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NIAW

Lovin’ Julie, Awaiting our Miracle, and Mrs. Mroch!

Sorry for the delay! Let’s get to it! It’s Blog Love time!

First up is Julie from My Sweet Kenny. She just recently honored her sweet little boy who died at birth a year ago on Sunday and called it “Kenny’s Day”. And since she also recently lost her mother-in-law to pancreatic cancer, she could use a lot of love right now.  Go give Julie some hugs (via comments)!

Next up is Awaiting our Miracle. She could also use some love because she recently got the call that her frozen cycle was cancelled. But she should be gearing up for a new cycle this month! Also, to keep her mind off of anything IVF related, she has been working REALLY hard in her Australian garden making tons of renovations! Go send her some love and good luck!

And last but not least we have Mrs. Mroch. She just read Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult and gave it an (A) rating! I have to get my hands on that one soon! ;-) In other news, she has an appointment soon at her clinic and will decide what to do next. I love how she writes, “I’ll take hope any day, even if it’s only a tiny sliver.” Read her myth busting post for NIAW and send her some love!

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Celebrating National Infertility Survival Day with a Giveaway!

So, today is National Infertility Survival Day which I think is so fitting since National Infertility Awareness Week just ended (and rather successfully I might add with more than 300 submissions to the Bust a Myth challenge!) This Survival day started back in 2004 by Beverly Barna author of Infertility Sucks! Keeping it All Together When Sperm and Egg Stubbornly Remain Apart (which I just added to my Virtual Bookshelf from Shelfari). It was invented to celebrate all the hard work and effort that infertile couples put towards trying to have a child which is intentionally dated for the week before Mother’s Day. From Rachel Gurevich’s About article, Barna explains the holiday like this:

“I hope National Infertility Survival Day will lift their spirits and give them the impetus to celebrate themselves and that which they do have. This is not to negate the very real despair they may be facing. Rather, it’s an opportune time to stop and smell the Chanel, and also to blunt the emotional pummeling that can occur leading up to, on and around Mother’s Day. And it’s also a vehicle through which those close to them can provide meaningful, creative, and fun support.”

So today, focus on your strengths, not your losses and go out and do something fun!

To celebrate this day, I wanted to do a giveaway in honor of all of you who are surviving infertility everywhere! I’m giving away this Lia Sophia bracelet (valued at $78). I own one, wear it often, and get tons of compliments on it! Here’s why I love it and want to give it away:

  • It has lots of little hearts to remind you that you are loved!
  • It has a charm with a flower that says “HOPE” to remind you to always be hopeful through your journey.
  • It also has a charm that says “JOY” to remind you to appreciate the little things.
  • It’s a cute, bangley bracelet that I know you will love!!

Here’s what you have to do to enter: Write a comment below on what your perfect Infertility Survival Day would be like. (*And then you can also share that here). Make sure to include a valid e-mail address so I can contact you. The giveaway will be going on all month until the 31st. Here are ways you can have extra entries:

  • Follow my blog (or subscribe to RSS feed)
  • Like my page on FB!
  • Follow me on Twitter!
  • Tweet about it! Your tweet needs to include the link and my name: @stressfreeIF
  • Blog about it linking back to this post for 2 entries! (*Please comment twice, once telling me you blogged and the 2nd one giving me the link.)

*VERY IMPORTANT! Your extra entries NEED to be seperate comments below to count as a seperate entry! Thanks! And Good luck! ;-)

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Meant To Be

Here is my final myth I’m busting for NIAW! ;-)

Myth: “If you’re infertile, maybe you’re not meant to be a mother.”

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You’re a Mom, you’re not infertile anymore!

I’m busting another myth for NIAW! Tomorrow is the last day, so if you haven’t done a post yet, try to get the word out there. There are plenty of myths to bust! ;-)

Myth: You’re a Mom, you’re not infertile anymore!

I went through 2 1/2 years of infertility. To be honest, it doesn’t sound like a lot of time, but the quantity isn’t nearly as staggering as what I endured and how much we actually squeezed in during that time. I’ll break it down for you. Nearly half of that time was spent trying naturally (without intervention). Many of those months, I did what the uninformed fertile usually does…I estimated when I ovulated according to the traditional ‘normal’ cycles of a female and had sex on certain days. Other months (when I was much more savvy in infertility know-how) I examined my CM and charted my temperature. None of this worked. Every month I got my hopes up (like way, way up) and every month, it all came crashing down while I pathetically strained to see the slightest hint of a second line against the bathroom light and only saw a single line of failure staring back. The other much more critical months can be broken down like this: 6 IVF cycles (3 of those frozen) with a total of 14 embryos transferred. That led to 2 negative results, 2 chemical pregnancies and 2 pregnancies that led to my daughter (who is now 4) and my b/g twins (currently 19 months).

