Now Accepting Donations

Sperm. During the first 26 years of my life, I gave it hardly any thought at all. There was this one recurring nightmare I had after our best guy friends house-sat for us where their sperm managed somehow to live on in our bed and sneak into my PJ’s to impregnate me. There was also this incident where I found a splatter of thick, creamy substance on my car after my yoga class one night and spent a week wondering if it was someone’s sperm. But apart from that, nothing. It barely registered in my consciousness as having any relevance to my existence for most of my life, and then, suddenly, it was everything.

Ok, actually, it wasn’t all that suddenly- Cari has been talking about having a baby since the day I met her. We met at a coffee shop, moved on to lunch, and then met up at the dog park later that afternoon where I walked up to her cradling Rylee, her puppy, in a newborn position and said jokingly, “You look like you need a baby.”

“I do,” she replied, bending down to plant a kiss on Rylee’s scruffy head, “I’m thinking of having one on my own…I’m tired of waiting!”

But wait she did, for four more years, while I slowly, budgingly, got on board with the plan. So while in retrospect sperm’s entrance into my life wasn’t all that sudden really, it certainly felt that way at the time.

There is this period of time during the lesbian conception process when sperm plays the starring role, makes up the ensemble cast, and even seems to direct the show. For us, the auditions lasted several months.

Each evening we’d pour over the sperm bank’s website, looking for our perfect match. We wanted someone who was a balanced blend of our physical features so that both of us could carry his babies and still have the children resemble the non-bio mom. Cari has pale, almost translucent skin that burns but never tans, reddish-blond hair, green eyes, and an angular face. I have dark brown hair, even darker brown eyes, light olive skin that tans deeply, and an oval face with a broad jaw. There is no notable combination of these features.

We are both mutts, but without any overlap. Cari has English and Irish ancestry, while I am Swedish, German, and Cherokee. Our search to find a donor who matched both of our heritages turned up a fair number of candidates, but somehow they all managed to have essays that were deeply concerning from a psychological standpoint. One, when asked to describe his relationships with his family, wrote: “My mother taught me how to copy human emotion.” Not your typical response to a question like this, and in our heightened state of anxiety, this struck us as more than a little predictive of some kind of psychopath/serial killer who might fit in better on Dexter than in our home.

We also quickly learned that the sperm bank’s distinctive feature, “Celebrity Look-Alikes,” which offers a link to Internet photos of celebrities whom each candidate resembles, was less than helpful. Most of the celebrities looked either hung over and drug addicted or aloof and unapproachable with their chiseled, perfect features. It was hard to imagine raising someone who looked like any one of them.

Once we purchased the pricey “90-day all-access pass,” which allowed us to download everything from baby pictures to “creative expression” pieces from each of the candidates, we were faced with a whole slew of new problems. Take, for example, their childhood photos. Was that stiff posture and averted gaze we noticed in several candidates indicative of Aspergers? Why, of out all their pictures, would they choose one where they were dirty and tear-streaked?

Finally, we narrowed it down to two promising candidates. A music teacher we selected based on the fact that his writing style in the donor essays reminded Cari a lot of mine, and a PhD in electrical engineering whose impressive credentials of nearly perfect SAT and GRE scores, athletic prowess, and a penchant for adventure sports seemed too good to pass up. After agonizing over the decision for several weeks, we finally called Cari’s step-dad Chappy, a retired army chaplain, for some spiritual guidance. He recommended we put out the extra cash for access to the donor’s audio downloads.

That evening Cari sat in our tiny condo’s bathtub and I sat on the bathroom floor next to her, a set of headphones strung between us. We expected that upon hearing their voices, we would suddenly know which one was The One; that the heavens would part and reveal we had found the person who would contribute half of the DNA for our children-to-be. Instead, it felt like being a fly on the wall during a really bad first date. The sperm bank employee haltingly yet flirtatiously led each candidate through a series of getting to know you questions. By the end of the interviews, we realized that what we had mistaken for an intentionally self-deprecating, humorous, good-naturedly sarcastic tone in the Music Teacher’s writing was actually a socially awkward, self-indulgent pessimism. Less than half-way through the PhD’s interview, we began to realize that to finish your doctorate while managing to master the Argentine tango, teach Martial Arts to kids, surf, snowboard, and train to vlimb Mt. Everest requires a certain level of drive so intense, so focused by nature that when combined with our own anxious, achievement-driven temperaments could be disastrous.

