Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Forgive Me Bloggers For I Have Sinned...

... it has been over two weeks since my last blog. It's funny how blogging about IF is what I would imagine going to confession being like. You have all these pent up feelings and once you get them out in the open you feel cleansed, free of the things that were weighing so heavy on your mind that you can't just blurt out during everyday life. Blogging is my confessional.

Here's a long one...

I was never the type of girl who wanted to be a mother. I was the little girl who played with stuffed animals and Breyer horses instead of dolls. Rode my pony and spent hours mucking out stalls instead of Barbies and playing house. When I did have a doll it was never a baby doll. My dolls were friends, companions, confidants. When my childhood friends did force Barbies on me my Barbies led glamours jet setting lives without husbands or children. They were highly paid executives driving the silver Barbie corvette to their swanky office, while my friend's Barbies married Ken in elaborate wedding ceremonies and had little makeshift Barbie babies that were actually peanuts swaddles in Kleenex.

In High School I horrified my friends by saying I was never going to get married. I did not want to have children. I wanted to be a travel writer, a news anchor, anything that involved getting out of our small town and into the world. They would say "Oh, Bev... you'll change your mind!" But I was emphatic. Absolutely not. My single, childless life looked free and glamorous. I had my mind made up. The thought of being a stay-at-home mother horrified me. So traditional, so domestic. I looked down with disdain on the idea as simple, old fashioned and boring. That was never going to be me, no way. I watched the jets fly across the sky from the window of my classrooms and dreamed of the fabulous life I was going to have.

By college I had thrown the never getting married idea out of the window. I had fallen in love with the idea of being in love forever. How romantic. We'll both have fabulous jobs, live in a brownstone in New York City. Be connoisseurs of food and wine. I didn't dream about a wedding, but a traveling around the world style honeymoon. Italy, Scotland, India, Africa. My new outlook was even better than the original, now I would have a partner in crime.

Then the unexpected happened. The spring of my sophomore year my father was diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer. He was told he had two months to live. My whole world fell apart. My dad was absolutely everything to me. I transferred to a local school to be closer to my parents. My grades fell. Gone was the Dean's List, the Journalism major dropped. I was lost. The glamous job didn't seem to matter anymore. My escape plan from the suburbs from Oregon faded into a distant memory. The next couple months was spent watching my dad, who was my hero, the strongest man I knew, fight with everything he had against this disease that was slowly and painfully killing him. He refused to give up, and fought it even up to the sunny July day when he passed away in the house I grew up in.

My outlook on life was dramatically changed after my father's death. My delusions on grandeur disappeared with him. The ambition I once was so proud of seemed trite and silly. I transferred again, to a better school, but spent my junior year of college fighting depression and driving home every weekend to take care of my mother. I still did well in school, but my heart wasn't in it any longer. Losing my father had changed me. I didn't know who I was or what I wanted any longer.

One month after I graduated I met Rob. That was it. I knew I wanted to marry him the month I met him. I always scoffed at love at first sight but now I knew. I knew how my parents felt. That kind of love was no longer a mystery to me. When he proposed several months later I didn't hesitate to say yes. One night, after my poking and prodding him for input on the wedding plans , Rob jokingly said he wanted to name our child Macadamia. He was just being silly but I surprised myself when I started to think that having children wouldn't be so bad. I told Rob that he would have to be the stay-at-home dad. He laughed at me and agreed, pointing out that I was going to change my mind. No, I knew it. I wanted him to stay home with the kids. In a way I was still holding on to the shreds of my original dreams.

A year and a half after getting married we decided that we would start trying. I probably wasn't even ready for it then, it still scared the living hell out of me. The negative tests and AF showing up where almost a sense of relief mingled with the dissapointment... for a little while. It wasn't that I didn't want to get pregnant. It was the the thought of being a mother. Being responsible for someone else. The thought of actually having a child absolutely terrified me.

The silver lining of infertility is that now, almost two years later, I can safely say I'm still slightly terrified but completely and absolutely ready for this. I told Rob the other night that I think at some point I want to be a stay at home mom. He laughed out loud at my change of heart. I've come a long way from the silly little girl who didn't know that it is family that matters, not how much money you make, what your business card says or what kind of car you drive. I wish my dad was here to see it, my transformation. I can be both. I can be smart and I don't have to be Suzy Homemaker to be a mother. I'm just not that person. I still have dreams. I still have want to see more of the world. I can be a jet setting wife, a jet setting mother. It is the blending of two dreams. In the end it will be more rewarding that glamorous, but I'm ok with that.


This blog entry is dedicated to my dad, Patrick Greene.

Who made me realize that family is more important than anything else in life.

"In telling the story of my father's life, it's impossible to separate fact from fiction, the man from the myth. The best I can do is to tell it the way he told me. It doesn't always make sense and most of it never happened... but that's what kind of story this is."

- Big Fish

Monday, February 11, 2008

I'm Gonna Be A Supermodel...

I was talking to Rob the other night about the compliments we have had over the past couple of years regarding our reproductive organs. One doctor had said I had a "a really, really good looking cervix", his sperm were deemed"great looking" from his SA, and this last doctor said I had "beautiful" tubes.

Me: "Apparently we are the supermodels of reproductive organs."

