Guest guest Posted June 3, 2003 Report Share Posted June 3, 2003 > I debated whether or not to add to this thread about reproduction, for > fear of mortally offending others here, but... Reproduction issues are a matter of personal choice. There are basically three places where people stand on reproduction and EDS. 1) Diagnosed after already having children. Diagnosis came too late to effect reproductive decisions. 2) Diagnosed before having children and chose to have children anyway. 3) Diagnosed and therefore decided not to have children. Where each person fits on this spectrum is a very personal matter and no individual choice is right or wrong. The right choice is the one that you can live with and feels right to you. > I really become ill at the thought of deliberately risking bringing > someone into the world to suffer as I have done. That was a major part of the decision my husband and I made when deciding not to have children. We aslo both have EDS, which increased our risks of passing it on. My parents knew nothing of EDS when I was born, but they chose to only have one child because my mother is adopted and her medical history is unknown. She felt comfortable with one, but feared what she might pass on to other children. As it turns out, EDS came from my father. Having children is a huge risk, EDS or not. You simply don't know the millions of things that can be in your genes that can affect the health of your child. But having children can also bring tremendous joy and love to one's life. In all things, it is a trade off. You take the good with the bad. And even those of us that choose not to have children may find life has other surprises in store. My husband and I adopted a dog 2.5 years ago with the intent of training him as a service dog. This morning, I spent the most gut wrenching 90 minutes of my life watching my almost 3-year old " baby " Sherlock cry out in pain while my father and the vet tried to hold him down for X-rays of his hip. I didn't want a child with EDS, but it seems I have a dog with a dislocating hip - just like mine! How's that for irony. I see him struggle to climb into bed and to get up from the floor and my heart breaks because I know more than most people the pain he is in. > I've remained single in good part for this reason. Another of our support group members locally has done the same thing. I personally always knew I wouldn't have children, but the idea of living life without a spouse never occured to me. You don't have to sacrifice happiness to avoid having kids. You just have to find someone willing to compromise and share your life just the way it is. But if you are happy being single, then good for you. Again it's a matter of making personal choices and making the decisions that are right for you and ignoring whether anyone else would have chosen differently. -Barb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2003 Report Share Posted June 5, 2003 In my original message to this Yahoo newsgroup, ceda , I am of course, referring to the choice of knowingly reproducing the gene(s) for Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS) or other serious genetic illnesses. Now, I hope [you] won't take what follows too personally - I'm arguing against a general position, and I know that many others in this society would offer arguments very similar to those you've offered. But I think the matter is very important, so I hope that you'll permit me to have a different opinion, and to explain what that might be. As well, I've mixed perhaps a bit too much from my background in Professional Philosophy into the argument that follows, but it is hard to avoid doing so, since this sort of question is what they're paid to explore. Also, I know that it takes time to absorb the implications of a diagnosis (maybe forever) and that we all have to make decisions in the meantime, anyway. I don't blame, I think morality is possible without anger (although a particularly sharp phrase in my original message might be thought to belie this.) You said: >> Where each person fits on this spectrum is a very personal matter and no individual choice is right or wrong. In the strongest sense, personal matters are, by definition, those which affect no-one else, although the term may be used by extension to refer to matters falling under general societal agreement as uncriticisable. This affects someone else, extremely - note the no doctor could do this (or suggest anyone else do it) for any experimental or research purpose, no matter how valuable, without extreme professional sanction. If you mean something else by personal matters, I'm not sure what that would be. If you mean that it is not illegal, that's true, but of course it hardly follows that what is not yet illegal is harmless, or good. I'm not proposing a law, but I'm also pretty sure that one will come with enough time and medical progress (what diseases would be prohibited I don't predict) - perhaps to humanities loss, since illness seems to have been a frequent spur to creativity and iconoclasticism. By predicting such a law I'm not advocating or arguing for it, merely judging from history and law as I understand them that this will happen eventually, with or without discussion here. I have known one professional Philosopher, of ethics, to argue that the yet unborn have no rights, and that, therefore, even causing the extinction of the species is morally OK, so long as those alive are benefitted. He