Just twelve hours after losing her husband Simon, to leukemia, Michelle Gordyn went into labour.
At the time, she was seven months pregnant with her first child and sadly, the little boy she named Charlie only survived three days before he lost his battle as well.
Understandably, Michelle says that that week was devastating.
“It was a good thing that Simon passed first because he went knowing that he was a father, I was having our child and that was one of the things that was really important to him,” Michelle told reporter Liz Hayes in a recent segment on Channel Nine’s 60 Minutes program.
But despite Charlie’s and Simon’s death, it wasn’t the end of the road for Michelle and Simon’s family plans.
Using an embryo and sperm they’d preserved when Charlie was originally conceived via IVF, Michelle was able to fall pregnant again. And 18 months after Simon died, she gave birth to his daughter, a little girl named Gracie.
Gracie is now a healthy one-year-old who, according to mum, takes after the dad she’ll never know.
“Her particular mannerisms sometimes are very much her father. A particular eye roll. Or the way she lifts her brow,” Michelle said. “It’s a comforting thing. It really is a comforting thing. She’s not just mine, she’s ours.”
Michelle’s story featured last night on 60 Minutes, in a segment called ‘Life After Death,’ which followed women who have used their deceased partner’s sperm to have children.
In recent years, advancements in science have made it possible for doctors to extract sperm from men, if it’s done within 36 hours of their deaths. But those advancements have also raised ethical questions about whether it’s morally okay to take a man’s sperm – especially when the request comes without the man’s written consent.
For Michelle Gordyn, consent wasn’t too much a problem. As detailed in this feature article from The Australian Magazine, Michelle’s major hurdle came when she had to obtain approval from Victoria’s Patient Review Panel before she could go ahead and get pregnant:
Top Comments
In the 90s I was in Britain and there was a similar case there were a widow called Diane Blood (I always remembered her because of her usual and somewhat appropriate name) wanted to use her dead husband's sperm.
Whether you think this is right or wrong one thing I thought was terrible about the case was the amount of vitriol this poor woman faced, the newspapers were just terrible, once the British newspapers decide someone is a villain they go for broke. The amount of hatred she received just because she wanted to have had a child with her husband. I always recall one paper saying, "she is young she can always find another husband to have a baby with." Around that time the dunblane tragedy had happened when a nutter had shot a whole lot of kids, and I remember thinking imagine if they had said to one of those kids mother's "so what your child is dead you are still young you can always have another one."
Interestingly enough I have always very adamantly not wanted to have kids, yet I actually in the case of a spouse wanting to have a child to a dead spouse agree that they should be allowed to whether they were given permission or not, the reason being is that a lot of people (maybe even the majority) get married with the thought that they will have children but even those like myself who do not want kids know that if you enter into marriage there is always a chance that you may get pregnant, of course this applies to any sexual encounter that you run the risk of getting pregnant but in the case of marriage you enter into a long term sexual relationship where you know there is chance despite precautions that you may get pregnant yet you take that risk and for most people (not all of course) if pregnancy happens they make the best of it and have the baby, of course this is all about the majority and not the minority who would adamantly not choose to have the child, but when a spouse has died and there is no proof as to what their desires would be, surely we should go towards what is the most probable, that they would either have wanted kids or at the very least would have entered into marriage knowing and accepting there is a good chance they might become a parent.
I think there is another reason these women want a child to their dead spouse they want something to remember him by, and I actually understand that. I think some women are highly maternal and whilst they would prefer to have a child with a man thru love they would still opt to have a child with someone else because their greatest desire is to be a mother, other woman really want a child because they want a product of their love with the man they love. The latter I can relate to personally.
A child isn't "a piece of him" it is a person with its whole life ahead of it. Find a father then have a kid. I would never consent to my baby bieng born purposefully motherless. Move on and start a family.