Anonymous wrote:Oh sweetie, it's time to get your sh*t together.
I remember you from six months ago, when I was lingering on this board during my last round of IVF. Now I'm considering DE, and I see you're back, too. If I lived anywhere near you if come watch your kid while you did monitoring, but I can't do the way out 'burbs.
You have many choices here, and they all involve either sacrifice, throwing money at a problem, or doing the thing that seems to be most uncomfortable to you: asking for help. (Welcome not just to parenthood, but adulthood!)
It's time for tough love and here are your options:
*get your husband to switch shifts or take a vacation day. Suck up the financial loss or loss of vacation time as a sacrifice for something you both want.
*ask your MIL to help.
*pay ridiculous amounts of money to a short term sitter to cover the morning shift while you do monitoring. Accept that your kid might not like it, but that it's just and hour out of their life, nothing more.
*get someone at your church or temple or gym or playgroup or library kids group or yoga class or WHATEVER to help you. Go do something to MAKE A FRIEND. Tell them you are in need.
*join the local RESOLVE support group, which meets monthly. Their email is dcbasedresolve@gmail.com. I bet they can help you find a fellow IVF traveler in your area who will help.
*ask a neighbor to drive with you to the clinic in the morning and to watch your (potentially screaming) kid in the car while you go in and do your thing. Tell your nurse you need to be in and out fast because you have issues that make everything challenging.
If none of these options work, then you are, for whatever reason, putting up your own road blocks to the thing you say you want. That's your trip, not anyone else's. And you seem to maybe have some legit reasons for dragging your heels on a second kid.
Best of luck to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's super selfish to reject all good solutions to your childcare issue and then break the no children rule because you "couldn't" find care. Super selfish and lacking empathy. It makes me angry that people are suggesting that to an OP who has clearly not exhausted all avenues for care.
What "no children rule" are you talking about? When I went to CFA for treatment, they had a toy bin in the waiting area for older siblings.
Same with Dominion. If the PPs can't deal with seeing a child in a fertility office, how do they deal with seeing children during the course of their normal day?
I also find it hard to understand why it makes a difference to see a kid in the waiting room or in the elevator or on the street when you leave the clinic. Children exist and you will see them. You will see the pregnant woman the day you miscarry--these things happen. It sucks but at the same time, the world shouldn't conform to fit your issues. As they say, don't pave the world over, wear shoes.
Go away. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's super selfish to reject all good solutions to your childcare issue and then break the no children rule because you "couldn't" find care. Super selfish and lacking empathy. It makes me angry that people are suggesting that to an OP who has clearly not exhausted all avenues for care.
What "no children rule" are you talking about? When I went to CFA for treatment, they had a toy bin in the waiting area for older siblings.
Same with Dominion. If the PPs can't deal with seeing a child in a fertility office, how do they deal with seeing children during the course of their normal day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's super selfish to reject all good solutions to your childcare issue and then break the no children rule because you "couldn't" find care. Super selfish and lacking empathy. It makes me angry that people are suggesting that to an OP who has clearly not exhausted all avenues for care.
What "no children rule" are you talking about? When I went to CFA for treatment, they had a toy bin in the waiting area for older siblings.