Some words from The Stirrup Queens
"You don’t understand, so let me
explain.
We thought we’d be able to have children
and then we couldn’t.
It wasn’t a choice to enter into
treatments/adoption/donor gametes; it wasn’t an option.
Having a child may feel like a choice to
you, but it isn’t to us.
You and I will need to disagree on that,
because you’ll never change our feelings about having a family be a need over a
want.
When we’re cycling – whether we’re
trying naturally, doing minimally invasive treatments, or doing invasive
procedures – I am riding on a roller coaster of emotions.
I am angry. I cry a lot. I am
frustrated. I am told one thing and another happens. No one can give me
straight answers. No one can make real promises. We pay A LOT of money for the
chance to have a child. This money does not guarantee that we will have a child
at the end of the day.
We get pregnant and we are elated. And
then we lose the pregnancy.
Or we get news that the pregnancy isn’t
taking and we never get a chance to feel that elation – we only get the
depression on the other end.
Even though I’m a pro-Choice feminist, I
also love my children when they’re only embryos.
And that is a difficult thing to wrap
your mind around.
You think that you know what we’re going
through based on the small amount of information you know.
You think you know how I feel or how I’m
reacting based on what I present to you.
You never see the full picture, but you
make a lot of assumptions.
You are impatient that we plan our lives
like this.
You think you need to make parenthood
seem less enticing – this doesn’t make me feel better. This just makes me feel
like you are belittling the thing I am putting myself through hell to obtain.
You say that you feel like you can’t
support us. And you can’t. Not really. Or not in the way that you want to offer
support.
Infertility isn’t linear. It’s a wavy
line and you can’t know if you’re entering on a crest or a dip. I don’t expect
you to get it right.
I don’t expect you to run in like a
cheerleader and accompany me to appointments or help me raise money for
treatments/adoption.
What I want from you is actually quite
simple.
Ask me how I am and want to hear the
answer.
Ask me about treatments and where I am
in the process.
Ask me to explain to you more of what
I’m going through.
Let me vent.
Don’t try to change my mind or see the
world from your eyes.
I used to have your eyes too before this
happened. And I know you mean well, but even if you say that you went through
infertility or loss yourself, my own experience is unique.
I try very hard to be proactive. I do
this not only by seeking treatment, but gravitating towards other infertile men
or women or other people using assisted conception/adoption.
We are a supportive community.
They take care of my emotions – I rarely
have to explain myself to them. They understand with few words. I enjoy being
with them because it’s easy.
I also enjoy being with you. Sometimes I
like being with you because I don’t have to speak about infertility at all.
Other times, I like being with you because I can talk it out and explain and
hear my own words and make sense of this myself.
Infertility is so different for every
generation. When our mothers and fathers were experiencing infertility, they
had few choices. They had fewer answers.
Now, we have many choices–maybe too many
choices. It makes it difficult to step away.
I believe that I probably won’t
understand much of what my children are going through if they experience infertility.
I’ll try to be there for them and I’ll do my best. But I also know that they
will have opportunities or choices to make that I never had. And it will affect
them in a way that I will never understand because I didn’t go through it
myself.
And that will make me sad because I
really want to be there for them. That’s the closest I can come sometimes to
understanding how you feel when you are dealing with me. So, I’m sorry. I know
it really sucks to watch me be sad and feel like there’s a wall between us.
Infertility makes some women want to
sweep it under the rug. It has made me want to be an activist – not only for
infertility, but for all the taboo topics still out there. I talk about
infertility a lot – not because I’m obsessed with the topic, but because it has
shaped who I am and it is a large part of my life. It has to be – so much of
infertility is a day-to-day monitoring that it becomes impossible to set it
aside fully.
It makes me want to reach out to other
people – and that is something I am extremely proud of that I do. I think I
used to lead a life that was very focused on self and I think I lead a life
that is now focused on others – the children I have, the children I want, the
people I reach out to comfort or help. You may think I focus too much on self
because you may not understand the intricacies of what I do. What I put myself
through because I have a burning need to parent. You may think the choices I
make are selfish. Or self-indulgent. You may think that I like being sad or
that I should just move on. You may think that I’m making unhealthy choices. I
can’t really do anything to change the way you think and frankly, I don’t have
the emotional reserves to focus on you.
We can’t take you to the edge where we
stand – we can only tell you about it. And hearing it is nothing like living
it.
But if you want to stand over here and watch me at the edge, you may find that everything you are scared that I am or becoming isn’t true at all. And if you opened your eyes, you would see that I’m not at the edge to jump, but I’m at the edge because I trust myself and my choices so completely and I know this is where I need to be if I want to fly."
No comments:
Post a Comment