Cheers, dear readers,
Cathy here of the Dynamic Infertility Duo, Eric and Cathy. Well, isn’t that a strange title? Ha! So be it! As we like to say in my rock band Surrender Friday, “It Is What It Is.” Speaking of my rock band, as I was deciding what to highlight in this week’s post, I remembered a vital detail in my story that is important to bring to light:
Dealing with what other people think about our actions and decisions about such controversial topics as infertility and IVF treatment.
Last I left you on our timeline, Eric and I had just undergone one natural cycle IVF treatment. We didn’t even get to the implantation stage, as my one egg did not fertilize with Eric’s hand-selected sperm (a technique called the ICSI process). We were highly disappointed, but not licked yet. Along with our doctor’s recommendation, we had made the brave decision to go for the big guns: hormone-induced IVF treatment. It was expensive in our case (health insurance covered literally nothing), complicated (what to do with all of these vials and syringes! How was I going to figure it out! Can’t a nurse just come home and live with me to help me?), emotionally exhausting (the roller coaster of emotions is difficult to describe – from extreme hopefulness to total despair, and everything in between) and … well, overwhelming. Also, we realized that keeping all that we were going through virtually a secret from our acquaintances and co-workers was equally difficult and exhausting. How do you keep showing up at work with a bright smile on your face leading your respective teams when you are trying to will your reproductive parts to cooperate with you and the kind doctors, all while telling little fibs about all of these doctor’s appointments that you have to keep running off to?
It was getting to be too much. Something had to give.
Meanwhile, my band was having some modest success. Our music was tight. We were getting somewhat consistent “gigs”, and I enjoyed the distraction of coming to practice each week to work on something other than scientific baby-making, maintaining my job and my other worries. One of my guitarists was getting anxious and a bit demanding about us learning more and more songs, and getting more consistent gigs. I could feel the pressure mounting. What I needed was LESS PRESSURE as I was about to embark on the most expensive and important medical procedure of my life. It also dawned on me that I was jealous that as male musicians, family creation does not have to affect one’s ability to be a member of a band. The wife and mother must literally bear the burden of the medical condition of “pregnancy” while the male partner can keep up their requirements with their bandmates. Yet as a female singer and musician, how could I possibly meet all of the demands that my body would require going through IVF treatment and hopefully pregnancy and birth, AND still remain a practicing member in a band? Begin inner turmoil…