fbpx

Pleading the Fifth

ask a question

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Pleading the Fifth

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Categories

keep in touch

sign up for our newsletter

Pleading the Fifth

I think it’s safe to say at this stage that there isn’t much we keep secret about our family planning challenges and experience with the multiple pregnancy/loss scenario we have found ourselves in.

I think there’s a lot to be gained by being open and honest about your experience – it means others open up to you, you get the opportunity to support each other, and you don’t have to skirt around those awkward “when are you going to have kids” questions that people love to ask.

Most times, if people ask, I just tell them honestly about what our experience has been. Usually, people will take it quite well and often share an experience of their own or someone they know as well.

But every now and then we do find ourselves in a situation where we’re around people we don’t know all that well… and in order to avoid making them feel uncomfortable, there are times when I do skirt around the inevitable “so, when are you two having kids” *wink wink* *nudge nudge* with a fairly ambivalent and non-committal “I don’t know” type of response.

It happens more often than you would think… a couple of examples from this month alone include, at the pool shop, getting my groceries at woollies, and at a casual BBQ… sometimes it feels like you just can’t go anywhere without being asked the big question!

I know I openly promote the notion that if people just talked about their experiences more openly it would reduce the awkwardness of such conversations for everyone… and maybe people would realise that miscarriage and fertility issues are so common (1 in 6 people experience fertility issues and 1 in 4 pregnancies end in miscarriage) that to respond to the big baby question with your honest experience would just be acceptable.

But unfortunately, it isn’t always that easy.

Even though the question can make those of us experiencing difficulties feel uncomfortable… it’s hard to know how to respond to the question without making the other person feel bad for asking.

I don’t know that there’s a real solution, but I have found what works for me is – if it’s someone I know well (friend, family member or colleague) I will just tell them what our experience is.

Usually, most people are understanding and supportive.

If it’s people I know I’m going to see again, but don’t know well enough to gauge how they might respond, I give a fairly standard “I don’t know” type of response and focus the conversation back to being about their kids (people love talking about their kids). My reasoning here is, I don’t want to make them feel uncomfortable for asking and I’m sure when I know them better I’ll tell them eventually.

If it’s people I’m never going to see again… I do tell them. I think if they think it’s reasonable to ask a stranger such a personal question, it must also be reasonable for them to hear my personal response, and generally, I don’t care if they feel uncomfortable about it.

Even though I have these standard types of responses in the back of my mind, there are other times when the question just completely catches me off guard, like it comes out of no-where and I really don’t know what to say at all…

But I do think there’s a solution to all this.

I think if people just spoke openly to their friends and family about fertility and loss (especially since it is impacting so many people in our community!) it would become more acceptable to just say why you don’t have kids when people ask the question (and perhaps less likely that people would ask the question in the first place!)

Although, I don’t think “the question” is the problem.

I think the inability to feel as though we can honestly answer the question is the real problem, and that needs to change.

People aren’t going to understand that these experiences are so common unless they hear it from the people close to them – their family and friends who are experiencing loss and infertility.

We are the only ones who can change this perception that it’s “not ok” to talk about loss or infertility.

So, don’t feel like you need to keep it a secret. The more people hear that these experiences are commonplace, the more it will become acceptable to answer, “when are you having kids” with “when we stop having miscarriages” or “hopefully when we start our next IVF cycle”.

What are your thoughts? Do you think if people spoke more openly about their experiences, the culture around talking about fertility and loss would change? Do you think there would be less of an overwhelming feeling to keep these issues a secret?

Look forward to hearing your thoughts.

share this post

Dealing With Pregnancy Number 5

ask a question

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Dealing With Pregnancy Number 5

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Categories

keep in touch

sign up for our newsletter

Dealing With Pregnancy Number 5

It sounds a little bit daunting even to me to say out loud “this is my 5th pregnancy”.

I wrote a couple of months back that I had been having a pretty difficult time coming to terms with the loss of pregnancy number 4, so I wasn’t sure how pregnancy number 5 would go.

