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It's OK to Say No: why I ended my battle with infertility

11/11/2014

11 Comments

 
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"I would do anything to have a baby! It's worth the pain." 

As I read these words, written by a fellow Endo Sister, I felt guilty and hurt. Here I was, expressing my feelings and experiences regarding infertility, and suddenly what I was willing to do wasn't good enough. 

Some might say I didn't try hard enough. Some may say I didn't give it enough time. In theory, I suppose we are all supposed to leave the door wide open, and subject ourselves to the emotional and physical assault of fighting against our bodies to try to have a baby. But even world class fighters know when to tap out. 

It's a serious injustice in our society that trying to have a baby plays such a huge role in who we are as individuals. I literally turn into one of those cartoon characters every time I read about how giving birth is the ultimate expression of womanhood. I suppose in a society where we sexualize women for entertainment and have to justify ourselves in every corner of our lives, where the major milestones revolve around sexual maturity (our first periods, losing our virginity, our first child, "the change"), we never really stand a chance. For those of us who most likely will never conceive, it feels like we are stuck in some kind of sexual limbo. Our bodies will never be changed by giving life. Any stretch marks on my body are the mark of my own making: puberty, the freshman 15, or in my case, weight gain brought on by medically induced menopause.

For years, I believed that I was preserving my fertility by not having my period. Hormonal suppression destroyed both my body and my spirit, but once I went off the progesterone-only pills, my cycle returned. I ovulated. I had extremely painful periods. I expected to be able to get pregnant, and why not? I was/am young, a mere 29 years old at the moment, but soon to be 30. I was once told by a gynecologist when I was first diagnosed with endometriosis that 30 was the magic number. A screwed up Cinderella story, get pregnant by 30 or risk never getting pregnant at all! 

Two years ago, my husband and I began our journey to start a family. Frantic at first, driven by uneducated doctors who believed getting pregnant would treat my disease. Two surgeries, a miscarriage, and likely two more very early losses later, we made the unbelievable decision to stop fighting my body. While on a weekend getaway celebrating two years of marriage, and two years trying for a child, I said no more. No more blood tests. No more drugs. No more anxious "two week wait." I'm tapping out. 

It's not that I'm giving into defeat, beaten down by life, or tired of heartbreak. My body is done. This year alone, I've had three surgeries for various reasons, but it's more than just feeling sick and tired. I actually feel pretty good, in comparison to where I was two years ago. What is really driving this decision is both what my body has been through, and what might await it if I don't stop.

Let me tell you a little about where my body is today. I've had two excision surgeries for endometriosis, and plan to have one more to remove my uterus for suspected adenomyosis, a disease which causes endometrial-like tissue to grow inside the uterine wall, causing severe cramping, bleeding, anemia, fatigue, and leg and back pain. It is also associated with several pregnancy complications, including placental abruption and early labor. I have bone loss in my spine from taking drugs I was told would "treat" my disease, but which just masked symptoms as my disease continued to grow. I have an extra 40lbs I have been unable to lose since my medical menopause. My joints hurt ever since I took one round of a fertility drug this cycle. I have 12 scars from surgeries that gave me back my quality of life, and in one case, saved my life. I have some fatigue and brain fog from who knows which cause, whether it be my disease directly or long term side effects from suppression drugs. I have a couple kidney diseases, countless aches and pains, headaches, allergies, all somewhat secondary and mostly managed well. And lastly, I have hormonal imbalances. 

We've done a lot of work over the past year with our NaPro doctors to supplement and regulate my hormone imbalances. When we started, my estradiol was too low at ovulation and too high after. My progesterone was low, but close enough to normal that we actually got pregnant! After we miscarried, I continued supplementing my progesterone while we avoided conceiving until my surgery to check for blockages in my Fallopian tubes, since it would be risking life threatening ectopic pregnancy. The day I went into surgery, I found out my estradiol was perfect! Our efforts were successful, and we were given the green light to try again when I woke up with two healthy Fallopian tubes. 

We began again with fresh hope, on the road to our "rainbow baby," and it wasn't long before my period was late again. Yet, something wasn't right. I saw a shadow on my pregnancy test, just enough to get my hopes up, but the next was stark white. For days, I peed on every test strip I had in my house, but that shadow never returned. Although four days late, my period eventually showed. 

