Thu. Nov 21st, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

This weekend Anna, Matt and Brendan will uphold a somewhat belated annual tradition.

Every year gay couple Matt and Brendan take their son Baker to Anna’s house and help her and her children put up their Christmas tree lights. “Then we have a picture in front of it,” Anna says. “We didn’t get around to it this year, so instead they’ll help us take them down!”

As always, they’ll exchange presents, including for Baker, 3. “I’m like his aunt,” Anna says.

But the two Adelaide-based families have a particularly special relationship. Anna was a surrogate for Matt and Brendan, enabling them to become parents.

Four adults and three children pose for a photo, smiling, in front of a decorated Christmas tree
Every year Matt and Brendan take Baker to Anna’s house and help her family put up their Christmas lights.(Supplied: Anna McKie)

Before she became a surrogate, Anna was an egg donor for three different families. “I got hooked on the wonderful feeling of helping others in a really meaningful way,” she says. “It’s addictive.”

Her next step was to become a surrogate: rather than just donate eggs, she wanted to carry a baby for another couple. “I’d really enjoyed pregnancy with my own children, and wanted to experience it again without raising any more children,” she says. “I found giving birth very empowering.”

Anna gave birth to Baker at home with midwives. Matt and Brendan — who are what the surrogate community call commissioning parents — were also present.

The two families now see each other about six times a year and have an annual ‘Surryversary’ — a celebration of the date Anna agreed to carry their child. “We get babysitters, go for dinner and celebrate this enormous journey that the four adults went on together to create life,” she says.

The controversial world of surrogacy

About 100 babies are born to surrogates in Australia every year and about 200 more are born to international surrogates. Those figures are growing.

Many of those helped to become parents by surrogates are gay couples like Matt and Brendan, as well as couples who are childless for a range of reasons including infertility.

Australia has strict rules around surrogacy, with only “altruistic surrogacy” legal here: women must volunteer to carry a child for another person or couple and do not receive monetary compensation beyond reimbursement of medical expenses.

“You can’t really ask someone to be your surrogate in Australia — you have to wait for a surrogate to approach you and offer, which is what I did,” Anna says.

But surrogacy is complex, broad and can be ethically fraught and last week Pope Francis weighed in, generating a noisy debate in the media and among academics.



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