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no you don't have to be in a relationship to adopt all you have to do is care for the baby and make sure that if you are struggling you have someone there to help you x
partner parent boss child
the chances of you and your partner having an SS child as you rightly said is 25%.but there is no way of predicting
Generally if a domestic partner is covered then the child of that partner can also be covered.
If your relationship is shaky, then having a child will probably not make it stronger. You should work on your relationship first, to see if you both want it to continue, and then work on things to strengthen it. Having a child is a serious business and will take up the next eighteen years of your life. So you need a good partner who's with you all the way in this.
This particular STI does not necessarly have any effect on the ability to have a child. If you are having difficulty in having a child you should check with a doctor for any underlying medical conditions that may be effecting you or your partner.
The transaction model of communication believes in the development of a child through interactions with a communicative partner. Active signaling can be used by a communicative partner to get the child to speak more clearly.
take it to court and back it up with facts of bad actions of the partner that shouldn't have the child
You dont tell your child,you leave your male partner.
yep.
It depends on the laws of the state.
The time at which you conceive to have a child has no bearing on the gender that your child will be: the gender of your child is dependent upon the sperm that gets to the egg first. Unless your sexual partner is not genotype XY as a male, the chance of having a female or male child is 50-50, regardless of when you become pregnant.