Real Life

I married my sperm donor

Aminah Hart reveals how she came to wed her daughter’s biological dad

With a delicate crown of flowers atop her wavy golden hair, three-year-old Leila makes her way down the aisle. Not far behind is the stunning bride, Leila’s mum Aminah Hart, who greets her groom Scott with a warm smile.

It’s not the first time little Leila has been the frontrunner. Aminah gave birth to Leila as a single mother through the help of an anonymous sperm donor. Then, in an extraordinary twist of fate, she met the donor and they fell madly in love. “It really is a case of the cart coming before the horse,” says the Melbourne mum, 46, at the couple’s spectacular clifftop wedding in Sorrento, Victoria. “I never thought this day would happen.”

Scott is also dad to (from left) Belle, Bailey, Jye and Luke.

Past tragedies

By age 40, Aminah had buried two children due to a rare disorder called X-linked myotubular myopathy. Only affecting little boys, the disorder is passed on by the mother. It causes muscle weakness so the baby appears “floppy”, with sufferers often unable to breathe or move unassisted.

Aminah was unaware she carried the disorder when she had her first child Marlon with her then-husband Jake. The little boy survived for 14 weeks in 2005.

Three years later, Aminah gave birth to Louis with her new partner Simon. Louis was unexpectedly born with the same condition. He battled on until he was 14 months old, learning to breathe on his own, until one day his heart tragically stopped as Aminah held him in her arms. “Being a mother without children was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to confront,” she says. “It’s one of the most difficult challenges imaginable, to feel like a mother in every way and not have children to parent.”

By the time she was 41, Aminah was single again. Recognising her daughter’s deep pain, her mother Helen encouraged her to try IVF. Aminah knew she risked losing another baby – a boy born to a carrier mother has a 50% chance of inheriting the disorder – but she says, “I was desperate for a child. I think that primal desire for a child can drive women to the extremes of their coping ability.”

Then, after three failed attempts and almost giving up, Aminah became pregnant.

Several years earlier, Victorian farmer and footy coach Scott Andersen had agreed to become a sperm donor after receiving a call from the IVF clinic two years in a row. “I just thought, ‘Why wouldn’t you help someone?’” he remembers.

Scott – father to Luke, 22, Jye, 20, Bailey, 17, and Belle, 10, from previous marriages – made his donation and ticked the box on the form saying he was comfortable being contacted by donor families. He thought he might hear from a child in a couple of decades, once they’d grown up. “There’s no way I thought this could happen,” says Scott, 44.

In August 2012, Aminah gave birth to a healthy baby girl and she thought life couldn’t get any better. Yet Helen couldn’t help but wonder about the father’s identity. By using the information

on Scott from his donor profile, she found what she thought might be a photo of Leila’s dad on the internet.

“It really is a case of the cart coming before the horse!” says Aminah, who never expected for Leila to grow up with her father Scott by her side.

Instant bond

Aminah decided to contact Scott via the donor Voluntary Register. “I always had a notion I’d try and find him to see if the door really was open for Leila,” she says. Aminah never met her own father – he was based in the UK while she was raised in Melbourne, and although she made the trip to find him in her 20s, she discovered her dad had passed away the year before she arrived.

Aminah’s first communication with Scott was a short email with photos of Leila attached. Scott wrote back and after six months of communication, the strangers decided to meet. Aminah was so apprehensive, she almost turned the car around twice on the way to Scott’s house.

One chilly August morning, Scott opened the door to see Aminah holding his one-year-old daughter. “It was a very strange feeling – hard to know how to feel,” says Scott. “There’s this girl who kind of looks like you and like your other children but it’s not really your child.

“She was such a cute little girl and her mum seemed really easygoing,” adds Scott, who agreed to see Leila once a month. Then as the bond between them strengthened, the trio started meeting every two weeks.

Little Leila has been embraced by her new older siblings.

“I wouldn’t have been game to say anything, but then Aminah said, ‘Look, I’ve got a crush on you.’ And I said, ‘Well, the feeling’s mutual.’ But we didn’t know what to do about it.” Aminah was concerned if they embarked on a romance and it ended, Leila’s relationship with her father could be affected. But denying their connection proved futile and by December 2013, they were officially a couple.

“As soon as I met her, I knew I wanted to be with her forever,” says Scott, who proposed during a trip to Thailand in October 2014. “She’s the most beautiful woman I’ve met in my life, inside and out.” Aminah has been welcomed by Scott’s kids, who affectionately call her “Steppie”, and was touched to see how they’ve adopted Leila as their little sister.

“I thought when I had Leila that was as good as life could get because I finally had a healthy child,” says Aminah. “I’d given up a bit on being able to have it all, on being able to have a partner and a child. Then Scott came along and said he wanted to be Leila’s dad, and I thought, ‘Well, that’s even better!’”

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