was arguing from esoteric Group-Utilitarian arguments I believe, and was quite sincere. Other than that I can't think of much academic support for your position as stated or the idea of inviolable " personal matters " , offhand - I wouldn't refer to Hume in this context, for example - so I presume you aren't proceeding from Philosophical grounds, or general ethical principles, such as discussed by professional philosophers of ethics, but are referring to societal agreements about what can be raised in informal groups, particularly where the individuals don't know each other well. We do often choose to wall off what is uncomfortable, or might cause a few ruffles during dinner parties, as a matter of politeness, and sometimes we refer what falls under such (changable) rules of thumb as " personal matters " . But this doesn't mean they aren't ethical choices, even the most important and dramatic of our ethical choices in life, just that we don't want to deal with those issues in public, except maybe during ethics seminars, because censorship is thought to lead to more pleasantness. (But I might be so impolite as to remind you, that similar censorship can also inhibit we sufferers telling others about EDS or our symptoms, even when this is necessary to help us to avoid pain or blame.) Once upon a time society agreed that slavery was such a personal choice, certainly most (white) Americans did. Not so long ago, whether you (male since women weren't legally people, at least in Canada) chose to hit your spouse or not (or cause pain to animals you owned) was regarded as simply a personal matter by most, and society enforced this rule of polite discourse. We would now agree that these choices were still wrong, whether it was polite to raise a disagreement or not. We cannot easily or trivially predict how a future society will view us. Such politesse is perhaps fine if there's no action that could be taken. But times have changed, our tools and genetic knowledge are growing enormously. Simply to sit back and refuse to raise such issues because it's awkward can't wash anymore. They will be raised - and even now laws are being passed affecting just such issues, especially re insurance and eligibility for health care, for example. Those laws will affect this group. Whether we wrestle with the ethics or not, legislators will. So we probably should take them seriously as ethical issues here, rather than be surprised when we open our newspapers to find that they have made these " personal choices " for us. Surely, of nothing with profound consequences for others could it be said that " no individual choice is right or wrong " . Even post-modern philosophers would back away from such a position, I believe I can predict. We can agree to disagree (but that also means that we must allow, and allow the expression of, real disagreement.) We can limit the scope of legislation in such matters (as constitiutions usually do.) But it would, by now, be unwise, I think, not to discuss such matters, even using terms such as " right " and " wrong " , if only because others are discussing them, and will act, without our input if we say nothing or assume that things will always be the way they are now. If nothing else, to dismiss the possibility of taking a position on such matters dismisses whole religions out the box, and rules out as false (because it does present a position) much of what they have to say to us. Surely more tolerance of differences of opinion on these important matters is needed than that. I do understand the psychological reluctance to discuss - my own decisions in life have slowly been informed by my slowing growing understanding of this disease. Had I known more, earlier, my decisions would have been different in many cases, I'm sure. Tomorrow, I may realize that a decision I made today didn't sufficiently take into account how my weakness might put others at risk, for example. But it would not be moral to leave my acions and decisions unreviewed, and perhaps blindly continue to be a risk factor for others. Of course life holds surprises, we are not Gods, and our decisions do not singly determine consequences. But, as the renowned anthropologist Clifford Geertz once pithily wrote in reply to such an argument, " just because there is no such thing as complete aesepsis (sterility) does not mean that we should conduct surgery in sewers. " Whether we should took large risks of adding to the pains and troubles of the world is surely a serious matter, and not obviated by the possibility that we might get lucky, or cound be otherwise unlucky anyway. None of us would accept such an argument from a child of ours (and they certainly do make such arguments!) Again, I respect your right to your opinion, I merely hope that you will also respect my right, also, to disagree with a blanket assertion that nothing I could say apply, because I've mentioned right and wrong and for reasons you've put forward and feel produce a valid argument, it's not that sort of matter. Free speech must include the tolerance of contradiction and the expression of disagreement, otherwise it is merely the tyranny of those who speak first, or the tyranny of the smallest claim, which would be a different thing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2003 Report Share Posted June 5, 2003 > Again, I respect your right to your opinion, I merely hope that you > will also respect my right, also, to disagree