Is it really such a bad thing to allow parents the ability to choose the gender of their baby?
It was these words which scratched the wounds of many of our readers this morning:
“I might seem ungrateful because I already have three healthy sons. But unless you’ve experienced gender disappointment, you can’t understand how crippling it can be.”
The very idea that a mother could be disappointed in what gender her child was seems shocking. Unnatural.
Words like “selfish” and “bitch” were cast at her. You don’t deserve children.
Passionate raw stories of infertility were posted.
Heartbreaking tales of loss and disappointment.
All in relation to the news that the National Health and Medical Research Council are considering changing the rules on gender selection in Australia.
All in relation to the idea that women might be given the option to pick girl or boy just before they decide on the Bugaboo or the Mountain Buggy.
Social media outraged that something “natural” and “god-given” could be a lifestyle choice.
Their outrage is one shared with the Australian public who overwhelmingly disagree with gender selection through IVF.
In fact a 2013 Roy Morgan poll found only one in five Australians supports the process.
Australians feel it is “playing god”, it is “changing nature”, it is a “slippery slope” to designer babies.
But I am not so sure.
What I struggle to understand in debates like this is why, when it really won’t affect the rest of us we care so much.
Women who say they would like the ability to go through the expensive and lengthy IVF procedure speak of the hold so called “gender disappointment” has over them. They speak of the “emotional torment” they feel.
Top Comments
I am totally against this, I have two daughters and am expecting our 3rd child (gender will remain unknown until birth) and while my husband and I would dearly love a little boy I would never ever opt for gender selection to archive this. I believe one of the core parts of being a parent, a good parent is loving and accepting your child for who and what they are unconditionally not only if they fit some kind of pre described mould of who I want them to be.
Ultimately this DOES hurt children and that is why I feel it is wrong. Can you imagine growing up to discover you were such a disappointment to your parents not for anything you have done but purely for your gender?
To put it in the same category of genetic selection to avoid a serious genetic disease or illness is just offensive. Being born a boy is not the same as being born with a disease that will cause pain and suffering and a potentially tragically short life of the child.
Why is there even a debate about this. Of course sex selection should be allowed. We already permit sperm and egg donation. We don't expect single, gay or post menopausal women to accept their infertility. Why should we accept random sex selection when the technology exists to permit choice. Why shouldn't people be allowed to decide what to do with their own DNA if they can afford it? Sex selection should not be subsidised by Medicare as its personal choice and should not be a strain on the public purse. Unless you've experienced the heartache of longing for a boy/girl it's hard to imagine. The pain never goes away.