Two days until my EDD and I still feel like like hell. My new provider has doubled my dosage of metformin so I feel like I am going to puke at any moment which does not help at all. I finally broke down and got tickets to Vegas for my husband and I at the end of the month, the same week as our appointment with the specialist. I have been planning my life around my cycles since our loss and we have not gone on any vacations and I really need some fun in the sun. It will only be a short break but we definitely need it. We were able to get in for a SA this week and are anxiously awaiting the results of that. At this point we really don't expect any positive news from any part of this process.
Here is something else that I found online about infertility and it really hits the nail on the head.
1. Lonely.-- We saw couple
after couple get pregnant before us, our best friends included. When
they told us, we high-fived them, then we went home, and hardly knew
what to say to each other.
We felt lost, sad, and even lonelier than before. We were excited for
them; we were just very sad for us.
It’s okay to go home and cry your eyes out when your friends get pregnant.
2. Exposed.-- Everybody wants to give you advice, and some people say incredibly stupid things. My favorite:
“You just need to stop trying so hard!”
Some people want to know every excruciating detail of what you’re doing
to get pregnant. Suddenly, your most private details are the subject of
casual conversation.
Once people know you’re trying, people want to know how it’s going, if
you’ve done artificial insemination, if you’d consider IVF, and how it
felt in that small white room with the gross leather chair & the bad
magazines.
It’s okay to avoid the question, smile, and change the subject. Keep
as many things private as you can (except to a few trusted friends).
3. On Hold.-- We were
always checking the calendar, wondering if we should plan that vacation,
or that work trip, because what if we’re pregnant? Then we stopped
doing that, because we would have never lived if we
would have scheduled everything around a “what if.”
It’s okay to miss a month or two; you have to live your life. This is
hard, but over the long haul, it will create more stress if you feel so
trapped that you can’t plan anything. We even found that it’s good to
take a month off now and then.
4. Invaded.-- For women,
there are so many things entering your body (probes, needles, drugs) and
so many people measuring your progress. Even sex, at the mercy of a
calendar or a temperature reading, can feel invasive.
The loss of control can almost merge into a loss of self. But, it
feels like once you’ve started down this road, there’s no stopping until
you get pregnant.
It’s okay to say what you need, and it’s okay to shore up your boundaries in whatever ways you can.
5. Awkward.-- During one
of the first visits where I was given the small cup and ceremoniously
ushered into the small room, I actually ran into some people from my
church afterwards. Of course they had their baby
with them. I had a small cup that contained very personal contents with
me. They asked, “What are you doing here?” I mean, what do you say?
It’s okay to laugh at yourself sometimes. And when someone catches you with your cup in your hand, that’s all you can do.
6. Angry.--
Unfair is the password that gets you into the infertility club. Mary tells a story of a friend asking her if she was angry with God.
“No!” she blurted.
“I’m angry at pregnant women!”
She knew this was irrational, but she also knew that it was good for
her soul to be honest in safe places. You actually may be angry with
God, and you may need to
find some safe places to be honest about that.
It’s okay to express the darkness, even the stuff you’re terribly
embarrassed about, because it’s good for your soul. But in the right
places, with people who can handle it.
7. Stressed.-- Even though it seems like a stressed out couple is less likely to get pregnant,
The American Society for Reproductive Medicine finds that there
is no proof stress causes infertility. Besides, trying hard to “not be
so stressed about it” never worked for us. It also didn’t help to “just
stop trying.” Everybody has a friend who was
infertile for 73 years, and the day they stopped trying, they got
pregnant. That never happened with us.
It’s okay to be stressed. Don’t stress about your stress. Trying hard not to be stressed is silly.
8. Despair.-- The cycle of
hope and despair with infertility can take you out. I remember getting
so excited when Mary was 2 days late, and just
knowing that this time, it’s going to happen! Then, a few
days or hours later, when she told me she got “it,” I would plunge into
despair. The alternative is to temper your hope so that your despair
doesn’t get so low. After about a hundred months
of experiencing this cycle, we found that the best route is to keep
hoping, and if it doesn’t happen, keep crying. It’s too hard to pretend
that you’re not excited and that you’re not depressed. Be excited. Be
depressed.
It’s okay to hope, and it’s okay to cry. Keep hoping and keep crying.
9. Loss.-- This was not how it was supposed to be. This was not what you dreamed it would be. And you don’t know how it will end.
It’s okay if you don’t know how to wrap your mind around your
emotions. Be gentle with yourself for not totally having control of how
you feel from moment to moment.
10. Ambivalence--. Every
time you have to go through another kind of treatment, you ask yourself:
“Is it worth it? Do I really want it that bad?” And then in the very
next breath, you are taken out by the sheer magnitude
of how much you want a baby.
It’s okay to want and not want. That’s normal.
If you’re struggling with infertility, it can be such a dark time. You
have to be out loud with each other about what you need, and every
journey will be different. You have to give yourselves permission to do
this journey in whatever way makes the most sense
for you.
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