Cheers, dear readers,
How does one decide when enough is enough?
How much emotional and physical trauma can a person or a couple withstand?
When is the right time to let go of a dream?

These are the types of questions that Eric and I were pondering after our second IVF attempt did not work. It was a big, fat failure actually. Even today, five years later, it is hard to ignore the reality of “We cannot control this failure – not us, not the doctors, not the acupuncturists, no book or new fertility diet or ‘fertility friend’ website.” Most of my life I lived as an optimist, a champion and beacon of hope for my friends, able to leap tall buildings figuratively in a single bound, able to eventually solve any problem. The ‘straight A student’ who never missed a deadline. The one everyone could count on. Yet my body and modern medicine had failed me. And there wasn’t a darn thing I could do about it. So what that I aced every quiz on noting fertility / ovulation signs and had taught myself all the ins and outs of cervical fluid, monitoring temperature readings and knew my very regular cycle like a well-read book? None of it mattered in the end. My plumbing and my fried eggs were toast (pun intended) apparently. No point avoiding the truth of the situation. As Einstein famously said: “Doing the same thing and expecting different results is the definition of insanity.”
There is a myth in our culture that anyone can have a baby with the help of modern medicine. Every tabloid has front page stories of another celebrity well into their 40s, beaming and pregnant. But they don’t like to discuss any back story of how they got there, including possibly withstanding a dozen or more gruelling IVF attempts until success was finally in their hands and wombs. Eric and I did not have this kind of resources to battle the disease of infertility (that insurance does not cover as they do other diseases). But honestly, I don’t know how anyone has the emotional fortitude to go more than several rounds. I had always thought of myself as a strong, healthy, determined woman. Yet after only two IVF attempts, I came to the realisation that there was no way I was going to subject myself to another attempt with the odds strongly tilted toward disappointment, and another round of all of those needles, physically uncomfortable and emotionally upsetting doctor’s appointments, possibly going into debt. For what… another failed attempt? My logical mind, as well as my sensitive heart could not withstand it. I was sure of it!