with a blanket assertion > that nothing I could say apply, because I've mentioned right and wrong > and for reasons you've put forward and feel produce a valid argument, > it's not that sort of matter. Everyone is entitled to their own position. Like you, I have chosen not to reproduce because I don't want to have a child with EDS. However, I will not judge others for making different choices. I do not believe that anyone has the right to determine for another whether they should or should not have children, regardless of whether they have EDS or not. You don't have to agree with another's decision whether or not to have children. However, as we all must respect the different opinions of others, so must we respect their decisions, lifestyle choices, religions, etc. The strength of this forum is in the support and respect of each other, regardless of our many differences. In the context of genetic ethics and advanced knowledge, may I point out that the human genome project examined the ethical and social implications (ELSI) of the growing availability of genetic information and genetic testing. One of the many questions asked was whether or not people would terminate a pregnancy, even late term pregnancy, if they were told the child might have a defect. I participated in the ELSI research and was invited to a conference 7 years ago to discuss the initial results. Most conference attendees were shocked to learn that many people would terminate a pregnancy due to a possibility of a birth defect. A possibility, not a certainty, of a defect was enough. Science fiction takes this response further in the movie Gattaca, in which a person's genetic code determines his or her reproductive rights and employment opportunities. There is an interesting NPR segment on this ELSI research and the ethical implications of prenatal genetic testing online at http://www.ornl.gov/TechR esources/Human_Genome/medicine/genetest.html#more (Prenatal Testing: A Modern Eugenics?) The purpose of the list is support and sharing information. Differences in opinion and choices are inevitable. I respect your choice, as it is the same choice I have made for myself. At the same time, I respect the choices of others. I hope that all list members will also respect the opinions and choices of others. -Barb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2003 Report Share Posted June 6, 2003 Well stated, Barb, and I agree! We need to have respect for everyone for who they are and what they believe in. Usually if something really bothers me and I know I can't change it, I just delete the post and say a prayer. Love Lana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 > I do not believe that anyone > has the right to determine for another whether they should or should not > have children, regardless of whether they have EDS or not. That's the core of our disagreement - whether future consequences to children make it a public matter. And what I'm saying is that I don't believe legislators are going to agree with you - especially given the difficulties of Canadian medical systems, and other legislation I've seen. You wouldn't believe some of the things they've already done to save pennies - including giving doctors a monetary kick-backs for prescribing fewer drugs and tests to their patients over the year than other doctors, with no reference to need! If you believe this is a purely personal matter, I think it would be wise to start organizing politically now. You don't have > to agree with another's decision whether or not to have children. However, > as we all must respect the different opinions of others, But this is to one side of the discussion - you can't mean that I can only respect another's decision by never stating my own ethical beliefs if they contradict those of others - and the big question here is whether it's a personal matter at all, given that another, a future child, is very much affected. Unless I misunderstand you, you seem reluctant to allow disagreement at this meta-level. I think there's a deep confusion here, that pervades society, between what's not an ethical matter and what's too divisive to be decided legally as yet. If that confusion leads any of us on this board to believe that what we consider our " rights " will be respected, I think we're going to be surprised, sooner of later. Even now, a civil suit for damages by a child knowingly conceived by EDS parents against those parents might very well succeed, (I think it would) and I'd hate to think what the damages might amount to. I'm not at all sure that our courts are going to respect this right to reproduce regardless of known risks, or even that they do now respect such claims of priviledge. Russj Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 In a message dated 6/7/2003 10:07:47 PM Central Daylight Time, pghand@... writes: > I think that we are given things in life, some call them gifts, others call > them curses - but whatever they are, they make us who we are period. What > makes us human and able to tolerate and get to the next day is attitude, > friends, family, a higher belief if that's your thing, and your desire for > personal peace. Wow, Jill, what a statement! I totally agree with it, and it was said so beautifully. I will keep it for future re-reading if that's OK with you. You are a very smart lady, one I admire a great deal and feel priviledged to know - at least electronically (for now)! Love