Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Forgot to add I was 33 when we started IUIs, 34 when I did my first IVF cycle, and eventually had kids at 36 and 38. The age of 35 is not the end of your fertility.
I mean, 33 was the end of MY fertility, so I don’t think this trope is particularly helpful or accurate on an infertility board.
Np but I think the 35 as end of fertility "trope" is perfectly appropriate here. Clearly 35 wasn't yours, nor mine, nor is it likely to be the OP's. We're all "special cases" here, making a particular year even more meaningless as a fertility reference point. So if op was inclined to revert back to 35 as some sort of threshold or milestone this was a good reminder that it's particularly arbitrary.
Anonymous wrote:A different perspective here. I have severe DOR (undetectable amh, afc of 3 on a good month). My numbers didn't get worse over the 4 years I spent trying to and getting pregnant. They were horrible to begin with, but I did end up with 2 healthy kids, 2.5 years apart. I saw Dr. Reichman at Cornell in NYC for both.
This said, you may regret waiting if you're unsuccessful, wondering what if for the rest of your life. I don't know statistically, but I feel like I was really lucky x2.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Forgot to add I was 33 when we started IUIs, 34 when I did my first IVF cycle, and eventually had kids at 36 and 38. The age of 35 is not the end of your fertility.
I mean, 33 was the end of MY fertility, so I don’t think this trope is particularly helpful or accurate on an infertility board.
Anonymous wrote:PP again. Forgot to add I was 33 when we started IUIs, 34 when I did my first IVF cycle, and eventually had kids at 36 and 38. The age of 35 is not the end of your fertility.
Anonymous wrote:A different perspective here. I have severe DOR (undetectable amh, afc of 3 on a good month). My numbers didn't get worse over the 4 years I spent trying to and getting pregnant. They were horrible to begin with, but I did end up with 2 healthy kids, 2.5 years apart. I saw Dr. Reichman at Cornell in NYC for both.
This said, you may regret waiting if you're unsuccessful, wondering what if for the rest of your life. I don't know statistically, but I feel like I was really lucky x2.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on your diagnosis, but I had DOR and definitely didn’t have a year.
Agree with this 100%. What is you AMH and AFC? That should influence your decision.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on your diagnosis, but I had DOR and definitely didn’t have a year.