Bloodwork came back showing my progesterone was just 6.5, dangerously below the recommended 20 for a healthy pregnancy. Lower than my previous cycle, which was lower than the one before that, and the one before that. This cycle, I went against my gut feeling and took a fertility drug meant to improve egg quality and support my luteal phase by raising my progesterone. Despite that drug, and bioidentical vaginal suppositories, I opened my lab results the second day of our anniversary vacation to find my progesterone was at an all time low...and so was my estradiol. Now, both results were abnormally low, but this time, I also had severe joint pain that made it nearly impossible to use my right hand and arm for weeks. It was all for naught.

I know many people will question why I didn't try IVF. Our decision was complex, a mixture of contraindications and gut feelings. Risk of ovarian torsion and overstimulation, risk of going under anesthesia for a fourth time in a year, a deep, gut wrenching instinct that it just wasn't the right choice for us, and something else. 


A feeling of being called to adopt. 

I've always wanted to be a mother. My husband asked me years ago, while I sat in tears discussing why I wanted so badly to try for a baby, "What about your career? Don't you want to work on that first?" No...I'd give up my career in a heartbeat to be a mom. I went to college and received my masters degree because everyone has a place in society, and I loved working with children, but my heart's true desire was to have children of my own. 

It is devastating to not have that wish filled by a biological child. I'll never feel a kick inside my body, or know what it's like to be utterly uncomfortable and exhausted at the same time as complete joy and fulfillment. I'll never push through 36 hours of labor and struggle to guide my child toward my breast for the first time, desperate that she latch on and learn to nurse. I'll never sit in the middle of my friends and family, tying ribbons around my belly and opening precious little baby socks and diaper cakes. I do so very much want those things. But there's something I want even more.

A healthy body. One that is able to care for my children, whom I will have someday. Born in my heart, carried home perhaps at six months or two years old, cherished and nurtured and loved. I will raise my children with the knowledge that I put their needs above my own desires. They need a mom, whole and happy, and not beaten down by life and medical procedures. Not pushed to the brink by miscarriage after miscarriage because the pregnancies just wouldn't stick. 

When you go through parenting preparation courses, you discuss legal risk and the potential emotional roller coaster of adoption. Building a family when you have infertility isn't easy, no matter how you end up doing it. I know one thing, though. 

This is the risk I AM willing to take. 

I'm not willing to risk more bone loss. I'm not willing to risk the progression of my disease by increasing my estradiol via supplementation. I'm not willing to risk the breaking of my heart when I tried so hard to achieve a pregnancy only to lose it again. I'm not willing to push myself past what my spirit can endure. I know in my heart that something is telling me it's time to let go. My body cannot do it, not right now. Not after what it has been through. My body needs rest. My body needs pampering. My body needs me to focus on something outside of itself. 

My body needs hope. My spirit needs hope. And somewhere, there is a child or two who need that hope as well. 

I will be that hope. Every step in my life has led me to this moment. The moment when my husband held me in his arms and let me say no. "I'm all done. It's time to stop." 

It's ok to say no. It's ok not to take the next step. If your body is telling you, no more, it's ok to listen. 
11 Comments
Cally Byrne
11/11/2014 04:02:13 am

This is similar to my story. So touching. Such a difficult thing to work out when to stop trying and accept that not every female will have children.

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Amanda Webb
11/11/2014 04:04:33 am

I am very proud of you for making a decision so huge. Even if you never have a baby "of your own" you will still be a fantastic mother to any child. If adopting a baby in order to keep your health up, then more power to you! It's such a delicate subject and I am so glad you have the courage to be so open about it.

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Julia
11/11/2014 04:18:16 am

Wow. Very well written. Thank you. This is very near the devastating decision my husband and I have also just made. I too feel very called towards adoption, but I am still grieving the reality that I will probably never be able to give birth to my own children due to endo and adeno. It is complicated and often frustrating trying to explain to people why we will not try IVF. Many people, in their best intentions, have told me that we haven't tried long enough, given it enough time, been patient enough; even people who have struggled with infertility themselves! I can't fault them for not understanding the complexities this disease causes, and how it reacts so differently in all women, that even the best doctors in the world don't have the answers. For two and a half years we tried, plus the 2 years before that, waiting for other medical issues to clear up, which when I was finally diagnosed with the endo/adeno, we found out probably made all my other problems worse! And then, even after my endo surgery, my hormonal imbalances didn't go away. I'm so with you. I'm tapped out. I'm physically, emotionally, and spiritually just done. wiped. And I agree, it's not so much of a giving up as it is surrendering to my body's reality. I also think about what might happen to my body in the long run if I keep throwing fertility drug after fertility drug at it. I can relate so much to each and every bit of your wonderfully written statement. Really, the best of luck to you on your adoption journey, and if I may ask that you pray for my husband and I as we embark on our adoption journey to parenthood. Thank you!