I had been pretty stressed in the lead-up, as I was worried about having had so many D&C’s (sometimes you can get scar tissue which can make it difficult for an embryo to implant) and whether it would impact on our future ability to fall pregnant, plus I think the residual hormones were just wreaking havoc on my general state of mind.

So, I was surprised when I took the pregnancy test and felt pretty OK about it all.

It was Christmas Eve, so I thought I had better take the test even though there was a long shot of showing a result at 6 days early (usually if you’re lucky and have a good quality test kit you can test 5 days early).

I had worried that I might miss out on a lot of the Christmas festivities being on “pregnancy drink and food alert” but it turned out I didn’t actually really think nor care that much about skipping the wine and fresh prawns on the day.

If anything, I think all of the Christmas and New Year celebrations were a perfect distraction from thinking about the status of pregnancy number 5!

I managed to put it out of my mind so much so, that a couple of days after we had welcomed in the new year, I was packing up ready for us to head home after a couple of days of visiting my parents when I started to feel a bit sick… and thought to myself “Oooh I don’t feel well… I wonder if I ate something… oh hang on, that’s right – I know why I feel sick!”

It was funny that my first thought wasn’t of morning sickness, it was “I must have eaten something dodgy”! LOL!
I spent the next few days after that enjoying the rest of our break, chilling out by the pool and burying myself in a book.

I was able to keep myself at arm’s length when it came to thinking about the pregnancy, right up until the point where I figured I had better go get a blood test to confirm it.

So, I went and took the test and then I was able to forget about it again for a few more days as it appeared my OB was on holidays (I’m guessing since I didn’t receive the results until about half a week later!)

Eventually, he called and said the test results were fine and asked if I wanted to take some follow-up tests to confirm that the levels were increasing as they should be.

I declined further testing, based on the premise that the levels usually go up anyway and regardless, I would want to go for a scan at some point anyway.

So, we agreed to leave any further testing and booked in our scan for the 25th of January. By that stage, we will be well over 7 weeks and should get a fairly good indication one way or the other as to whether the pregnancy is viable.

I haven’t been able to keep the pregnancy at the back of my mind this past week or so as the intermittent “morning” “afternoon” and “generally any time it feels like it” sickness seems to hit fairly regularly to remind me that it’s there.

Plus, if you follow along on Instagram you may have seen that my stomach is looking quite large already (and as the nice lady who speaks little English at one of my favourite dress shops pointed out when I picked up my regular size (6) to try on “That no fit you! You try size 10!”)

I had a couple of weeks of blissful unawareness without symptoms but now that the sickness and the belly have presented themselves I’m afraid I can’t really ignore what’s going on anymore, even if I try to.

But even so, I feel OK about it all and ready to handle whatever comes our way next 😊

share this post

An Early Christmas Surprise

An Early Christmas Surprise

ask a question

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

An Early Christmas Surprise

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Categories

keep in touch

sign up for our newsletter

An Early Christmas Surprise

Do you remember a while back I was a little worried that I might end up pregnant at Christmas…?

I had thought about taking a break quite a bit and then I just couldn’t bring myself to it. After almost 2 years and 4 miscarriages in a row, if there was any chance at all of creating a healthy pregnancy, I didn’t want to miss it… so I decided there would be no breaks to be taken.

It kind of looked like we would be in the clear as far as Christmas was concerned, but since I do seem to fall fairly easily, I thought I had better take a test Christmas Eve just to be sure (especially given all the Christmas cocktails we had planned to make… hehehe)!

I had really been trying to put the pregnancy issue out of my mind lately, but throughout the week I had been feeling a bit off…

Gastro had been going around, so I told myself that it was probably just had a mild case of that, but decided JUST IN CASE, I had better make sure to take a pregnancy test on Christmas Eve.

Usually, you can test 5 days early, and this Christmas Eve would be pretty much a week early, so WAY too early to test, but you know, it is good to have some peace of mind.

So the night before Christmas Eve, I carefully placed a test next to my bedside table so I wouldn’t forget to do it (I do tend to get a bit scatter-brained sometimes)

…and first thing in the morning on Christmas Eve I went in to take the test…

…which to my surprise, had a very faint positive line!