Lana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 This is a highly sensitive and potentially volatile issue that will always separate people's beliefs and we should respect the differences in opinion as a point of view worthy of respect and honour. A good friend of mine had her first child when she was 27 years old and was looking forward to the expected arrival. Pregnancy went well, no problems or complications - but on the day the baby arrived, he presented with profound Down's Syndrome. Her life completely changed as did her husbands - fortunately, all for the better. When I decided to have children, I knew I had EDS and knew the potential for passing it along. We personally felt that at least we knew what we were dealing with with EDS and didn't have to learn anything new - although this was foolish to think because at any time genes can mutate, accidents can happen and any one of our children could have ended up with something that we could not have predicted. I think that we are given things in life, some call them gifts, others call them curses - but whatever they are, they make us who we are period. What makes us human and able to tolerate and get to the next day is attitude, friends, family, a higher belief if that's your thing, and your desire for personal peace. Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 7, 2003 Report Share Posted June 7, 2003 You flatter me Lana, thank you. Jill Re: Re: EDS...Fertility in Men and Women...seven month EDS babies In a message dated 6/7/2003 10:07:47 PM Central Daylight Time, pghand@... writes: > I think that we are given things in life, some call them gifts, others call > them curses - but whatever they are, they make us who we are period. What > makes us human and able to tolerate and get to the next day is attitude, > friends, family, a higher belief if that's your thing, and your desire for > personal peace. Wow, Jill, what a statement! I totally agree with it, and it was said so beautifully. I will keep it for future re-reading if that's OK with you. You are a very smart lady, one I admire a great deal and feel priviledged to know - at least electronically (for now)! Love Lana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 wrote: " The only child I am sure shows no signs of EDS is adopted " Ooooops! I thought your adopted child has EDS, I know now it was the one you were trying to adopt. Your comments are well said. Even if you did not have EDS you could still have had an EDS child or whatever. So like you, I feel it is not what is going on with us that define us, it is what we do with it that define us. And now I am being to understand that definition changes constantly as one ages. So, like in the Star Trek Next Generation, if Jordie did not have his blindness they would not be able to stop that world from being destroyed, and Hitler would have his Golden Children. I do not think anyone on this list would sue their parents for having them. I doubt it would hold up in court anyway as one cannot control the passing of genes without technological interference. Technological interference costs are prohibitive. So fear not if your children sue you for their EDS be sure it is more about your relationship with them rather than the EDS. Love Whole Bunches of The Lottery of Genes, Carole Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 Actually, I'm certain to change mine. Things are going to look very different for all of us once diagnostic chips that can easily screen for a multitude of genetic conditions exist, whole DNA scanning may become possible, the prospects of genetic therapy increase, legislators make their decisions and judges theirs, and all these issues become more concrete. I'm sure everything will look different once we are further into that brave new world. > You are, of course, entitled to your opinion. I respect your right to have > your opinion and to state it publicly. I will not debate the issue with you > on the list further as it is obvious that we disagree and are not likely to > change our minds. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2003 Report Share Posted June 8, 2003 I've been quite surprised, over the last few decades, by the number of issues that didn't need to be resolved, or were counted as necessary freedoms, that are now gone or legislated away. What counted as private a few decades ago (remember when they said our Social Insurance Numbers would be very private, never used by employers?) has been legislated away or gone whatever way private business thought best. From the lack of internet privacy, to constant camera surveillance, to the Patriot Act, etc... If this can't be addressed in this forum, if there can be nothing like a concensus here, I greatly fear that legislation will be passed by taxpayers whose concern will be reducing possible public health care expenses, period. I'm afraid they may be able to find a concensus, and that neither you nor I will like that concensus, or be able to budge it once it becomes law. I like talk of flowers, sharing and caring, but I haven't heard much of it from political parties in my neck of the woods. Wish I had. > This has been sitting in my 'outbox' for a few days. > > I think this is a subject so frought with emotion and opinion, all > important, individual, and valuable..that it can't be addressed in this > format. > > Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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