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Kristen Roy
11/16/2014 11:05:27 am

This was so well written. I felt the same way you did . I longed for a baby to feel a baby kick my stomach and feel it move . That is all I ever wanted in life was to be a mother . I did not have a good mother and I knew I could be the best mother ever, I married a woman and she was 6 years older than me. When we talked about having babies I knew she would go first because of age . But then something threw a wrench in all of that . I was volunteering at a shelter and there was this little girl 17 months old. as soon as we walked in she came knee walking over to us . She could not walk in her feet , she was the best knee walker I have ever seen. I knew in my heart that was my child. we went through parenting classes and fostered her and then adopted her . She had cystic fibrosis and g tube but in our care she blossomed. was running around our house and talking within 2 weeks of bringing her home.Arianna was the light of my life.to have our own children . My wife went first as discussed. I knew at 33 and she was 39 that was the right thing but I knew in my heart after finally being diagonised with endo at 30and the doctors telling me if I didn't get pregnant right away I probably would not be able to. But at 30 I was single living paycheck to paycheck. I met my wife 3 months after my endo surgery diagonises. My wife at 39 got pregnant first time with did artificial insemantion. I was so happy and felt like the happy "father" I even gave my wife the shot to get her to ovulate before insemination . I rememeber the night my other daughter was born at 4 am . cutting her cord . I held her for the first 30 minutes of her life and then watched when my wife came in to recovery after her c section how my daughter started to breast fed her. I had no jealous and I felt like I was her mother too,, through the years I have to say Arianna was made in my heart and I have always been close to her closer than I was to the child I created with my wife . I decided not to try to get preganant as I knew in my heart Arianna was mine and no child could take her place even one that came out of my body . Arianna used to tell everyone she came out of my belly like her sister came out of her mommies belly and I didn't correct her in due time I would tell her the truth .. well after I left my wife and Arianna and I went to live somewhere together our bond grew which I did not think was possible . We had the greatest 16 months her and I . we did everything together . she even looked like me and there was nothing I won't do for her. well then came that awful day . the day my daughter after ironing her dress for her first day of kindergarten she screamedher belly hurt and then passed out as I caught my daughter before she hit the floor . I knew my life would never be the same. My daughter died 24 hours later .My life in my mind my life was essential over . one year later after getiing back with my wife and with my other daughter I tired to get pregnant . I was 36 and I thought if only I had a baby that could help my broken heart. even my other daughter could not mend my heart even when she would run to me and hug and kiss me .. I still craved my Arianna . I tired 3 times and I did not get pregnant I made the choice even if I had a baby my heart still would be broken . I left my wife and started a new life . a new beginning . when I was so sick for 2 years and there was no other choice but to have a hysterectomy . I thought I would mourn my uterus and my chance to have a baby of my own, but I was so sick and knew I had to have surgery I wen to Atlanta and had my hysterectomy at the age of 39 . I felt so much better when I woke up I felt like a new person a person who wasn't suffering with horrible pain day after day . It has been 2 years since I left my wife and she will not let me see my daughter for no reason. still in divorce court fighting but I know I will not get to see her as I need to prove defacto parent . I mourned both daughters . I am now a childless mother and I had to come to terms with that . I am now 40 and getting my life back and a new career . But I mourn not being a mother and I think one day I will save another child and adopt again but I need to get myself together . Just know Arianna is my daughter will always be my daughter and nooone can replace her. I hope my story helps you . I never believed it when people said that about adopting but I lived it and it is true. Your child is out there and you will know the second you hold the child and then nothing in life will matter again

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Breanna Romaine-Guiliano
7/26/2015 03:04:24 pm