Rob: " We are like supermodels. Really, really ridiculously good looking, but that's about all there is to us!"

I'm glad we're to the point where we can laugh about these things together. It feels good. :)

"I'm pretty sure there's a lot more to life than being really, really good looking. And I plan on finding out what that is."
-Derek Zoolander

Friday, February 8, 2008

Hystosalpinogram Day...

So I had worked myself into a complete panic this morning about my HSG. I've heard so many horrible stories about it, and even my doctor warned me about painful they can be. Really, when you think about it, having a catheter shoved into your cervix and then having liquid forced to go north in an area where things usually go south is not meant to be a walk in the park. So I was totally terrified by the time I got into the room with the doctor.

10 minutes later...

RELIEF! It did not hurt a bit. NOT ONE BIT! I didn't even have a cramp. I've had paps that were worse than this, like the last one with the OB/GYN intern was way worse that this. In fact, the worst part when the doctor put in the speculum, which is always uncomfortable. What was even more of a relief was that everything was clear! The dye went through my uterus and tubes and spilled right out like it was supposed to. The doctor said my tubes looked beautiful, BEAUTIFUL! :: blushing :: I feel so lucky because I know that a lot of girls have had a horrendous experience with this and mine was seriously a picnic in comparison.

So I may not have any answers as to why we're not getting pregnant but at least I can check off the list as I get these tests done. Ovulation, check. Thyroid, check. Progesterone, check. Semen Anaysis, check. Ultrasound, check. And now...HSG, check!

So we're back to the business of babymaking. Apparently the 3 months following an HSG you are parituclarly fertile, so here we go!

Thank you for all your thoughts and prayers!

"If it takes my whole lifeI won't break, I won't bend. It will all be worth it. Worth it in the end."
-Sarah McLachlan

Monday, February 4, 2008

Button it up ladies...

Funny thing happened at work today. We took our new hire out to lunch, poor guy, he's the lone man in a department full of twenty to early thirty-something women. Us girls usually have no holds barred coversations at lunch ranging from sex to our wild college days to ex-boyfriends to current gripes with our husbands to sharing too much information about bodily functions. With our new guy around we had all promised to tone down the girl talk a bit.

Lunch was going pretty well until we realized that we were all of the sudden SURROUNDED by babies. Literally..surrounded. I'm kid you not. There were at least five or six women, milling around our table with either brand new babies in slings, strollers or car seats. It was bizarre. One of the girls, who has a one year old, said "Oh my goodness, look at all the babies!!!" She paused and said, "Seriously, I want to have another like NOW."

At that point our good intentions about limiting the girl talk went out the window and all of the girls began ooh-ing and ahhh-ing over the herd of babies. Everyone (except for my boss, our new hire and myself) started talking about how much they want to get pregnant. I should mention that most of the girls in the office are either pregnant or have been pregnant in the last year or are trying to get pregnant.

All of the sudden, my boss, a woman who dotes over everyone's babies but does not want any of her own, annouces, "NO ONE is having any more babies!!! I need you all!! Button it up ladies!"

At this point the poor guys looks absolutely terrified. I'm sure he was thinking, "What the hell have I gotten myself into?".

Poor thing.

I'm pretty sure my boss is counting on me to be the person who isn't trying to get knocked up... if she only knew the truth.

Anyways, it was pretty darn funny!

"We're not barren, we're reproductively challenged!"
-Charlotte from "Sex and the City"

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Alone...

It is strange how alone you can feel when you're not actually by yourself.

AF started last night. Not a big shock. I knew it was coming, I expect it to show up 15 dpo like clockwork. My ovulation days may be screwed up but AF always shows on day 15. Although it is expected it is always like a knife in the heart...every single time.

The feeling alone part came right before bed. Ok, so I was a little moody last night. I was bummed. I was PMSing. I'm feeling the sting of the rapidly approaching 2 year mark. So we get into bed and turn off the light and Rob says,

"So, what's wrong with you tonight?" ( Let me add, he does knows that AF had just started that evening).

What's wrong? Hmmm. Let me think about that. What IS wrong? MAYBE it is the fact that I could have been pregnant almost three times over by now in the amount of time it is taking us to get pregnant once. Maybe it is the fact that we'll be celebrating two years of TTC in April. Maybe it is the fact that I have cramps so bad that it feels like my very emply uterus is being ripped out of my body. Maybe it is the fact that I have a HSG AND A FREAKING BABY SHOWER all within 48 hours of one another next weekend.

That is the answer I wanted to give. Instead...

"I guess it is just that time of them month."

Him, "Hmm, ok goodnight."

Me, "Goodnight."

He falls asleep within minutes. I lay there with tears streaming down my face feeling so incredibly alone. He is usually very supportive, albiet not quite understanding what the problem is, he still thinks it will happen when it happens. But it is starting to weigh on me, the feeling as if I'm the crazy one because it affects me so strongly, because it hits me so hard. Ultimately, what I need and what I want are answers but he can't give them to me. So I would settle for a hug or an "it's ok to feel this way". I just need to feel like I'm not crazy.

My HSG is Friday at 9:45, maybe we'll get some of my answers then. Good or bad I'll just be glad to have something to go forward with. Wish me luck.

"I don't know why they call it heartbreak. It feels like every other part of my body is broken too."
-Missy Altijd
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