Hi Aunty Jenny, I trust that you are keeping well. I have been meaning to pop you a message and send you my experience as an egg donar for the blog🤍
Here it is …
Becoming an egg donor was never just a medical decision for me. it was a deeply personal and meaningful gesture rooted in empathy and the desire to help others build families. Over the course of seven donations (with special consent from the clinic for the seventh one), I’ve had the honor of playing a small but significant role in someone else’s dream of becoming a parent. It’s an experience that has shaped me profoundly.
Each cycle came with its own challenges, physically, emotionally, and logistically, but knowing the end result could be the sound of a baby’s laughter in someone’s home made every step worthwhile. The process required responsibility, self-care, and trust in the medical teams who guided me. I always felt supported, informed, and valued, not just as a donor, but as a person making a meaningful choice.
Aunty Jenny deserves a special mention here. She is truly remarkable not only in the way she runs her agency with professionalism and care, but also in the kindness, support, and warmth she brings to each donor’s journey. Having someone like her by my side made the process not just safe, but genuinely beautiful. She has a gift for making people feel valued, and I’m so grateful to have had her guidance.
What made the experience truly beautiful was the perspective it gave me on generosity and connection. I didn’t meet the families, but I carry a quiet joy knowing that somewhere in the world, lives were changed for the better because I said yes.
If you’re considering becoming a donor, know that it’s not just a clinical act, it’s a gift of hope, of possibility. For me, donating seven times wasn’t about numbers, it was about love, legacy, and the belief that helping others create life is one of the most powerful gestures we can make.