What we needed was someone who used their intelligence to increase their happiness rather than their accomplishments. What we needed was a slacker.

We spent the next several weeks on hiatus from the sperm bank’s website, eying instead the trio of close guy friends we had long ago identified as potential known donors, but ruled out primarily on the basis of how much we liked them and how little we relished having a conversation with them where we popped the big question and risked their polite refusal. We strategized ways to set them up in order to request the goods. Casual lunches, wine-filled afternoons, quick phone calls… no setting seemed quite right to say: “hey, I’d like you to father our baby but absolutely under no circumstances do we want you to be like a father to our baby.”

Yes, men get women pregnant all the time, and yes, a lot of them feel perfectly fine about parting ways afterwards and never looking back, but that wasn’t the kind of men these men were. And even if they were fine with not being parents to their sperm’s production now, how could we ask them to know how they would feel in, 5, 10, or even 15 years? Finally, we feared that if one of them did become the donor, we would be so busy setting up boundaries to make it clear they weren’t the parent that we would miss out on having them be uncles to our children, which we hoped for these three men more than anything.

It was back to the sperm bank, then, where anonymity protected us and the donors from any changes of heart for the first 18 years, at which point our children would be able to contact them once in accordance with the donor’s “willing to be known” contract. Most kids don’t want anything to do with their parents at that age anyway, so I knew that even if our kids did want to find their donor at 18 and idealize them for all the ways they weren’t like us, it would be easier not to take it quite so personally.

Our return to the vortex of the sperm bank’s search engine turned up only one promising new candidate: a young man we fondly came to know as “Shorty.” Several inches shorter than the sperm bank’s stated minimum height requirement, Cari took this as a sign that if we had a son, he might face rejection from her extended family, whose love of boys playing basketball is surpassed only by their love of Jesus. I, however, took it as a sign that there must have been something special about him to make it through the sperm bank’s rigorous screening process despite his height.

The son of a diplomat and an engineer, he works as a substitute teacher every other year to save up money and then spends the alternate years hopping trains across the country or couch surfing in Europe. It’s clear he was the kind of kid whose unwavering pursuit of his own dreams and ideas probably drove his parents crazy. But in response to a question about who he would like to have dinner with if he could have dinner with anyone from any place in any time in history, he said he’d like to have dinner with the friends he is meeting up with tonight.

In the end I got to choose, because I will be the one whose genetic input into our baby is limited to the selection of our donor, and I picked him.

I picked him because the values we have in common are things I identify with more than my Swedish heritage, tall frame, or Cherokee nose. Happiness, contentment, wonder, and a sense of connection to the beauty of world and all the people in it—who knows if those kinds of things are genetic, but I want to give our kid their very best shot.

Lottery

Last month Cari heard on the morning news that the Mega Millions lottery jackpot was up to $306 million, and insisted we buy a ticket. I was skeptical at first, but the idea soon grew on me. We’d spent the entire weekend talking finances with her parents, trying to figure out our new tax bracket, the difference between a 401k or 403b, and just how we might ever be able to contribute to these while paying back her student loans and still somehow managing to save up for a house. The lottery was clearly a simpler solution. Well, with the exception of the fact that neither of us had every purchased a lottery ticket. Cari works long hours and commutes, so I got elected to make the big purchase. My initial plan was to forget. I am the kind of person who has walked into a casino only once or twice in my lifetime, promptly lost the $20 I intended to spend, and vowed never to return. I hate losing money just about as much as I asking for favors, and in my opinion, the lottery involved both. To me, there always seemed to be something so naïve and vulnerable about playing the lottery. It’s as if you are presenting yourself to the universe and declaring that you believe you are special, the exception, the chosen one. And then being told your wrong, and your dollar is gone.