I figure a faint positive a week early is a pretty good indication of a real positive (plus there’s those sick feelings I’d been having for the past week….)

So there we go.

No cocktails for me this Christmas… (or fresh prawns… or other fun of any kind…!)

Kidding! I can still have a good time without those things.

I wasn’t sure how I would feel this time around (it is our fifth pregnancy after all…) but I feel OK. I think what Sam said when I told him the test result this morning sums it up fairly well:

“Yaaaaayyyyy….. kind of”

LOL!

I always have hope, even though I know the odds of a healthy pregnancy are slim, so I’m taking it as an “early Christmas present surprise” and we’ll hope it turns out to be a good one 😉

Until next time, Merry Christmas. I hope you get some nice surprises this year too.

As always, feel free to share your thoughts in the comments section below.

share this post

Just Call Me North Korea

Just Call Me North Korea

ask a question

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Just Call Me North Korea

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Categories

keep in touch

sign up for our newsletter

Just Call Me North Korea

…Can’t fire an effective missile.

I know, it’s a terrible joke.

And like me, you might be thinking it’s awful, but it’s so hard not to laugh.

“Just call me North Korea…” was the statement my husband Sam used to try and cheer me up after we found out about our fourth miscarriage yesterday (referring to his ability to produce sperm that don’t have chromosomal abnormalities).

Obviously, neither the North Korea situation nor our recurrent losses are any kind of laughing matter… but sometimes humour really does help us cope with the shittiest of times (and I’ll admit that I did have a good laugh when he said it to me).

If you’re not familiar with our story, this is the fourth miscarriage we have experienced in the last year, and we know that each time we get pregnant, our chances of a successful pregnancy are quite low due to my husbands balanced translocation.

We have both become fairly well adept at dealing with loss this past year, but the loss this time around has really shaken us.

We had our first scan at around 7 weeks, and it was fine. Our measurements were slightly behind schedule, but not enough to cause any kind of worry. For the next 3 weeks, I experienced a considerable amount of morning sickness (let’s call it “all day sickness”), which peaked at about 8.5 weeks and then slowly started to get better each day from there.

You might say that could have been some kind of sign of something being wrong, but honestly, I still had food aversions most evenings and my stomach was getting quite large, so I didn’t have any reason to believe anything was wrong until we went in for our ultrasound yesterday, at what should have been 10 weeks.

Unfortunately we were only measuring 7 weeks, 4 days, and there didn’t appear to be a heartbeat.

It’s not as if we didn’t know it might not work out, I think we both just thought that the chances of having 4 losses in a row were surely not all that likely… but alas we were wrong, and we find ourselves dealing with another loss.

A loss is always difficult to take no matter the circumstances, and while it helps to know there’s nothing we can do (not naturally anyway) to control the outcome, it still doesn’t stop us questioning “why us?” and “how is this fair?”

Most times I feel like I have handled the emotional aspect of the losses quite well. I wouldn’t say I’ve been OK, I have obviously been upset and some days I have felt better than others, but over-all I’ve accepted what has happened relatively quickly and been able to move on reasonably well considering the circumstances.

Unfortunately, there is something about this time that I’ve found harder to take than the others.

I don’t know if I had convinced myself that it was going to be OK this time. Or maybe I had spoken to too many other people who had experienced success on their fourth go, and thought maybe we would get lucky too.

I always seem to hold in the back of my mind that I need to have some kind of hope, just in case that tiny bit of faith that “everything will be ok” somehow tips the scales and results in a good outcome.

Is it even possible to “wish” a bad outcome on yourself? I’m not sure, but I wouldn’t want to dismiss the power of positive thinking either.

I also feel like I need to be grateful in some ways. The other alternatives for our situation could have been a stillbirth, a baby that didn’t live for long, or one that did survive, but had severe physical and mental disabilities. If we had made it to the 10 weeks we would have asked for a CVS, and once we found out there was a problem we would have needed to decide whether to terminate for medical reasons or wait to see what would happen… given the choice, I would prefer the outcome we have been dealt over other possibilities.

It still doesn’t make it any easier to take though. I don’t think any amount of reasoning is going to help right now.

