Current:Home > ContactOn Father’s Day, this LGBTQ+ couple celebrates the friend who helped make their family dream reality -Clarity Finance Guides
On Father’s Day, this LGBTQ+ couple celebrates the friend who helped make their family dream reality
View
Date:2025-04-17 16:07:07
PRAIRIE VILLAGE, Kan. (AP) — David Titterington had a sense of what his childhood friend would ask him when she led him into a photo booth at a mutual friend’s wedding roughly a decade ago. As the countdown for the second photo ticked, Jen Wilson popped the question: Will you be my sperm donor?
“Of course I said yes,” Titterington said. “I mean, who would have guessed that, being a gay man, I would have this opportunity to have biological children and also be part of their lives?”
On Father’s Day, Kansas residents Jen and Whitney Wilson will pack up their three children — ages 9, 7 and 3 — and head to picnic at Titterington’s Missouri house to celebrate the man who helped make their family possible. Like other LGBTQ+ couples, they and their sperm donor have created their own traditions around Father’s Day.
“We just have decided to celebrate him,” said Jen Wilson, who works as the executive director of the LGBTQ+ advocacy group Modern Family Alliance.
For LGBTQ+ people, single-parent households, other nontraditional families or those with strained family relationships, Father’s Day and Mother’s Day can be painful and confusing. Events featuring those holidays at school can make some children feel isolated. Jen Wilson said many schools are working toward being more inclusive, such as turning events like “Donuts with Dads” to “Donuts with Grown-Ups.”
“There are families who don’t have a David, who can’t really point to, like, this is what it means to be a dad or have a father figure. So I consider us really lucky,” Whitney Wilson said. She later added: “I think we’re really lucky in that we have lots of people in our life to point to. Not just David ... grandpas and uncles and all kinds of people who are also fathers.”
When it comes to Father’s Day, Jen Wilson said: “People focus so much on just their own father instead of highlighting the fact that there are a lot of really great fathers in the world in lots of different communities and just celebrating them for stepping up and ... being the great dads that they are.”
Jen Wilson and Titterington have been friends since childhood. When Jen Wilson and her wife began planning for a family, Titterington tossed out the idea of being a sperm donor, and he was overjoyed when the couple later made the ask official.
Titterington sees his role in the kids’ lives as more akin to a godfather than a father. He and his husband go to school events and birthday parties, and Titterington said they see themselves as “coaching them from the sidelines.” He said he is partial to the title “blood father,” but the Wilsons said the children more often refer to him as their “bio dad” or “donor dad.”
“I am their father, but I’m not really their parent,” Titterington said. “Because Jennifer and Whitney are the two parents, and they’re doing an amazing job.”
Even with David, the idea that the children don’t have a dad can be hard for them, Whitney Wilson said, but it isn’t “something that keeps anybody in our house up at night.”
“There are a lot of people that would love the opportunity to tell our children how terrible it is that they don’t have a father figure in their life,” Jen Wilson said. “We know that’s not true.”
For Titterington, fatherhood is the weight of the Wilsons’ firstborn falling asleep on his chest, gifts of scribbled artwork that can never be thrown away, and cleaning up after a toddler in potty training. But after a tiring weekend slumber party, he can send the children home to their mothers.
“There’s so many ways to be a father,” Titterington said. “We get to celebrate all kinds of fathers on Father’s Day.”
___
Ballentine contributed to this report from Columbia, Missouri.
veryGood! (266)
Related
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Helping a man walk again with implants connecting his brain and spinal cord
- Wealthy Nations Are Eating Their Way Past the Paris Agreement’s Climate Targets
- How a 93-year-old visited every national park and healed a family rift in the process
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Solar Breakthrough Could Be on the Way for Renters
- In some states, hundreds of thousands dropped from Medicaid
- Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello Are So in Sync in New Twinning Photo
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Want to understand your adolescent? Get to know their brain
Ranking
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Along the North Carolina Coast, Small Towns Wrestle With Resilience
- Keystone XL Pipeline Has Enough Oil Suppliers, Will Be Built, TransCanada Says
- Trump Proposes Speedier Environmental Reviews for Highways, Pipelines, Drilling and Mining
- Trump's 'stop
- FDA advisers narrowly back first gene therapy for muscular dystrophy
- What we know about the health risks of ultra-processed foods
- Priyanka Chopra Reflects on Dehumanizing Moment Director Requested to See Her Underwear on Set
Recommendation
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Would Ryan Seacrest Like to Be a Dad One Day? He Says…
The abortion pill mifepristone has another day in federal court
More women sue Texas saying the state's anti-abortion laws harmed them
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
Heart transplant recipient dies after being denied meds in jail; ACLU wants an inquiry
Climate Science Discoveries of the Decade: New Risks Scientists Warned About in the 2010s
Helping a man walk again with implants connecting his brain and spinal cord