Still, unable to gracefully shake the idea, I pulled into the gas station just down the block from my work, drawn by the lottery banners hanging across their door. I got out to check my tire pressure, nonchalantly peeking inside the cashier’s office. But then I was overcome by a wave of distrust. I remembered how much I hate that gas station, with it’s dirt streaked windows and prices 30 cents above those in the nicer parts of Oakland, as if taunting those born on Oakland’s more dangerous streets that they would never get out, not even to buy cheaper gas. I got back into the car and drove on.

Not even five minutes later, a parade of numbers arrived unbidden in my mind. 17 12 37 18. They repeated over and over until I jotted them down on a CD case sitting in my console. With that, I was sold. Convinced. The numbers took hold of me, and for the rest of the day I counted the minutes until I was done with work and could seek out a lottery ticket on which to transcribe them. I even contemplated taking my last client on an outing to a neighborhood gas station to purchase a ticket with her, since we’ve been working on independent living skills. I decided against it though, given that Medi-cal probably isn’t paying for our specialized behavioral services just so we can teach teenagers how to throw their money away.

By the time I was driving home from work, the numbers had all but lost their pull on me, and I made it into our driveway before I remembered my mission. I turned around and drove straight into the local gas station—the friendly, reasonably priced type that can be relied upon to serve its gas affordable, and with a free cup of coffee to boot. “Nope,” the cashier said sympathetically, we don’t sell any lottery tickets here, check down the street at the liquor store.”

As I walked down to the liquor store, I was giddy with optimism and hope. I’m not sure when the transition occurred, but somehow playing the lottery had shifted from an ominous overstepping of my place in the world to a challenge I was convinced I was up to meeting. Four months ago, when we completed our first round of insemination, as terrified that it would work as we were that it wouldn’t, one of the nurses had advised us: “don’t get your hopes up too high, getting pregnant the first time would be like winning the lottery.” Three rounds of IUI’s, countless doctor’s bills and missed days of work, and four $675 teeny, tiny sperm-filled vials later, I was read to be the kind of person who wins the lottery.

I surveyed the scene in the liquor store at 5 pm on a Wednesday. It seems I wasn’t the only one putting more faith in the lottery than in alcohol this evening; the only other man in the store was at the counter selecting a handful of lottery tickets too. “Three for the Super Lotto and five for Mega Millions,” he said casually, handing over his card to the middle aged Asian man behind the counter. My original plan was to purchase three tickets: one for Cari, one for me, and for the baby, but as I watched the man walk off with his tickets, I decided if he had five then I needed five as well. Otherwise, I wouldn’t even have equal odds with the man in our neighborhood store, and we’re talking about a national competition here.

“Five for MegaMillions,” I said, mimicking the man’s casual tone, and scoffing internally that he had wasted previous time and money on anything other than the 306 million dollar MegaMillions jackpot. The men behind the counter handed me a sherbet orange ticket with five lines of random numbers printed one it.

“Wait!” I said, as he turned to help the next customer, “I thought I could choose my numbers.”

“You bought a quick pick ticket- the machine chose for you.” This was all wrong. How could we possibly win the lottery without my lucky numbers? The only one of them present on the string of numbers he’d handed me was a lonely number 37… hardly enough to win the jack pot.

“How do I choose my own?” I asked, unusually persistent for someone whose painful youthful shyness usually returns with a vengeance at times like these. He pointed to a small table by the front door, and turned to hand the next customer her ticket. “Tisk, tisk, tisk”, the busy little machine murmured with quiet condescension while spitting out a string of numbers, “step right up and take your chances.”

Meanwhile, at the cluttered table, I held in front of me an intimating red ticket with a sea of numbers floating in little white bubbles. I stared at the lines, willing them to make sense. People do this all the time, I scolded myself, you can figure this out.

While I tried to make sense of the columns of numbers, I was distracted by two pressing thoughts. The first: how living in Alameda County, second only to Queens County in diversity, makes everything more interesting, even purchasing a lottery ticket, because I am constantly faced with the opportunity to discover the common threads among all of our human differences. As I watched, a steady stream of lottery winner hopefuls poured into the store, representing in just a few minutes more diversity of age, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status than I witnessed in any given month growing up in Palm Dessert. Some were likely buying the ticket in hopes of buying that second home up in Lake Tahoe, while others were dreams of buying food somewhere other than the neighborhood 7-eleven that week, with something other than their EBT card. All, hopeful.

