Anonymous wrote:If your husband is so unhelpful, will he be willing to give sperm samples? He’ll have to give some during the diagnosis stage. And give more as you go through your cycles. Some places allow you to do it at home. Others make you go into the clinic. Will he be willing to rearrange his schedule so he can give his sperm at the right time and possibly in a clinic setting?
And I just want to say, I’ve seen so many women pushed past their ability to cope with a second child. If you are doing all the work now, do not underestimate how much additional load a second child will be.
And there is no guarantee that having another child will give you a happy family. What if your child has significant issues? What if the siblings don’t get along?
Please work with a therapist before moving forward.
Anonymous wrote:It was a very hard time for me. It basically took over my life for months, and it was hard to focus on work or anything else because of the mental/emotional toll. I only had 2 viable embryos from my egg retrieval, so after the first one failed it was so nerve wracking waiting for the final FET and then waiting on if it was successful (it was).
I definitely could not have done it without the emotional and physical support of my husband - he administered all of my injections for me, was with me every step of the way, even drove me to some of my appointments because he wanted to be there for me as much as possible. I would not do this with an unhelpful spouse. Why do you want to have another child if the burden of everything is already on you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s such an emotional roller coaster. I was prepared for it to be successful and to have a baby or not be successful and I didn’t get pregnant. I wasn’t prepared for it to seem like it worked, then for there to be some doubt about viability, then to have non viability confirmed and to have to wait for my body to get the message. I wasn’t prepared to try again and go through all the injections and monitoring appointments, only to have the retrieval canceled because of a single follicle developing faster than the rest. I was mentally prepared to transfer a single embryo, not have my doctor recommend transferring more due to the low odds of success, but also telling me he’d later recommend embryo reduction if I ended up pregnant with more than two embryos.
Even if these situations don’t happen to you, if you do IVF and still don’t get pregnant, it’s tough to deal with the knowledge that you’re running out of options. It’s not like there are still completely different treatments you can try.
I didn’t find it physically painful, but I have small veins so the phlebotomists were worried that they’d run out of veins in my arms they could use for blood draws. They had started preparing me for the possibility of using veins in my hands. Thank God I didn’t reach that point. It’s a of appointments, a lot of injections, a lot of blood draws, a lot of vaginal ultrasounds, and a lot of following specific instructions, while feeling like you ultimately have little to no control.
I have “roll-y” veins so many of my blood draws were through a butterfly clip on the backs of my hands. It wasn’t bad at all.
What concerns me on your behalf is that the early morning appointment schedule is hectic. My husband and I had no kids and healthy parents when we went through it. It was still … a lot.
OP here. Thank you for this. It's funny you recommend veins, as mine are an issue too. Blood draws are so painful. I'm surprised you didn't have the same issue. They sometimes have to stick me four times to find a vein. That, after a lot of rubbing to bring them up. Did your veins dig further underground as they were poked and prodded? It's a lot of blood draws, so wondering if maybe I should have them try my hands once in a while just to keep the ones in my elbow from becoming even less cooperative. I heard that can happen.
I am hopeful I can keep a bit detached. Not too hopeful. I think that's the only way I can stay sane.
Anonymous wrote:It’s such an emotional roller coaster. I was prepared for it to be successful and to have a baby or not be successful and I didn’t get pregnant. I wasn’t prepared for it to seem like it worked, then for there to be some doubt about viability, then to have non viability confirmed and to have to wait for my body to get the message. I wasn’t prepared to try again and go through all the injections and monitoring appointments, only to have the retrieval canceled because of a single follicle developing faster than the rest. I was mentally prepared to transfer a single embryo, not have my doctor recommend transferring more due to the low odds of success, but also telling me he’d later recommend embryo reduction if I ended up pregnant with more than two embryos.
Even if these situations don’t happen to you, if you do IVF and still don’t get pregnant, it’s tough to deal with the knowledge that you’re running out of options. It’s not like there are still completely different treatments you can try.
I didn’t find it physically painful, but I have small veins so the phlebotomists were worried that they’d run out of veins in my arms they could use for blood draws. They had started preparing me for the possibility of using veins in my hands. Thank God I didn’t reach that point. It’s a of appointments, a lot of injections, a lot of blood draws, a lot of vaginal ultrasounds, and a lot of following specific instructions, while feeling like you ultimately have little to no control.
Anonymous wrote:It was a very hard time for me. It basically took over my life for months, and it was hard to focus on work or anything else because of the mental/emotional toll. I only had 2 viable embryos from my egg retrieval, so after the first one failed it was so nerve wracking waiting for the final FET and then waiting on if it was successful (it was).
I definitely could not have done it without the emotional and physical support of my husband - he administered all of my injections for me, was with me every step of the way, even drove me to some of my appointments because he wanted to be there for me as much as possible. I would not do this with an unhelpful spouse. Why do you want to have another child if the burden of everything is already on you?