Anonymous wrote:Whatever you decide, just be honest with him.
I was in the opposite situation. First marriage for me. Much older husband had three young adults.
My husband agreed to have children. But secretly, he was ambivalent. Although I was very honest with him, he was in denial, loved the idea of having a much younger wife but grossly underestimated how important raising a family was for me. He stalled, threw up roadblocks, did not cooperate, reneged on a promise to do IVF until it was no longer feasible.. He thought maybe I would outgrow it and his adult kids were so awesome, it would be enough for me. He was wrong. It destroyed us. And now it is too late for me.
It is such a cruel thing to do to someone you love.
Make your decision quickly and let him know so he can decide to stay or go depending on how important this is to him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you might be a candidate for a natural cycle IVF. Would you consider that?
Does that mean no hormone injections? I don't know if we'd be candidates because that is not the treatment program the doctor suggested for us.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I guess you can tell from my posts that I am very happy and thankful for what we have and don't really feel the need to change anything. But I know he does which is where my indecision comes in.
Anonymous wrote:Whatever you decide, just be honest with him.
I was in the opposite situation. First marriage for me. Much older husband had three young adults.
My husband agreed to have children. But secretly, he was ambivalent. Although I was very honest with him, he was in denial, loved the idea of having a much younger wife but grossly underestimated how important raising a family was for me. He stalled, threw up roadblocks, did not cooperate, reneged on a promise to do IVF until it was no longer feasible.. He thought maybe I would outgrow it and his adult kids were so awesome, it would be enough for me. He was wrong. It destroyed us. And now it is too late for me.
It is such a cruel thing to do to someone you love.
Make your decision quickly and let him know so he can decide to stay or go depending on how important this is to him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, that is a hard one. In your case, I might try the IVF once. Yes, I think with natural cycle you probably wouldn't need as many hormones. And it might be cheaper.
We were unexplained secondary infertile and did 3 rounds if iui for around $3k at givf (in the end, we wound up pregnant without help, but Sperm count wasn't an issue for us, although low morphology was). Some of the places offer deals like that-I think shady grove has a shared risk pool or something where you pay in a chunk of money for a several IVF attempts.
OP is too old for the shared risk programs if she will be using her own eggs. There are other discount packages offered at Shady Grive but it is still very expensive paying out of pocket.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, that is a hard one. In your case, I might try the IVF once. Yes, I think with natural cycle you probably wouldn't need as many hormones. And it might be cheaper.
We were unexplained secondary infertile and did 3 rounds if iui for around $3k at givf (in the end, we wound up pregnant without help, but Sperm count wasn't an issue for us, although low morphology was). Some of the places offer deals like that-I think shady grove has a shared risk pool or something where you pay in a chunk of money for a several IVF attempts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, so tough. It would depend for me on how badly DH wanted a child. I would consider reneging on the agreement just because I know how important my kids are to me.
Saying that, kids made my marriage a lot more challenging and we fought more, especially when the kids were little and really needy and no one was getting enough sleep. It sounds to me like you already have a lot of potentially challenging dynamics with 3 kids of your own, a new marriage and your new DH finding his place with your kids.
Was he a bachelor before? How is he settling into a more of a family lifestyle?
Yes this is his first marriage. He was previously in a very long relationship with a woman who ultimately decided she didn't want kids, which is why they never married and eventually split up. He is *such* a good stepdad to my children. He is truly wonderful with them. He is caring and willing to do pick up/drop offs, make dinner, braid hair, help with homework, etc. etc. but he never over steps with them. He is very respectful of the fact that they have their own father. He's kind of like a really good, involved uncle. They live with us half of the week (Sunday through Wednesday).