The second: that my unbidden numbers had materialized two numbers short of the six needed to play a MegaMillions lottery ticket.

My thoughts were interrupted by the man working the liquor store cash register, who had caught a lull in customers and walked over to show me how the ticket worked.

I left the store a few minutes later to the sound of the elderly check out clerk wishing me luck, his kindness in taking a moment to explain the ticket rising up within me to fill the narrow gap just before my ribs meet.

Instead of the three perfect tickets with variations of my numbers that I intended to leave with, I wound up with nine.  Five accidental “quick picks,” and four self selected- one for me, one for Cari, one for the baby, and one extra just in case- because trusting fate is all fine and well in theory, but I’ve always been one for taking matters into my hands.

Next on my agenda was to get busy cultivating the kind of positive energy befitting of someone who was about to win the lottery. I walked the dogs, tidied up the house, and headed to yoga for the first time since we’d moved to the bay area a year and a half ago. If there ever was a time to get zen, this was it. The yoga instructor, a woman in her 20’s with a lyrical, liquid voice and eyes that were somehow simultaneously sympathetic and empowering, instructed us to select a mantra to represent our intention for what we hoped the class would bring us. It was to be two words, one for each breath in and another for each breath out. It seemed crass to select “winning lottery,” even if my breaths would be the only one to hear what I’d selected, so I opted for a veiled approximation instead: “building home”. It seemed open to interpretation, and I hoped that God or whatever universal energies might be listening would be able to gather from it that I wasn’t simply being greedy.

I returned home confident that not only would we win the lottery, but that we would also adjust to our new financial status with the grace and generosity befitting of someone who had been called to fulfill this particular mission. When I arrived I discovered that Cari, also one to take matters into her own hands, had purchased two tickets as well. She’d encountered similar bumps in the unfamiliar process though, and her tickets consisted of one unintentional MegaMillions “quick pick,” and one even more unintentional SuperLotto Plus ticket for a separate drawing the following day. I paced the house while we waited for the 8:00 news to air the results of that day’s highly televised draw, and Cari hit the refresh button repeatedly on the MegaMillions website. We were sharply focused in our attention, unwavering, not unlike how we were in the moments surrounding the dreaded taking of the pregnancy test each month. Weeks of planning and hoping, despairing yet somehow still believing, culminating in three quick minutes of unearthly silence, like the moment you drive your car through an underpass in a rainstorm. Your senses suddenly sharpen, tuning to the unexpected lull in the insistent tapping of the raindrops against your car windshield; simultaneously straining to listen for the moment the sound will resume and yet also disbelieving that it will. With a soft thunk, the curtain of rain envelopes your car again and it is then as if the silence, the anticipation, had never even existed. One line, negative. Sixty numbers, not one single match.

As I drove home from work the next evening, watching the sun drop into the bay and light up San Francisco in a coral blaze, I was flooded with the realization that we had won the lottery after all. Not in a sudden windfall of money, but in the slow, painstaking, halting way forward that is the path most of us follow towards our dreams. A wife and partner of four years, a little house on a quiet street, jobs that are meaningful and pay us enough to survive, two dogs, a cat, and the hope of a baby. To the shy, lonely, teenager I had once been, so terrified by my first crush on a girl that I convinced myself my feelings were just the Holy Spirit calling me to convert her, what I have now is more than I could have ever hoped any lottery win would give me.

The following week, while cleaning off my desk, I came across the forgotten SuperLotto Plus ticket Cari had accidentally purchased when trying to buy a MegaMillions ticket. It’s numbers were a combination of our birthdays and ages. 04 07 22 27 31 02. I opened up my computer to the lottery’s website, and scrolled down to the winning numbers from the week before. Three of the numbers were a match, with a grand total payout of eleven dollars. This unexpected win of eleven dollars, the exact amount of money we had invested in our lottery adventure, seemed to confirm what I had been already been suspecting all week- that what we have is exactly enough.