My desire to protect future fertility of DsD is way down the list compared to wanting her to have the opportunity to grow into a happy and content well-adjusted same sex attracted woman, whether that be lesbian or bisexual (she’s not sure yet, she’s only 14).
Wanting decisions that affect fertility to be made in adulthood does not mean not also being perfectly happy if she chooses to be child free, or the non birth mother (legally ‘parent 2’) in a lesbian relationship.
Some years ago, back in the bad old days of lesbians having to adopt their own children in order for both to have legal parental responsibility, I had several meetings with a social worker as a lesbian friends non-relative reference. It felt unnecessarily intrusive, although I do understand why adoption (and that’s what it was in a legal sense) needs to be so carefully and cautiously vetted. Happily, by the time my friend and her now wife came to have their second child, the law had changed both on legal recognition of same sex partnerships and on legal parental responsibility in lesbian partnerships.
My feminist concern for young lesbians and trans issues is more around the current day lack of lesbian visibility/role models and the inability for lesbians to meet socially and organise politically without penis-people derailing them. Fertility preservation in gender distressed girls is immediately understood by the average woman or man on the street, but it’s only time me part of a bigger picture.
I will hold my hands up and say I know little about the processes and counselling involved in acquiring sperm through legal channels, despite having two lesbian couples and one single lesbian in my circle, more because of not wanting to invade privacy than disinterest. Would love to hear more about it in a one-step-removed conversation (ie, on an Internet forum) but for want it’s worth, it has never once occurred to me that the lesbian mothers I know are any lesser than any other mother (and certainly more prepared/better at handling the awkward questions from their offspring than many single mothers by accident or circumstance - I had a baby on my own from a causal relationship 20 years ago, and my lesbian cousin has said how I made it easier for her to decide on sperm donation a decade and a half later, because I had already dismantled all the ‘no father’ stigma in our family, albeit by accident 😂)
So I am on the page of ‘more in common than divides us’ and willing to listen and learn re: specific lesbian experience (whilst also having serious, sometimes conflicting, thought re: reproductive technology and it’s potential harms to women and children).
We are only going to be able to organise those internal and external conflicts through education discussion, although I understand why a straight person asking for ‘discussion’ might sound like a demand for ‘justification’, I promise it isn’t intended to be.
One of the problems I am personally experiencing is how much harder it is to raise a same sex attracted adolescent in a heterosexual family set up than it is to raise a heterosexual adolescent (we cannot model healthy, normal same sex relationships ourselves, so need to seek out those role models externally) and I expect some of that cuts the other way, although perhaps less so if only because heterosexuality is the norm. Perhaps a more pertinent comparison is lesbians raising sons/ gay men raising daughters?
How to we move forward, in the understanding that all feminists want to centre women and girls, but have different life experiences?
Ie, I support the rights of lesbians to have lesbian only spaces (and can see why it’s not just a nice to have thing, but a vital thing) and straight women entering lesbian spaces to finger point is rude/stupid/annoying/missing the point (to refer to the example from elsewhere earlier in this thread) but how do we ensure open communication and prevent the kinds of IdPol silos that reinforce division rather than entrench them?
We have common goals, and empathy. Let’s tap into those.
I prefer Mumsnet to the more general GC feminist subs because the common goal is easier to locate, I think? Will ponder some more.