I did not write this letter, and not all of it applies to me (my sister is not pregnant and I'm not at risk of losing my job), but I do think it illustrates how I feel very elegantly.
A Letter to Family & Friends
- by Jody Earle
I want to share
my feelings about infertility with you, because I want you to understand my
struggle. I know that understanding infertility is difficult; there are times
when it seems even I don't understand. This struggle has provoked intense and
unfamiliar feelings in me and I fear that my reactions to these feelings might
be misunderstood. I hope my ability to cope and your ability to understand will
improve as I share my feelings with you. I want you to understand.
You
may describe me this way: obsessed, moody, helpless, depressed, envious, too
serious, obnoxious, aggressive, antagonistic, and cynical. These aren't very
admirable traits; no wonder your understanding of my infertility is difficult. I
prefer to describe me this way: confused, rushed and impatient, afraid, isolated
and alone, guilty and ashamed, angry, sad and hopeless, and unsettled.
My
infertility makes me feel confused. I always assumed I was fertile. I've spent
years avoiding pregnancy and now it seems ironic that I can't conceive. I hope
this will be a brief difficulty with a simple solution such as poor timing. I
feel confused about whether I want to be pregnant or whether I want to be a
parent. Surely if I try harder, try longer, try better and smarter, I will have
a baby.
My infertility makes me feel rushed and impatient. I learned of
my infertility only after I'd been trying to become pregnant for some time. My
life-plan suddenly is behind schedule. I waited to become a parent and now I
must wait again. I wait for medical appointments, wait for tests, wait for
treatments, wait for other treatments, wait for my period not to come, wait for
my partner not to be out of town and wait for pregnancy. At best, I have only
twelve opportunities each year. How old will I be when I finish having my
family?
My infertility makes me feel afraid. Infertility is full of
unknowns, and I'm frightened because I need some definite answers. How long will
this last? What if I'm never a parent? What humiliation must I endure? What pain
must I suffer? Why do drugs I take to help me, make me feel worse? Why can't my
body do the things that my mind wants it to do? Why do I hurt so much? I'm
afraid of my feelings, afraid of my undependable body and afraid of my
future.
My infertility makes me feel isolated and alone. Reminders of
babies are everywhere. I must be the only one enduring this invisible curse. I
stay away from others, because everything makes me hurt. No one knows how
horrible is my pain. Even though I'm usually a clear thinker, I find myself
being lured by superstitions and promises. I think I'm losing perspective. I
feel so alone and I wonder if I'll survive this.
My infertility makes me
feel guilty and ashamed. Frequently I forget that infertility is a medical
problem and should be treated as one. Infertility destroys my self esteem and I
feel like a failure. Why am I being punished? What did I do to deserve this? Am
I not worthy of a baby? Am I not a good sexual partner? Will my partner want to
remain with me? Is this the end of my family lineage? Will my family be ashamed
of me? It is easy to lose self-confidence and to feel ashamed.
My
infertility makes me feel angry. Everything makes me angry, and I know much of
my anger is misdirected. I'm angry at my body because it has betrayed me even
though I've always taken care of it. I'm angry at my partner because we can't
seem to feel the same about infertility at the same time. I want and need an
advocate to help me. I'm angry at my family because they've always sheltered and
protected me from terrible pain. My younger sibling is pregnant; my mother wants
a family reunion to show off her grandchildren and my grandparents want to pass
down family heirlooms. I'm angry at my medical caregivers, because it seems that
they control my future. They humiliate me, inflict pain on me, pry into my
privacy, patronize me, and sometimes forget who I am. How can I impress on them
how important parenting is to me? I'm angry at my expenses; infertility
treatment is extremely expensive. My financial resources may determine my family
size. My insurance company isn't cooperative, and I must make so many sacrifices
to pay the medical bills. I can't miss any more work, or I'll lose my job. I
can't go to a specialist, because it means more travel time, more missed work,
and greater expenses. Finally, I'm angry at everyone else. Everyone has opinions
about my inability to become a parent. Everyone has easy solutions. Everyone
seems to know too little and say too much.
My infertility makes me feel
sad and hopeless. Infertility feels like I've lost my future, and no one knows
of my sadness. I feel hopeless; infertility robs me of my energy. I've never
cried so much nor so easily. I'm sad that my infertility places my marriage
under so much strain. I'm sad that my infertility requires me to be so
self-centered. I'm sad that I've ignored many friendships because this struggle
hurts so much and demands so much energy. Friends with children prefer the
company of other families with children. I'm surrounded by babies, pregnant
women, playgrounds, baby showers, birth stories, kids' movies, birthday parties
and much more. I feel so sad and hopeless.
My infertility makes me feel
unsettled. My life is on hold. Making decisions about my immediate and my
long-term future seems impossible. I can't decide about education, career,
purchasing a home, pursuing a hobby, getting a pet, vacations, business trips
and houseguests. The more I struggle with my infertility, the less control I
have. This struggle has no timetable; the treatments have no guarantees. The
only sure things are that I need to be near my partner at fertile times and near
my doctor at treatment times. Should I pursue adoption? Should I take expensive
drugs? Should I pursue more specialized and costly medical intervention? It
feels unsettling to have no clear, easy answers or
guarantees.
