“My best friend promised me that I would have my baby and now I am a mother thanks to her.”

Georgia holds a newborn baby and Daisy

Image source, Georgia Barrington

photo caption, Daisy gave birth to Georgia’s baby girl, Ottilie, in October.

    • author, Jasmine Ruffo
    • Author title, BBC News

Georgia Barrington had just become a mother, but she wasn’t the one giving birth to her daughter. That moment belonged to her best friend, Daisy Hope, who carried the baby in her womb after a promise they made to each other when they were teenagers.

These two women have been inseparable their entire lives. They consider themselves “soul sisters” and grew up together, with their parents being best friends.

The proximity to their childhood would later become the basis for the act of generosity that changed their lives.

At the age of fifteen, Georgia was told something no young woman would expect to hear: she was born without a uterus and would never bear a child.

The diagnosis, Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser (MRKH) syndrome, affects approximately 1 in 5,000 women, and for Georgia, it was as if her future had been rewritten in an instant.