Like many 23-year-olds, Sylvia Freedman isn’t quite ready to be a mum. She’s currently studying Communications at uni in Sydney; plus she hasn’t yet met the man she can see herself having kids with.
However, unlike most single women her age Sylvia has been injecting herself with hormones multiple times a day for the past fortnight, and every few days she visits fertility experts to have blood tests and ultrasounds.
Fertility is foremost in Syl’s mind right now because in July, she made what could possibly be one of the most significant decisions of her life: to freeze her eggs.
Often, a woman’s choice to harvest and freeze her eggs comes about because she’s trying to get pregnant, or undergoing IVF. For Syl, it’s a precautionary measure just in case she needs them in the future.
For the past two years she has been living with Endometriosis, a chronic, incurable gynecological condition that affects roughly 1 in 10 Australian women. Syl was diagnosed with the most severe form of Endo – stage 4 – and her symptoms are so debilitating they’ve impacted almost every aspect of her life. Although she doesn’t want to have a baby right now, Syl’s concerned her Endo could affect her fertility down the track when she was ready to start a family. So she decided to act now.
“Egg freezing was my idea and my decision – I was not advised to do it,” Syl tells The Glow. “At the time I made this decision several months ago, I felt like my Endo was getting worse, despite recent surgery in April, and wanted to do something proactive to help ‘Future Syl’ in case I needed it.”
Top Comments
There definitely isn't much information out there for single women wanting to freeze their eggs. I did this 4.5 years ago and also wrote a blog. It's surreal and bizarre when you are not actually ready to have a baby. Good luck Sylvia! Please reach out to me if you need to chat. http://tequila-salt.tumblr....
I am the same age as Sylvia, and froze my eggs earlier this year also for medical reasons. My fertility is already rather low, but due to the knowledge that in the not too distant future will I need chemo I took the drastic step. It was the most horrible experience, and while injecting myself three times a day I was travelling between states for job interviews and carrying the needles in hand luggage.
Although horrible, it was the best decision I could have made - the silver lining is that I don't have a 'ticking clock' and can focus on my career and when I need to have chemo there will be nothing in the way.