Kristen, thank you of your honesty and bravery sharing your story for others to read. I am in tears, gripping at your every word. Your courage, your strength. I believe that our greatest test of strength is when anyone else in our position wouldn't blame us for giving up - but we keep going anyway. You have given me so much hope for the future. I shared a piece of my story below, but this was a great fear. Little things pop up. I have no regrets, but knowing you had such a great bond. Arianna will always be your child, not even death can change that - if you don't mind me saying. While you did not deserve what you face and nothing can take away that pain you feel, your light changed my life. Your story has given me even more hope than I had before. People say such hateful things: "if you adopt you aren't a real mother." But being a mother is more than blood. I never wanted to be a mom as my pain goal, but the losing the choice, that is something i can't explain. I know I will have a family one day, even if it looks different - it can feel they same. Please keep sharing your light, the influence we have when we share our deepest vulneralities is beyond that can be described by words. You lifted part of my burden. Thank you (I am breanna Lettuce from NYC on Facebook, if you would like to connect. no pressure)

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Breanna Romaine-Guiliao link
7/26/2015 02:55:07 pm

When I was making the decision to have a hysterectomy during an excision surgery with Dr. Kongoasa in September 2014, I was 23 years old and a virgin. It helped me make one of the most challenging decisions of my life and I wanted to thank you. I have been working to start my own organization focused on connecting women with physical solutions. I read this to my sister at the time and she said to me "you don't have to suffer to be a mother". It's why I do not regret what I did. In the small chance I could get pregnant (despite the deep endo, damages from pelvic Inflammatory disease, adhesions, scar tissue, etc.), who knows if I could hold a child to term. Or if I would make it there suffering and in the life threatening circumstance I was in. I am now an excision marauder and I share this article to any women facing the removal of any or all reproductive organs. While I was doing better, I recently started to recede again. Which is understandable after a 7/8 hour excision surgery and years of damage. I was fearing that I may lose the only thing I have left, my ovaries. But reading this again, I know what ever happens, whatever I decide - a decision for me, for my body, is the best decision for my future family. Thank you for all you do: "Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure... as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same.” (I accidentally posted this to the wrong article - though all of them made an impact. it's up to you if you would like to keep it on the other article!)

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Neha agarwal link
3/31/2017 01:11:18 am

I can relate to you a little because even I'm infertile and it was painful for me to go on doing treatment for 3-4 years but the good part is finally my prayers were answered and I was blessed with a baby girl. It's feels good to share our pain and thoughts with others it's good that you shared yours with us.

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Kelly
8/1/2017 11:33:43 pm

So sorry for all we have been through those of us struggling with infertility. I pray for us often. Best of luck to you through adoption . My husband and I felt we should try adoption. First before fertility tx. After waiting 3 years and not being close to a match we have tried 5 IUI's and are considering ivf or what we should do next. Adoption has its own roller coaster moments. I asked so many times is my profile good ebough, my pictures, myexpectant mother letter? It's a roller coaster when you find out an expectan mom is looking at your profile and such a disappointment when you are not chosen time and time again. I can't speak on the what if the EM changes her mind once matched because we were never matched. Both roads fertility tx and adoption are hard. I am losing hope but clinging to my faith, family, and friends whi help me through it reading this I am sure I am not alone. I don't know anyone else currently experiencing infertility and that has been hard as well. Hugs and prayers kelly

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Leslie Waller
11/16/2017 06:46:37 am

Our family faced infertility quite recently. About two years ago I was pregnant. I was on the 7 month when this horrible situation took place. I become infertile as a result of an accident. Together with my husband we wanted to have a baby anyway. Finally we decided on surrogacy. We were pressed for money, so looked among clinics in India, Georgia and Ukraine. My husband had to get a loan. We used surrogacy service in one of the clinics in Ukraine. It was so good. New repair and a light building. . I have never met such wonderful people as ones, who work there. They are so pleasant. We were provided with food and everything else we needed. I have never expected to see such service. Surrogate mother gave birth to a wonderful girl. I can`t explain how happy we are. Now we are the happiest parents of a daughter.

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Patrick Quinn link
12/22/2017 12:17:55 am

I am glad that you shared your story with everyone. Same was the case with my daughter. I know how difficult and painful is to know that you can't give birth to a child like other women. I feel really good that there are people out like you who share their stories and it's so encouraging for the ones reading it. Stay blessed!

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Protorol link
9/1/2023 01:51:49 pm

Great share, thanks for writing this

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