The Part of Me That Still Lives On

My husband didn’t want more kids after our son, but I always dreamed of a big family. So I secretly donated my eggs to a couple, just to know a part of me lived on. They had three kids, but I stayed out. When my husband found out, he confessed that he’d done something similar in his twenties—he donated sperm to pay off student loans. We stared at each other in shock that evening. Neither of us knew whether to laugh or cry. There we were, arguing over ethics and secrets, while maybe a dozen mini-versions of us were walking around out there. I didn’t do it out of rebellion or spite. It wasn’t about disobeying him—it was a quiet ache I couldn’t ignore.

I loved our son with all my heart, but every time I saw siblings playing together at the park or heard a baby cry in a store, something stirred inside me. It felt selfish to push for more kids when he was clear from the beginning. He had his reasons—his upbringing was rough, and he didn’t want to stretch himself too thin emotionally or financially. I respected that. So I didn’t try to change his mind. Instead, I found a quiet way to contribute to someone else’s family. A couple who couldn’t conceive naturally. We had no mutual friends, lived in another state, and we agreed on no contact. I never thought I’d tell my husband.

It was just a way to find peace with my own longing. But as secrets do, it slipped out one evening over wine and a long conversation about regrets. He was shocked, of course. But then came his own admission. “I donated sperm three times in college,” he said, looking down at his hands. “I never told anyone. Not even you.” I blinked. Then laughed. It was too surreal not to. “So… technically, we both might have kids out there?”

He nodded. “Maybe more than we ever planned.” We sat in silence for a long time that night, each of us adjusting to the strange idea that somewhere, pieces of us were growing up, probably never knowing who we were. Months passed. We didn’t talk about it often, but the topic hung in the air sometimes. Like when our son asked if he’d ever have a little brother. Or when a family with four kids moved in next door and our son watched them with a quiet longing

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