Adults with intellectual disability (ID) have the same basic needs for intimacy and belonging and the same range of sexual desires and preferences as others (Eastgate, 2005;Neuman & Reiter, 2017). Furthermore, like most persons without ID, many grow up hoping to find a partner and start a family (Bernert, 2011;Siebelink et al., 2006). Marriage, and even more so parenthood, may hold special significance for individuals with ID. As a public affirmation of a person' s sexuality and sexual maturity, parenthood marks a rite of passage into the adult world (Booth & Booth, 1995;May & Simpson, 2003). As such, persons with ID may view parenthood as a path to adult status and the respect it engenders, as well as a repudiation of infantilizing sexual and reproductive oppression. For persons with ID, who may have felt "different" their entire lives, parenthood may be "the great equalizer" (Finucane, 1998, p. 38) or "expression of ordinariness" (Booth & Booth, 1995, p. 33), affording them not only a socially valued role, but also a nonstigmatized identity.Many adults with (mostly) mild ID are experiencing satisfying sexual lives, forming loving and lasting relationships, and bringing up children. Barriers of prejudice and isolation prevent many others with ID from doing so. Community attitudes are slowly changing, but young people and adults with ID are still denied access to sexuality and relationship education, on an equal basis with others;