker wannabe, and tells the bedtime stories that are most in-demand by the kids.  My GF, who is surely "ALL Girl" is a highly skilled mechanic, a street racer, was busily laying concrete while 6 months pregnant, and practices kenjutsu (Japanese sword fighting skills).  And me?  I'm AFAB but I'm infertile and I feel like I should have had a male body...yet I possess very little in the way of "manly" skills or desire to acquire them.  I'm in my boy form these days, but pretty much useless for accomplishing "boy stuff."     I think my family blew those definitions out of the water.  Yet, somehow our family structure is also religiously patriarchal....and happily so!  It'll bend your brain to try to figure that one out.    I'd say its just important to be you, do what you do best, and stick your tongue out at anybody who doesn't like it. 
    • JenniferB
      Welcome to the board gizgizgizzie! I sure can understand what dysphoria feels like. I found it stayed in my head during nearly all waking hours. Although, sometimes held in a little deeper. But it was triggered easily. I hope you can find that place you feel comfortable with yourself. This is a good place to find help as you traverse your journey.   Jennifer
    • VickySGV
      Welcome to the Forums @gizgizgizzie we have folks in your situations to talk to and share with. 
    • gizgizgizzie
      hi everyone, my name is giz (or gizzie), i use all prns but i prefer they/it and i just found out abt this place pretty recently !! im really excited to find community among other trans people from so many walks of life !! in my personal life, i do have trans/queer friends but its not easy to navigate that without coming out all willy nilly (and i can't come out to my family, pretty much ever) so this is a pretty good place for me to get to know people and make new friends !!   i also have this weird dysphoria issue that i feel like everyone (and society at large lol) is attaching me to categories and boxes that don't really fit me (obviously this is to do with my agab) so being here without that presentation is also really helpful !!   i also hope to be able to start and share my transitions goals and things like that (just getting my body to a more androgynous look) !!   thanks for reading, and i hope to see more of y'all soon !!
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Well, my friends are out publicly. Openly transgender, and on HRT.  I agree that the survival of all of us is at stake.  But I think there are threats greater and more dangerous than those faced exclusively by LGBTQ folks.   Rising prices. Unaffordable food.  EPA strangling transportation and energy.  Needless foreign wars that put us at risk of literal nuclear annihilation.  A government that wants to tax us, track us, and control every aspect of our lives...including using us as guinea pigs for their medical experiments.     Trump is no savior.  Neither is the Republican party.  But I believe that a vote for Democrats in the federal government is for sure a vote for globalism and what follows it.  War, famine, plague, slavery, and death don't care if we're trans or cis.  
    • Ladypcnj
      There is light at the end of the tunnel, just believe. 
    • Ashley0616
      Y’all are pretty ladies
    • Ashley0616
    • Ivy
      People who are out publicly, and openly transgender, maybe on HRT, having changed names and gender, have a lot to lose if anti-trans politicians take power.  They have openly called for our eradication, and promise to do everything they can to accomplish this.  (again, 2025) For someone in this position the election is about our survival.  It's foolish to delude ourselves into thinking "Oh, they don't really mean that.  It's all for show," or, "There's other more important things to concern ourselves with." Maybe for some people the other things take priority.  But if you have skin in the game, things look different.  
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      If that happens, a lot of things I don't want to see might also be codified into law.  And some things that shouldn't be law might not get repealed.  To me, progress in one area isn't worth the price we'd have to pay in several other areas.     For me, voting on LGBTQ issues always ends up as an "out of the frying pan, but into the fire" sort of event.  
    • Ivy
      Trying out a new wig. Got my reading glasses on. I've also got dark roots now - first time in years.
    • Vidanjali
      Thea, your post made me think of a comic named Chloe Petts whom I saw recently on Hannah Gadsby's Gender Agenda comedy special on Netflix. She is a cisgender masculine lesbian. She is brilliant and so funny. I was intrigued by her identification - specifically masculine, not butch. And it seems to me there is a difference. 
    • Vidanjali
      Today I had a dr appt. When I checked in, I was asked my surname, which I gave. Apparently there were two patients with appointments at that time with that same surname. The receptionist asked, "Are you (my legal name which is feminine) or Paul?" I got such a kick out of it not being assumed I had the feminine name. 
    • Vidanjali
      That must have felt affirming, albeit perhaps weirdly so. However, I'd construe that more broadly (no pun intended) as sexism rather than misogyny where the latter would imply contempt. Also, incidentally, I've heard chivalry referred to as "benevolent sexism". 
    • MaeBe
      My boss is in a panic. His business is a couple straws away from breaking a camel in half. He's just handling the stress very poorly.   My dad, though. He's handling things pretty well, as long as I continue to don't get massively offended by being called: son, boy, etc. His eldest is leaving the State and looks so different than he's been used to over the years. I haven't told him I'm on HRT, but to be fair the changes haven't been massive. I've always had boobs, more so after COVID weight gain and made more obvious with its loss, but now I'm not hiding them--and obviously wearing a bra. The estrogen has done some work, but nothing major (sadly). I think the biggest HRT changes have been my skin and a mild amount of fat redistribution.   Today I'm wearing my cheater, I almost have cleavage! :D I need to get another t-shirt bra to keep a good rotation. I only have two, one push-up, and the rest are unlined (great for Summer, but not great for my Summer wardrobe ).
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...