To some extent, I am making assumptions. I don’t know for sure that this loss has been due to the balanced translocation until we get the test results back in a month or so. On one hand, I hope it is due to the translocation, at least that way I know there aren’t any new problems.

On the other hand, it would be nice if it wasn’t the translocation, just for the peace of mind that we can create an embryo that doesn’t have an unbalanced translocation (unfortunately we’re not exempt from other types of chromosomal abnormalities, much the same as the odds of 1 in 4 pregnancies ending in loss for the general population, which around 90% of the time is due to chromosomal problems) …but only time will tell I guess.

There’s no point in continuing to run the scenario’s through my head until we know exactly what happened.

On a totally different topic, and last but not least, my state of mind is not being helped by the fact that I took my cat Sebastian to the vet today (for what I thought would be a tooth extraction) only to find he couldn’t have the procedure due to concerns with his blood work… of which they are trying to determine whether he has a thyroid problem (unlikely) or potential liver disease/cancer. I’m hopeful that it’s nothing serious, but preparing myself for the worst as it obviously doesn’t look good.

Sometimes it feels like we just can’t catch a break?

It’s certainly not doing much to curb my feelings of helplessness at the moment, and even though I know we’re both very resilient and can get through this just like we have so many times before, it’s safe to say we’re both feeling quite defeated, frustrated and upset.

I’d love to end this post on a happy note, but I just don’t have one to share, and I don’t see the point in pretending there is one, so I’ll leave it there for now.

Until next time…

share this post

May The Fourth Be With Us

May The Fourth Be With Us

ask a question

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

May The “Fourth” Be With Us

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
product
Filter by Categories
Fun For Kids
IVF
Life
Marriage
Miscarriage
Parenting
Planning
Pregnancy
Recipes
Uncategorized

Categories

keep in touch

sign up for our newsletter

May The “Fourth” Be With Us

I know, it’s the lamest Mum-joke I could think of.

I thought I’d better practice just in case I need a stock of Mum-jokes in my future…

…but all jokes aside, for any new followers to our blog, what I mean is, this is our fourth pregnancy after 3 miscarriages in a row. We had our first scan yesterday and it looked good!

By good, I mean it was what you would expect to see from an early first trimester scan. It was like a big blurry screen with a little circle in the middle with a teeny tiny flicker inside it, which was exactly what we were hoping to see.

Our embryo was still quite small, so we could only get a measure showing about 6 weeks and 2 days. We could clearly see the heartbeat, but it was tricky to get a reading on it, so we don’t know what the rate was.

I was expecting the measurement to be more like 7 weeks, but at such an early stage we’re not worrying too much about the accuracy of it all.

This is good news for now, but like always, because of our balanced translocation we’re not really letting ourselves get too excited and will just take each day as it comes until our next scan, which is about 3 weeks away.

While we were chatting to our OB, we decided to find out what the gender of our last miscarriage was. He told us it was a girl… which is interesting, as we seem to have managed to alternate each time: girl, boy, girl…

So, our money on this one is “boy”.

What do you think?

Feel free to take a guess and let us know your thoughts. I’m feeling like it’s a boy, but I guess we’ll just have to wait and see 😉

Until then, I am grateful we’re heading away up north for a couple of weeks as that ought to take our minds of it all.

You might notice things go a little quiter on our website and blog while we’re away, but if you like to follow along our social media channels you can still see our daily strategies on facebook and twitter.

We probably won’t be posting as regularly on Instagram (but I will pop some pics of our holiday up along the way). I’m not really sure what the phone or internet reception will be like, but I will do my best to post and respond to emails when I can!

Until we get back, please keep your fingers, toes and everything else crossed for us! 


Before you go, have you or someone you know experienced miscarriage, stillbirth or infertility?

Throughout the month of October, we will be sharing stories to raise awareness and reduce the stigma associated with these “taboo” topics.

Check out this post for more info on how you can share your story.


Looking for child behaviour strategies? Click here to access to all our strategies from infancy through to the teenage years. Make sure you register here first!


Photo Credit: Ammon Creative

share this post

Orders over $55 ship Free! Get FREE Shipping with every Calming Cards purchase.