Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. First kid at 33, took 18 months of timed intercourse. Second kid took 7 months.
I really do not understand those who ascribe to the whole “timed intercourse” schtick and then wonder why they are having difficulty TTC.
If you are serious about TTC, just be practical, cover your bases, and have intercourse all the time.
Why is that so difficult / hard for a married couple TTC? It should be the norm.
Did you struggle with infertility? Because most people do not have the energy to have sex every day for a year? And if you know anything about a woman's body, most days you are just physically impossible to get pregnant, so...
The man’s sperm can survive inside for up to 5 days after sex. And tests/ predictors and strips are often NOT accurate.
So this whole “timed intercourse” strategy is majorly flawed . A prediction is just that: only a prediction.
But whatever; you do you. Limit your intercourse; good luck with that strategy.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I got pregnant on month 7 and am now 24 weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, took 8 months with first DC. Figured out I wasn't ovulating when I thought I was (not 14 days before period).
How did you figure it out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. First kid at 33, took 18 months of timed intercourse. Second kid took 7 months.
I really do not understand those who ascribe to the whole “timed intercourse” schtick and then wonder why they are having difficulty TTC.
If you are serious about TTC, just be practical, cover your bases, and have intercourse all the time.
Why is that so difficult / hard for a married couple TTC? It should be the norm.
Did you struggle with infertility? Because most people do not have the energy to have sex every day for a year? And if you know anything about a woman's body, most days you are just physically impossible to get pregnant, so...
The man’s sperm can survive inside for up to 5 days after sex. And tests/ predictors and strips are often NOT accurate.
So this whole “timed intercourse” strategy is majorly flawed . A prediction is just that: only a prediction.
But whatever; you do you. Limit your intercourse; good luck with that strategy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. First kid at 33, took 18 months of timed intercourse. Second kid took 7 months.
I really do not understand those who ascribe to the whole “timed intercourse” schtick and then wonder why they are having difficulty TTC.
If you are serious about TTC, just be practical, cover your bases, and have intercourse all the time.
Why is that so difficult / hard for a married couple TTC? It should be the norm.
Did you struggle with infertility? Because most people do not have the energy to have sex every day for a year? And if you know anything about a woman's body, most days you are just physically impossible to get pregnant, so...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. First kid at 33, took 18 months of timed intercourse. Second kid took 7 months.
I really do not understand those who ascribe to the whole “timed intercourse” schtick and then wonder why they are having difficulty TTC.
If you are serious about TTC, just be practical, cover your bases, and have intercourse all the time.
Why is that so difficult / hard for a married couple TTC? It should be the norm.
Anonymous wrote:No, in my experience if it takes over 6 months you need assistance.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. First kid at 33, took 18 months of timed intercourse. Second kid took 7 months.
Anonymous wrote:I took more than a year at age 34. My husband had some outpatient surgery to improve his test results.
But, just as I was on the verge of starting IUI, an ultrasound tech told me the ultrasound was out of sync with what my ClearBlueEasy fertility monitor indicated.
We tried earlier the next month and I got pregnant. 3 years later I got pregnant within 3 months of trying.
My sister did IVF for her first, then had a natural pregnancy that ended in early miscarriage, then a natural full-term baby.
Although I can never know the truth, I think my systematic reliance on a specific technology may have been the problem. I didn't do basal temperature monitoring or any other corroboration. But I'm grateful for the ultrasound tech sharing that the monitors do go off too late in some cases. This was about 20 years ago. So the monitors probably are different now.