Posted on 01/21/2014 5:22:06 PM PST by Behind Liberal Lines
Frustrated by their inability to have a baby, Roger and Jasmine Hill of Canastota are going public in their effort to conceive a child.
The young couple is asking for donations from the public to help pay for the costly IVF, or In-vitro fertilization, procedure they are hoping to try.
There are incentives for those who help: $100 gets you a copy of the sonogram and a photo of the newborn, $500 gets you in the baby book and $1,000 gets you a T-shirt plus all the other rewards.
Roger, who works at Walmart in Oneida and Jasmine, an accountant in Manlius, have set up a Go Fund Me site "Hope for a Baby Hill" where people can donate money to their cause. In the past two weeks since they started the site, they have raised nearly $900. Their goal is $10,000 by June, and they plan to save and contribute some cash of their own.
"We wanted a baby right away when we got married in June 2010, and nothing has worked,'' said Jasmine Hill. "My goal was to be a mom by 27, and that didn't happen."
Hill, 27, said they've tried fertility drugs and four cycle of (IUI) intrauterine insemination, which was covered by insurance. (IVF) in vitro fertilization -- isn't covered by their insurance and costs more than $8,000, plus follow-up visits. They hope to raise the cash and start IVF in June.
IVF combines an egg and sperm in a laboratory dish, and when successful it is combined with an embryo transfer, which involves physically placing the embryo in the uterus.
To chronicle their journey, the Hills also have started a blog.
The couple also has responded to critics who question their decision to go public.
"We both come from big families, and we really want a child,'' Jasmine said. "Roger has three siblings and I have four. So I got worried pretty quickly when I didn't get pregnant right away. I thought it would be easy."
After tests showed no clear obstacles, they were told they had "unexplained infertility," Jasmine said. She began taking medication to boost her fertility, with no luck and some unpleasant side effects.
"Roger and I have a lot to offer a child,'' Jasmine says. "We go to church, and we are both very active people. We feel like we could really give something to a child."
Roger, 29, agrees. "I love to hunt and fish, and we'd love to have two children to share that with,'' he said. "I'd really like to have a mini-me."
At Christmas, their families always asked about grandchildren. The Hills didn't share their struggle with their parents until they decided to go public.
"It's not just the financial support that matters to us, but it's all the emotional support we're getting by going public,'' Jasmine said. "My friends were against it, and it is a very private thing. But we wanted to do it.
"Infertility is viewed as a disease,'' she said. "But it doesn't mean we are broken. We need to make people more aware of that."
IUI, which they tried, was covered by insurance an has about a 10 to 20 percent success rate based on Jasmine's age. It also was invasive. "We counted and I had to give myself 69 shots for the cycles. Our bathroom was filled with medication and needles."
IVF's success rate is higher, more like 30 to 35 percent, the Hills said.
Although they consider adoption down the road, the Hills want to explore every alternative they can to have a child naturally. Still, they debated the public campaign.
"We had some qualms about doing this, but we both paid for college ourselves and we paid for our wedding and house on our own,'' Jasmine said. "To have to ask for help is hard, but we are so happy we are doing it."
Tell them to eat sweet potatoes like the amish.
That's why there seemingly aren't any newborns available for adoption except for man-on-man partners... apparently the high bidders.
Amazingly, a lot of subfertility is caused by relatively minor hormonal and even nutritional deficiencies. I hope this couple has checked out NaProTech - Natural Procreative Technology, which addresses underling health issues and results in successfully achieving pregnancy naturally.
It costs a tiny fraction of what IFV costs,it doesn't kill your embryonic offspring, and it addresses women's health in a holistic way. It's the kind of advance that actually respects human beings.
adopt a baby if you are that desperate to have a child
“Now, pregnant teenagers keep their babies and make the their kids live miserable.”
While MTV cameras follow them around...
4 years later: “Please help us pay for our children’s needs”
6 years later: “Please help us pay for our children’s education.”
Etc.,etc...
If you’re from New York, you don’t even have to donate to help them out financially. Your turn comes when they’re on welfare.
Granted, he’s working at WalMart but she’s got a job in MANLIUS as an accountant!!!
And they’re begging for money to help with in vitro?
If they managed their finances better, they’d be able to manage that.
I don’t think we would ask for donations, and all of that stuff is expensive. We had a brutal year of medical expenses, and we recovered, but our parents lent us 10k a few months ago. We paid them back last week. My wife is pregnant with twins. Its been a emotionial few years. She had a horrible hernia operation when she was a toddler and corrupted one of her tubes(we found that out together, she was crushed ) When your wife wants a child, you might do anything to give her that expierence of child birth. And we are in the midst of adopting a baby from S. Korea(Mrs. Jrzguy is from S Korean). All I know is we are so excited to have three children in our home within the next 7-15 months. I hope these folks find peace with however the events unfold.
When they split and she goes after the donor for child support?
Hell NO!!
no because obviously they can’t afford it
all about me
And I'm sure he'll name the poor unfortunate "Jr." Have you ever noticed that women almost never name their female children after themselves? No, it's a male ego thing, pure and simple.
Yes my thought also, adopt! There are so many children in need. Oh and I want a Ferrari, I wanted one as soon as I got my license but Al Gore had not invented the internet yet, can I still ask other people to buy it for me? And I was thinking maybe I might even put in some money of my own.
My wife and I adopted a child three years ago through the state. He was just turning 3, and it cost us virtually nothing.
Sure, if you want that white new born, it will cost you.
If you just want a child to love, it is a lot easier than you might think.
Have to disagree with you.
Most reputable clinics will not treat the babies with anything but tender care. Implantation does not always take but that is part of nature.
The days of implanting numerous babies in the hope that one takes is a thing of past for reputable places.
And as someone who is trying to adopt I can tell you that it is expensive and risky. Adopting from overseas is even more expensive and risky.
Wife and I both agree. When we adopt the child will be potty trained.
Call that crazy octomom. She’s probably let a few go about now.
I looked into adoption very seriously when my husband and I were trying to have kids, and found that KosmicKitty is exactly right. It’s quite difficult to adopt these days unless you’re willing to take an older child, usually with issues of some kind, or go out of country. (I admire people who will take a kid with issues but frankly that idea scared me to death.) It’s expensive to adopt, as well. When people told me, “You should ‘just’ adopt!” I knew they had never taken five minutes to find out the realities of adoption these days.
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