Trying To Concieve

The reaction to a Story like this can be so visceral for those in the eye of the storm of TTC reading it might a) feel like a lifeline b) be too painful to read. Neither are wrong. Or maybe both things are true at once.

  • At around six months in my husband told me he didn’t recognise me anymore. I thought he’d seen me at my worst, when I couldn’t leave the house, when I couldn’t go to work but this was different. I’d carried on as normal but it became robotic.
  • I recognised he was right and went to my GP. She explained it was too early to start testing for infertility as it could take years for my hormones to rebalance after being on the pill for over 16 years, but told me if nothing had happened after a year of trying they would start tests.
  • However she did suggest that I went back on to medication to help with my anxiety and took a break from trying. I said no thank you but did start to make changes on my own.
  • I got more seriously into yoga, I started practicing mindfulness and I went to an acupuncturist. I even went to a naturopath who prescribes herbs and diet changes. I did an online CBT refresher. I didn’t get pregnant but I slowly started to feel better. I went on holiday with a friend and finally started to come back to myself.
  • After a year of trying we were given a referral to the Assisted Conception Unit at our local hospital. We had tests and so far they haven’t found anything wrong, I should be happy, and I am relieved but this news doesn’t make me any more pregnant. If the doctors found something wrong at lest they could fix it and just because they haven’t found a problem doesn’t mean there isn’t one.
  • People trying to be kind and helpful tell me: it will happen when it happens, when the time is right, everything happens for a reason, just relax stressing is worst thing you can do (so thanks it’s all my own fault then is it?), two years isn’t that long, it takes some people much longer. It’s normal. And I reply I know but it doesn’t happen for some people. What if we’re those people?
  • I worry that my mental health history will stop us from being accepted for fertility treatments or adoption should it come to it. I worry we will run out of time and options.
  • Just before Christmas we found out we now meet the criteria to go on to the waitlist for IVF in our area. At the moment the wait to begin treatment is about six months. I’m pleased and sort of relieved that there’s something we can finally DO (apart from the obvious) but I still feel in a weird limbo of trying desperately to stay positive and hopeful. While also quietly readying myself for the worst, so that I will be prepared if it doesn’t work.

  • So far trying to make a baby has not worked out as I had planned. I had always (naively) assumed the difficult bit about making babies would be finding someone awesome to make babies with. Thankfully that bit was actually alright. My husband and I got together in 2011, aboutsix months laterwe moved in, we then went on to get a mortgage, got a dog, got engaged and got married, all wonderful and pretty much straight forward. But the next step of my grand life plan has not gone so smoothly.
  • We started down road procreation in January 2016, not really that long ago I hear you shout, but trust me it feels like a lifetime.
  • I want to start by saying I love my life. I have almost everything I’ve ever wanted. After decades of living with an anxiety disorder that I could never quite get under control, and subsequent bouts of depression, my thirties have brought the stability I’ve always longed for. I have finally figured out, for the most part, how to manage my anxiety; I have a supportive partner I’m crazy in love with; the best dog (who is actually a small hairy person); a beautiful home; a job I enjoy; a loving family and the best army of friends anyone could ask for.
  • All that stuff is great and I’m ridiculously thankful for it. But I’m an only child, I’m greedy, and much like Veruca Salt, I want more and I want it now! I want my own family, I want children (multiple).
  • I started on the TTC journey imaging all my husband would have to do is look at me and I’d be pregnant. We’re young, sort of, pretty healthy. What could go wrong?
  • Coming off the pill sent my anxiety disorder into melt down and caused all sorts of physical symptoms that left me a sweaty, greasy, crampy mess (and the acne, oh god the acne!). Never mind the emotional mayhem. I cried all the time for no reason and I had real trouble focusing. My work suffered and my friends started to have quite words with me because I was acting so oddly. This took over a year to pass fully but the first six months were the worst.
  • The irony of this situation is not lost on me. I spent most of my teens and all of my twenties doing my best not to get pregnant. When you’re young they practically tell you you can pregnant from sitting on a spunked on toilet seat, this might be the case when you’re sixteen, it isn’t when your thirty three.
  • Nothing happened, then nothing happened and so it continues…
  • Trying to have sex on a schedule is shit. It sucks all the romance and loveliness out of it. My husband feels like a piece of meat and I feel like a horrible person for nagging, cajoling and having full on temper tantrums to make him have sex with me because I know if we don’t, we might never manage to do it at the right time in my cycle. (I know sexy!)
  • I started to hate my body, I felt like it had failed me. I felt like less of a woman. I stopped feeling sexy. This obviously didn’t help the aforementioned sex situation.
  • It feels like a day doesn’t go by without at least one person asking me if I’m pregnant. I don’t know why, it might be my age or may be Im just fat but it makes me want to cry in the loo.
  • I’ve cut back on drinking alcohol and caffeine, at times completely. This doesn’t help the pregnancy rumours. But mostly it just makes me grumpy as coffee, wine and gin and basically my favourite things in life.
  • The two weeks after I’ve ovulated are crap. I keep imagining pregnancy symptoms: I feel a bit shit, I’m pregnant, my boobs hurt, I’m pregnant, I want to cry at a sad film, I’m pregnant, I feel cramps at an odd time, I’m pregnant! But I’m not.
  • I take my monthly test knowing what the answer will be and it feels like a waste but if I don’t I will be continuously nagged by what ifs.
  • It feels like everyone around me is getting pregnant and having babies. It’s hard to keep my jealously in check and it makes me feel very ashamed that I can’t be more happy for my friends. I realise these sorts of feelings don’t serve anyone though so I’m working on it.
  • I realised recently that I’m angry too. I was very excited to start trying. I always knew I wanted to have kids and when we first started trying I couldn’t wait to be pregnant. I feel betrayed somehow like the joy of what was supposed to be an exciting and wonderful time has been taken away from me.
It feels like everyone around me is getting pregnant and having babies. It’s hard to keep my jealously in check and it makes me feel very ashamed that I can’t be more happy for my friends. Jennie Gibson