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Blame

I probably need to figure out how to not blame myself for things outside of my control. Because as you can probably imagine I blame myself for the failed implantation. Maybe I didn’t relax enough during my “princess days” or I relaxed too much. Maybe I did a medication incorrectly. Maybe I’ll make a terrible mother and so God doesn’t want me to have children. The list goes on. It’s interesting that I feel the need to take responsibility for the failure because I am normally too prideful to do so. I also am really bad at attempting things I’ve already failed at once. It will take some mental recovery to try again.

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Ingratitude

After all the poking and prodding, the egg retrieval, more poking and prodding, embryo transfer, more poking, and and excruciating 10 day wait….we’re not pregnant.

Devastated doesn’t even begin to cover what I felt.

There were and still are tears.

The triggers seem to lurk around every corner.

As I was laying in bed listening to a meditation specifically for sleep As I laid in bed running through different scenarios and memories relating to IVF while a sleep meditation was playing I happened to catch a few words of what was said. Gratitude, happiness, generosity and how they were all related.

Since receiving the news Wednesday I have been filled with ingratitude. None of the wonderful things I have in my life husband, family, garden, etc have been enough. I can only focus on the thing I don’t have-children. Thus, making myself miserable any moment of free time.

The way to change this would be to be more grateful right? It will take practice because practice makes permanent.

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Babies

Nope

So 10 days after implantation, they do a blood test to confirm a lady is pregnant. From implantation, there is supposed to be a 60+% chance of taking home a live baby.

Jordan’s not pregnant.

We implanted two embryos.

Still working through how to feel. Not all the feelings are positive.

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Babies

The beginning?

A year ago, we started pursuing this “maybe we should have a baby thing” as intensely as we ever have. (I want to be really clear, I don’t know that we slaved and prayed and cried the way some people do/claim to do.)

Anyway, we took it seriously. Because it wasn’t happening naturally, we started making appointments with doctors to see what could be done.

Last July, we met with a doctor who practices NaPro (natural procreation) methods, with the intent to try to address the root causes of why we weren’t having children. NaPro claims to be as effective as the most aggressive methods (IVF) for reproduction, without having all the excessive amounts of drugs added to your body.

Long story short, it actually doesn’t work at all if the guy is the main cause of the problem. (And these couples aren’t included in the success statistics. So NaPro is actually quite a bit less effective than it claims to be.)

So we move to a men’s fertility specialist who told us all the things we already knew from the test results and offered a potential solution: have surgery that might (~30% likelihood) solve the problem.

Because this is a journey a couple goes on, I figured it was worth going under the knife to see if we could save Jordan a bunch of drugs, injections, and hassle. So in October 2019, I got two new scars just above my pubic bone, where they removed 1.5x the normal number of varicoceles. (Yes, I had trouble running and jumping fro a while.)

Post surgery, they wanted us to wait 3 months to see if my counts improved. They didn’t so we were on to more and different fun.

To this point, we’d worked exclusively with the University of Utah medical system. It’s the first system I’ve dealt with that seems to have its act together, and I really didn’t want to go to a new set of doctors.

But Utah Fertility Center is literally 5 mins away, and Jordan didn’t want to go to SLC for all her appointments (possibly a good thing, but for different reasons). She got what she wanted. That story is elsewhere.

(It was a good thing we went through UFC, even if the customer service has been poor: UofU shut down all non-essential things, including fertility, and UFC didn’t.)

We implant today. We have some (unknown at the moment, but we’ll know in less than 90 mins) number of viable potential humans in test tubes (or petri dishes) that will get a chance to grow up into little gods.

So it’s been a year. The next step of the journey will be almost another year, but by March next year (assuming the worst statistics still ignore us) we’ll have a little human running around.

Well, lounging. It won’t start running around till October 2021 at the soonest.

It’s quite the progress for a year. And we need to start looking into what the next leg of the journey looks like, and how to balance new requirements with good things we already do.

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Babies

Waiting

Jordan went in for egg extraction this morning. (Why they don’t just call it eggstraction is totally beyond me. Marketing opportunity utterly wasted.)

I get to sit in the car and wait.

It’s one thing to consider being a father and having a child come in a normal way. That seems pretty natural. But rushing through manual stimulation to put a sperm donation in a little cup before speeding to the eggstraction (I won’t miss the opportunity) so Jordan can be anesthetized and have eggs surgically removed, then have eggs and sperm mixed up outside the body, live in testtubes for 5 days and have a smaller number put back in seems really unnatural.

Like we’re doing an end-around on evolution.

There’s probably good reasons, biologically, we haven’t yet had children. My parents struggled to get me and my brother. Although we’re pretty awesome in a lot of ways, we’re severely lacking in others.

So maybe although I have a lot of traits that would be good to pass on, the ones that aren’t shouldn’t be? And so for whatever reason my reproductive system is much less effective than others’.

However, the blessing of posterity is the greatest that can be granted to mankind. And anything should be sacrificed to obtain that blessing. Discomfort. Money.

Abraham basically gave everything. Having a child at 100 and 90 (let’s give Sarai her due) seems absolutely bonkers. Then being asked to sacrifice him 14-40 years later when he’s the only inheritor also seems nuts.

Maybe the modern version of that is paying money (a real sacrifice for many people) to have children.

But what will they be like?

Mental health problems are pretty dominant on my mom’s side. Maternal grandfather, both my mom’s siblings. My mom certainly has issues she won’t admit to. Kurt and I both have depressive tendencies, even if we’re not likely to admit it out loud.

Most of Jordan’s siblings have some sort of mental health obstacle. Some cope better with them than others. Jordan copes well some days and not others.

Are we expanding the mental capacity of humanity, while doubling the mental health susceptibility of our children?

Or is that something we can teach and parent around?

Jordan worries about some kids getting my physical genes and some of them getting hers.

That’s probably a good worry.

How will we encourage all of them to grow up to work hard, sleep long, and eat well?

And is it ok that some are beanpoles and some are tanks?

Yes. But how do I teach them that?

What is the world going to be like?

Lots of people buy homes based on the school district they are in. I’m pretty sure in 15 years, school as we know it won’t exist. Or there will be enough options that we won’t have to indulge poorly executed prison systems (that happen to have sports).

If nothing else, the COVID pandemic has taught us that we can act differently than we have and the world will still continue.

Maybe they’ll call me soon and my brain can stop waiting.

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Babies

Anxiety

This blog probably could’ve been more therapeutic for me had I chosen to write my thoughts and feelings down more instead of letting worries run rampant in my brain, but I’m still working on that.

But also had I done that then it would’ve appeared as the ravings of a mad woman.

I’ve done all my shots and appointments that were on my calendar and now I just get to wait. I was told that someone would call me today with further instructions and to not panic if I haven’t heard from anyone by 5.

Um, hi, it’s almost 6pm and still nothing. Do you have to be on the phone with me as I do the trigger injection? If not why can’t you call me and give me the instructions beforehand so I don’t have to sit by my phone all day waiting. Also the inability to contact anyone in your office outside of 8-5 M-F when so much goes on outside of that time frame is hugely frustrating.

I would personally never recommend the Utah Fertility Clinic in PG to anyone. They could’ve done so much more to help reduce the anxiety of an already stressful process and yet they seem to do the bare minimum if that.

Also my plan of care nurse expects me to remember the details of a conversation we had 2 months ago when she unloaded a lot of information on us? But also told us not to worry because she would help us out along the way. That has not been the case.