Dana says the formula-maker sent her to a company that sells lists, which then sent her to a marketing company. "It is highly insensitive for people who, I mean imagine if you were going through infertility, if you had recently lost a child, if you are adamant about not having children." “For me, number one-it felt like a huge privacy breach to have something like this show up at a family member’s door,” Dana said. Which, unfortunately, I don’t,” Dana told NBC 5 Responds.ĭana says after she gently explained to her mother that she had nothing to do with the delivery, she set out to find out who did-and how her name got on a list of parents and parents-to-be. “Mom thinks I’m pregnant and this is my way of telling her, since it’s right before Mother’s Day, that I have some sort of Mother’s Day reveal that I am planning to tell her. When her mother opened the box, it contained cans of Similac baby formula. The problem? It was shipped to her mother’s house, in Kansas, the week before Mother’s Day. A package with all the markings of a baby gift arrived, unexpectedly, for Chicagoan Dana Bottenfield last May.
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