Family | Barfield
April 26, 2016Venues | Intimate Wedding Series
May 3, 2016This is National Infertility Awareness Week. Because we are 1 in 8 couples who’ve struggled, I feel compelled to speak up and help break the stigma of trouble conceiving a child.
Three years ago, we were just entering the phase of “lets have a baby!”. My birth control prescription ended in March, we would “avoid” April, because my best friend was getting married in May and overmydeadbody would I be the un-fun, pregnant bridesmaid. I bought a fathers day card, that I just knew I would get to give Jeremy in June. June came and went…. I thought, no big deal, we’ll get to reveal to my entire family during our 4th of July vacation that we were going to be parents. Instead I got stupid drunk.
After almost 13 years of on and off birth control use, I thought… well, my body just needs to adjust.
It never did… or I never did.
I’ve never fully adjusted to the fact I may never well carry a child. I may never get to buy maternity clothes. I may never take a birthing class or hear my baby’s heart beat on a sonogram. I may never get to pee on a stick and surprise my husband. I may never get to wear white pants with abandon for nine months.
If you’re struggling with having a baby, you’re not alone. So many of us have walked the painful monthly cycle of hopefulness met with devastation.
week 1- a new month, a new start… this will be the month!
week 2- make a baby 😉
week 3 & 4- painfully wait!
Heartbreak.
What you don’t realize if you aren’t in the cycle of treatments…. is that the day you get your period, your heartbroken, crying, you have to call the doctor and tell them it didn’t work (or better yet, leave it on their sterile voicemail)…. and 2 days later, you’ve got to pull yourself together to go to the doctor and start a new month of treatment all over again. That was the awful part. You had zero time to grieve before starting all over again. Months go by, and it’s weight compounds on you like interest on a bad loan…. a loan that never matures and is never paid off. It’ll wreck you mentally and financially.
After 2.5 years, countless pills, self-administered shots and too many highs and lows (and a natural pregnancy that resulted in miscarriage)… we walked away from fertility treatment and decided to pursue adoption. I have zero qualms with treatment, but physically and mentally (and financially), we didn’t want to do it anymore.
Unfortunately, the hangover of infertility is that you never stop thinking about it. Not a month goes by that I don’t mentally know when the “optimal” time is (even without the handy iphone app)… or when my period should start. Or that when it does start, I’m still sad. It never goes away, it follows me like a shadow… a shadow that wears white pants with abandon. I firmly believe that adoption is a wonderful thing, and blessed that it’s been put in our path…. but it doesn’t cure infertility, it doesn’t change that biological child size hole in our hearts. But please don’t tiptoe around me, around the subject… you’re just adding fuel to the infertility-taboo fire. Embrace the conversation if someone struggling is willing to open up to you. Just please never say to someone you know is struggling, “oh just do IVF… so-in-so did, it was great!” or “just adopt, too many kids need families”…. both are incredibly insensitive responses and incredibly personal choices. I don’t need someone telling me what to do with my ovaries or my family dynamic. What can you say? “I’m so sorry you’re hurting, what can I do, do you want to talk about it?” is the appropriate response.
I am really thankful that I’ve come over the hump of disdain for people getting pregnant around me. I’m genuinely happy for you if you’ve gotten pregnant… it means your compounding interest finally got paid off. It sucks, and I wouldn’t wish it on anyone.
I still have that Father’s Day card. I cannot wait to give it to Jeremy when we do bring a baby home via adoption. You can read more about our adoption process by visiting Horton Adoption