I read somewhere that Mother's Day is to Infertiles what Valentine's Day is to single people who just want to be in a relationship, a day to survive, to somehow make it through. That certainly felt true last year. I thought it was so weird how strangers would say "Happy Mother's Day" like it applied to everyone. I realize most of you might not have given this a second thought, but to someone doped up on fertility meds, it was all I could notice. It's like pregnant people, sometimes I think they follow me around on purpose just to be jerks. Last year was impossible. I got through it because I was fortunate enough to spend it with my own amazing mother (and I stayed far away from facebook!). I could focus on how lucky I was to have her as a mother instead of focusing (or at least not constantly focusing) on how unfortunate I was to not be a mother myself.
That was last year. This year is different. My husband and I have put fertility treatments on the back burner. It was time. We were out of money, out of patience and frankly just tired of it. It has been wonderful, like we can start living again. (I know right now you are tempted to tell me that because we have stopped trying maybe we will get our miracle!! Stop yourself.)
4 IVFs meant a year of planning our lives around appointments and injections. Last summer I went to two concerts where I had to do injections in the car while tailgating. Awkward.
This summer we have plans, lots and lots of non fertile plans and I plan on enjoying it. My best friend went crazy about a year ago and became an avid runner, she forced me to sign up for a race with her. Running (even though I still kinda hate it) has been so therapeutic for me. I have a physical goal for myself that I ACTUALLY have control over. I know people might feel sorry for me but I can say at this moment I am that happiest I have been in a long time. I think I can speak for my husband and say he feels the same way. I'm not saying it doesn't sting when I see a pregnancy announcement on facebook, but I'm also not automatically defriending people because of it. Progress. I can even tell people I am happy for them and almost mean it.
We will probably try again eventually. We might even know our next move. But it's not happening right now and that's ok. We are more than ok.
I do hope you take a second to consider and pray for the women who are still in a dark place this Mother's Day, still struggling and hurting. It's a silent pain that is really hard to share.
"From the outside looking in, you can never understand it. From the inside looking out, you can never explain it."
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Friday, March 21, 2014
The infertile part of our lives...
I always imagined how I would
announce my pregnancy, even after starting my first of four IVFs, I had visions
of how it would go. Tears, laughter,
relief, I would tell my expanding
stomach how hard we worked for it.
I would tell my baby how I put countless needles into my muscles and
more hormones into my body than anyone could ever imagine. He or she would hear about our miscarriages
and the difficult times. Our baby would
know how insurance covered 0% of our treatment and how we spent it’s entire
college fund trying to bring it into existence. Our baby would know our frustrations, sadness, and heartache, but most of all it would know our love.
At the beginning of this journey
I wrote a letter to my children telling them how much I loved them and that I
would do whatever it took to get them-my children might never read that letter. Now these visions I've had are replaced with the unknown. I might never make that announcement. I might never talk to my child. The hardest and most gut wrenching thing
is-my husband might not either. My
husband might never teach his son to be as good of a man as he is. He might never hold the daughter that has his
eyes.
Infertility is more than “needing a surrogate,” more than
taking vitamins or lying on my back.
Sure we could “JUST ADOPT” but the money is already spent. “Just relaxing” or “getting drunk” won’t heal
our medical issues. Imagine telling
someone with bad eyes that if they just relax they won’t need those glasses
after all. If we just stop trying it’s
not going to miraculously get us pregnant, I’m sure you’ve heard “those”
stories but I promise it’s more complicated than that.
We can’t say we didn't give it our all, everything in
us. We absolutely did. Four ivfs, two miscarriages, all of our
money, and one dream shattered later and we are still here, still fighting the fight. In a way it kind of makes us special. Most people can get pregnant on their own, if
they can’t they can adopt or do a fertility treatment and it will work out for them. In the end they get to hold their baby in
their arms. We aren’t any of those people. We are something else. We are an unfortunate kind of special. Our friends and our family are wonderful and
try so hard to empathize. Thankfully no
one can, I wouldn’t want them to be able to.
A few people have walked along this road with us but have gotten off
along the way, while we pushed forward, farther than anyone should walk. We are still walking, still trying to find our way.
Am I mad at God? I
never really was. I always lived
thinking “you can’t have the testimony without the test.” Now I am re-evaluating what that means. We have certainly been given the test, so
what is our testimony? I don’t know yet. But I do think my testimony is coming, I
think someday it will make sense and God’s plan will reveal itself. But right now? I don’t know.
What I do know? I know I love my
husband more now than I think I could have without our infertility. We have faced the worst and held on to each
other tighter. I don’t take that for
granted. I know it can break people,
break marriages. God and my husband have
kept me alive during this, not just alive but happy. Yes somehow I will be happy anyway. We are hurt, and we are sad but we are not
broken. We are just infertile.
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