By KATE TAYLOR
Fertility treatment is a lot like doing the Nutbush.
You just follow the steps; left foot back, right foot back, left ovary stimulated, right ovary stimulated.
It’s fun at the start. You kick off with a whole lot of gusto.
But it just keeps going. And going. Keeping up gets harder, and then you start to wonder if it’s ever going to end, and someone please hand me a frozen margarita and show me to the nearest bar stool already because no amount of calf raises could prepare me for this.
Make that a virgin frozen margarita. Just in case the last cycle worked.
You’ll have to guide me to that stool while you’re at it too because I’m blind.
Being blind doesn’t define me, just the same as undergoing fertility treatment doesn’t define me. Even though on the days of scans, injecting hormones and going to the clinic it feels like this is who I am now. It’s not.
What defines me is in itself indefinable. But there are bits I can pick out. Writer. Wife. Vegetarian. Aunt. Germ freak. Sister. Blogger. Runner. News junkie. Tea drinker. Anxiety sufferer. Daughter. Recovering Milo addict.
I’m not just a 30-year-old who has to try really, really hard to have a baby. For absolutely no medical reason at all. Despite extensive testing.
I’m a spectacularly happy 30-year-old with a brilliant, brilliant husband who keeps me more entertained than an entire season of Modern Family, and an awesome job that keeps me busier than my fingers can type.
Top Comments
Have you been checked for killer T cells? After 3 years on IVF and no reason for it not working I found Nick Lolatgis in Melbourne and fell pregnant that cycle with my son. Killer T Cells are part of the unexplained infertility blanket and not many dr's check for it. Nick is the only one I know in Melbourne doing this protocol and having huge success! Worth a thought! Good luck!!
I understand why nobody talks about it. I have a very close friend who was very open about beginning their IVF journey. She was excited and hopeful and expected that it would mean she would be sharing her pregnancy news soon. So she shared the details of what she was going through with anyone who wanted to know. And after a few failed attempts I think she regretted being so open because then she was faced with the are you pregnant yet questions...
After a while she kept it quiet. And after quite a few years of no pregnancy announcement she announced that they had exhausted themselves physically, emotionally and financially and have given up trying.
And other friends who seem to take ages to have a baby or larger than expected gaps between their kids face the awful questions of when they're going to have a baby and just say no right now. And all of a sudden announce their pregnancy and that it was after a long struggle with IVF that nobody knew about. So I understand the secrecy.