Occasionally I feel my panic subside. I'm learning some
helpful ways to cope; I'm now convinced I'm not crazy, and I believe I'll
survive. I'm learning to listen to my body and to be assertive, not aggressive,
about my needs. I'm realizing that good medical care and good emotional care are
not necessarily found in the same place. I'm trying to be more than an infertile
person gaining enthusiasm, joyfulness, and zest for life.
You can help
me. I know you care about me and I know my infertility affects our relationship.
My sadness causes you sadness; what hurts me, hurts you, too. I believe we can
help each other through this sadness. Individually we both seem quite powerless,
but together we can be stronger. Maybe some of these hints will help us to
better understand infertility.
I need you to be a listener. Talking about
my struggle helps me to make decisions. Let me know you are available for me.
It's difficult for me to expose my private thoughts if you are rushed or have a
deadline for the end of our conversation. Please don't tell me of all the worse
things that have happened to others or how easily someone else's infertility was
solved. Every case is individual. Please don't just give advice; instead, guide
me with your questions. Assure me that you respect my confidences, and then be
certain that you deserve my trust. While listening try to maintain an open mind.
I need you to be supportive. Understand that my decisions aren't
made casually,I've agonized over them. Remind me that you respect these
decisions even if you disagree with them, because you know they are made
carefully. Don't ask me, "Are you sure?" Repeatedly remind me that you love me
no matter what. I need to hear it so badly. Let me know you understand that this
is very hard work. Help me realize that I may need additional support from
professional caregivers and appropriate organizations. Perhaps you can suggest
resources. You might also need support for yourself, and I fear I'm unable to
provide it for you; please don't expect me to do so. Help me to keep sight of my
goal.
I need you to be comfortable with me, and then I also will feel
more comfortable. Talking about infertility sometimes feels awkward. Are you
worried you might say the wrong thing? Share those feelings with me. Ask me if I
want to talk. Sometimes I will want to, and sometimes I won't, but it will
remind me that you care.
I need you to be sensitive. Although I may joke
about infertility to help myself cope, it doesn't seem as funny when others joke
about it. Please don't tease me with remarks like, "You don't seem to know how
to do it." Don't trivialize my struggle by saying, "I'd be glad to give you one
of my kids." It's no comfort to hear empty reassurances like, "You'll be a
parent by this time next year." Don't minimize my feelings with, "You shouldn't
be so unhappy." For now, don't push me into uncomfortable situations like baby
showers or family reunions. I already feel sad and guilty; please don't also
make me feel guilty for disappointing you.
I need you to be honest with
me. Let me know that you may need time to adjust to some of my decisions. I also
needed adjustment time. If there are things you don't understand, say so. Please
be gentle when you guide me to be realistic about things I can't change such as
my age, some medical conditions, financial resources, and employment
obligations. Don't hide information about others' pregnancies from me. Although
such news makes me feel very sad, it feels worse when you leave me out.
I
need you to be informed. Your advice and suggestions are only frustrating to me
me if they aren't based on fact. Be well informed so you can educate others when
they make remarks based on myths. Don't let anyone tell you that my infertility
will be cured if I relax and adopt. Don't tell me this is God's will. Don't ask
me to justify my need to parent. Don't criticize my course of action or my
choice of physician even though I may do that myself. Reassure yourself that I
am also searching for plenty of information which helps me make more
knowledgeable decisions about my options.
I need you to be patient.
Remember that working through infertility is a process. It takes time. There are
no guarantees, no package deals, no complete kits, no one right answer, and no
"quickie" choices. My needs change; my choices change. Yesterday I demanded
privacy, but today I need you for strength. You have many feelings about
infertility, and I do too. Please allow me to have anger, joy, sadness, and
hope. Don't minimize or evaluate my feelings. Just allow me to have them, and
give me time.
I need you to be strengthening by boosting my self esteem.
My sense of worthlessness hampers my ability to take charge. My personal privacy
has repeatedly been invaded. I've been subjected to postcoital exams, semen
collection in waiting room bathrooms, and tests in rooms next to labor rooms.
Enjoyable experiences with you such as a lunch date, a shopping trip, or a visit
to a museum help me feel normal.
Encourage me to maintain my sense of
humor; guide me to find joys. Celebrate with me my successes, even ones as small
as making it through a medical appointment without crying. Remind me that I am
more than an infertile person. Help me by sharing your
strength.
Eventually I will be beyond the struggle of infertility. I know
my infertility will never completely go away because it will change my life. I
won't be able to return to the person I was before infertility, but I also will
no longer be controlled by this struggle. I will leave the struggle behind me,
and from that I will have improved my skills for empathy, patience, resilience,
forgiveness, decision-making and self-assessment. I feel grateful that you are
trying to ease my journey through this infertility struggle by giving me your
understanding.
Jody Earle
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