I have a few friends who are mentally ill and have children, and to be honest they have all been fantastic parents. Many of them kind of used the pregnancy as motivation to get extra support for theirselves to help them to get better, and as has been said no parent is perfect, all parents make the odd mistake.
As for the genetic component, well there is only strong evidence of a genetic component with some mental health disorders, and even then it's not a "your child will deffantly have X" type thing, it's more a "your child has a higher chance of having X" but there are all sorts of other factors involved in the development of any mental health issue.
So one that basis if mentally ill people are "selfish" for having children due to that slight increase in suseptability (wrong word I now, cant think of right one) then people with cancer or diabeties must be too. And people with genetic disorders are defantly selfish as there is a far higher chance there of the child having the disorder.
Basically I do not think that you having a child is selfish. However, in time between now and the birth (and maybe for a while afterwards) it may be an idea to get as much help as possible to make sure that you (and the father) are stable enough to be able to give the child all they need and all you want to be able to give them
I agree with the support group thing too. One of my friends is bi-polar and when she had her child she told me that the support group for new mums that she went to was more helpful than anything else as it gave her not only support, but also a sence of belonging and a rutine, as well as new friends.
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