Anonymous wrote:I can’t recall my AMH but my numbers were “good” when I did IVF as a single woman at 36. I skipped straight to IVF because I knew I had endometriosis, which can make it hard to get pregnant even with good numbers. In fact, I did not get pregnant, even with over 2 years of IVF and 5 full cycles. It was horrible. I eventually used donor egg and got a perfect baby. I think it’s hard to know from the numbers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you still incurring new credit card debt, OP? Where did that debt come from?
I ask because if you have a pattern of overextending yourself, paying to freeze eggs on credit could be part of that pattern. If, however, you had a catastrophic one time expense of some kind and you used credit cards to get yourself out of that jam, then this is a different story.
I just feel concerned for you that you’re already significantly in debt and now considering going significantly further into debt. And then you’re going to have a baby, which is incomprehensibly expensive, in my experience (especially if you do it alone). If you start out as a single mom with, say, $60k in debt and a $100-$120k income, that’s going to be an extremely stressful life.
Right...and I can get out of this debt in five years if I stick with my budget. I had a series of catastrophic events that propelled me into this debt. My options now are finding a job to cover the egg freezing or hoping that a partner comes along in the next five years...
That’s FANTASTIC that you have a plan in place to pay off the debt in 5 years, OP. Truly. But if all goes according to plan, you’ll have a baby before, and all the expenses that come along with a baby. Plus you’ll have the debt from egg freezing on top of what you have now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you still incurring new credit card debt, OP? Where did that debt come from?
I ask because if you have a pattern of overextending yourself, paying to freeze eggs on credit could be part of that pattern. If, however, you had a catastrophic one time expense of some kind and you used credit cards to get yourself out of that jam, then this is a different story.
I just feel concerned for you that you’re already significantly in debt and now considering going significantly further into debt. And then you’re going to have a baby, which is incomprehensibly expensive, in my experience (especially if you do it alone). If you start out as a single mom with, say, $60k in debt and a $100-$120k income, that’s going to be an extremely stressful life.
Right...and I can get out of this debt in five years if I stick with my budget. I had a series of catastrophic events that propelled me into this debt. My options now are finding a job to cover the egg freezing or hoping that a partner comes along in the next five years...