If the above title made you giggle, join me in searching through cryobanks, and this word will lose all comical meaning. Actually, it will lose most meanings. Now all sperm means to me is expensive baby-gold. Searching for sperm is a paradox. I keep envisioning life-size vials of the sploogy stuff interacting at a bar, and I’m supposed to pick the vial that has all the best traits, like searching for a mate. But when I met Lesa, I didn’t asked her to list her grandparent’s medical history and her SAT score. I saw an attractive woman. When we were dating, I didn’t wonder if she had viable, fertile eggs (the female equivalent to a high sperm count and good motility). Yet, Lesa and I both agreed, these things are on the top our list for donor picks.
Also on the top of the list is CMV negative donors. CMV is a nifty little acronym for a virus, similar to herpes, when active creates almost no symptoms in adults, but can be fatally harmful to fetuses. Also, similar to herpes, most of us (over 70%) are walking around with it unknowingly, active or not. I say most of us, but actually I mean most of us except Lesa. She’s never been exposed to the virus. So if she gets pregnant with CMV positive sperm, there’s a good chance she’ll contract the virus while she’s preggers, which is a no go for the baby doctor. While it’s a good thing Lesa doesn’t have this virus, it limits our donor choices by about 70%. My top eight picks suddenly becomes my top three with the news of this test result.
Knowing about things like the existence of CMV or that RH- moms shouldn’t get pregnant with RH+ sperm makes me worry for all my straight child-bearing counterparts. Although it’s a pain to go through all these tests, at least we know for sure that we’re ruling out horrible genetic disease and hereditary viruses. It makes me wonder how anybody got born before the advent of blood tests. And although it is immensely easier for a straight couple to conceive, for this reason I’m glad we have to go through a fertility clinic.
When I was younger I used to fantasize about one day having kids with my wife. I thought by then they’ll have come up with a way to create a baby from two eggs. (Just like by then we’ll be able to get legally married.) I knew it was theoretically possible to create life with two eggs, although I didn’t like the fact that I would have only female offspring. And in fact I’ve read studies where they’ve successfully done it with animals, albeit with multiple tries and weird birth defects. But, by then has a harsh way of becoming right now. And right now I’m resigned to the fact that only one of us can be genetically linked to our children. I’ve been asked already if I mind that the kid won’t be genetically related to me. I mind in the same way that I mind I was not born male, or that I have a big nose. But in terms of having a family with Lesa, I don’t think genetic ties will make me any less of a parent. It definitely doesn’t make me want or love my children any less. I’m excited to see a little Lesa.
So, picking sperm is bittersweet, for Lesa and myself. The good news is we get to pick cream of the crop genetics. A prospective donor I was looking at last night has a SAT score of 2300 (out of 2400). Neither Lesa nor I come close to the pedigree these guys offer. Now we’re struggling with questions like, brown eyes or blue? Should we pick someone who looks like me, or just generi-man (in case baby Duncan-Hall #2 comes from me). Do we pick based on pictures or based on a donor who wants to be known? We can’t even decide which sperm bank to use. Just when I think I’ve found the sperm bank ultimo, I exhaust their list of donors and think, “but what if this other sperm bank has Mr. Perfect?” After weeks of looking through potential baby-gold I’ve become well versed in medical terms I have no other need for. Is Vericocele hereditary? How young is too young to die from “old age”. The questions are endless.
I get all worked up trying to compare these things. Then I get all worked up because even if I pick Mr. Perfect, if his swimmers don’t get Lesa pregnant, we’ll have to re-pick Mr. Almost Perfect. And then I remind myself of the paradox. I didn’t ask all these questions when I picked Lesa. I picked her for who she is, the perfection and the flaws. And then I relax. Whichever sperm we end up picking will create our baby. And, although I’m not a fatalist, I’m inclined to think that our child will be who it was meant to be, and will be perfect for Lesa and me.