So now I’m a mom. Now what? Do you think I’m not infertile anymore? Do you think my infertility is behind me? Well, yes I am and no, it’s not. Once you’re an infertile, you’re always an infertile. Infertility changes you. It can take you to places that scare the hell out of you and also to places that are better than anything you’ve ever imagined.

When I got pregnant with my daughter after several months of natural, unsuccessful tries and 3 IVF cycles, many of my friends and family were pregnant too. But because of what I went through, I knew my pregnancy was profoundly different. I wanted to shout from the rooftops how happy I was. I wanted to shake the pharmacy guy and explain why I smiled so big while I filled my pre-natal vitamins for legitimate reasons. I wanted to tell everyone how blessed I felt to have a miracle finally growing inside of me. But, I also wanted to scream. I was scared that my body would fail me as it did so many countless times. And I wanted to sleep the days away to get further and further along that much quicker so I could meet my baby girl…the baby I thought I could never have.

Now that I’m finally a mother, I am so very blessed. I know that and I whole-heartedly appreciate that every day. Yes, there are days that aren’t easy. I still remember the utter disappointment looking at all those negative tests and feeling the sheer devastation in getting a negative outcome after all the (literal) blood, sweat and tears were shed through an IVF cycle. And, I still grieve the little lives that ceased to live in the petri dishes and especially in my body. They were apart of my husband and I and had the potential of changing our lives forever. And now that I do have children that have changed my life, at times I do have frustrations that most moms of little ones have. But I remember how much I lost through my infertility journey and it reminds me to look at the bigger picture and live in awe of how much I gained. So even though not every day is filled with endless joy and smiles, every day is filled with love, a love only an infertile parent can empathize with.

As an infertility advocate who dedicates so much time giving support to others still struggling through this horrific disease, I am fully aware of  other women who are suffering, crying themselves to sleep night after night, month after month. It is a painful reality I am immersed in all the time. I chose not to shut off that part of my life, stuff it in a shoe box and forget it ever happened. I believe it all happened for a reason; a reason bigger than myself. This disease effects us all in different ways. And admittingly, there are definitely negative ways I have changed. I can be bitter (inwardly mostly), extremely anxious and easily emotional about anything and nothing at all. But I believe the experience has also helped me to be more patient, more loving, more appreciative of all that life has to offer. Without suffering through it myself, without drying my own tears night after night, without ever feeling a deep ultimate fear of never being completely fulfilled, I would never be that person that loves without boundaries, hopes without doubts, or believes in miracles without reservations. Yes, I am still infertile. I have completed my family, but I can never go back to the person I was before (naive, impatient, frivolous, ungrateful). It’s not who I am anymore. It’s like the quote from Flavia Weedn. Infertility came into my life, left a footprint on my heart and I will never, ever be the same.

To learn more about infertility, go to Resolve’s page: What is Infertility? Find out what you can do for National Infertility Awareness week!

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“You’re So Young!”

It’s NIAW and I’m busting more myths! This myth in particular hits home for me.

Myth: You’re so young!

When I first started trying to have a baby…I was married almost 2 years at the time. I had just finished my masters and we were both ready. I didn’t wait for a career or our marriage to ‘marinate’ so to speak. There wasn’t a need for that (not that there’s anything wrong with that need when it arises amongst couples or jobs).

So we started to try. And we were eager as most young couples are, thinking it wouldn’t take long, thinking there wouldn’t be anything wrong. Age never came up as a factor because at the time, it wasn’t. I was only 28 and my husband 29.

But as months grew into almost a year, we knew something was up. So when I saw my OB and he saw a urologist and then we both saw an RE after many invasive tests, we were vulnerable.

As we jumped right into our first IVF (per our RE’s advice as the only treatment that would be successful for us), I remember many nurses looking at my chart (my birthday) with surprise, remarking that patients my age were unusual. One actually told me I was the youngest patient they had there (at that time). And I remember one of the doctors told me because I was so young, I should get positive results quickly. (But that’s another busted myth because I endured three tries each time I wanted a child, six total. IVF simply doesn’t work right away for everyone, even those that have age on their side.)

As I struggled through my first cycle, feeling overwhelmed, I remember confiding in a couple of co-workers (revealing only the delicate info that we were ‘having trouble’). They said how I was “so young,” and that I “had so much time…” It was heartbreaking to realize that the majority of couples my age were so fertile and getting pregnant relatively easy. I didn’t know quite where to fit in or where to turn.

When I finally got pregnant and had my daughter at the age of 30, I was happy that I’d be on the young side when I was ready to try again. But on my next IVF cycle to try for baby number two, when I was merely 31, my eggs weren’t cooperating as well. It took a long time to stimulate my follicles and although initially a positive result, sadly, my pregnancy ended prematurely. Two frozen cycles later, I finally got pregnant again (with twins!) after transferring three embryos the day following my 32nd birthday. Now at 34, people stare at me in amazement sometimes when I say I have three children, saying, “but you’re so young.” And I smile, thinking, if only they really knew….

This is a myth that is definitely busted because age doesn’t really play a factor in infertility. Yes, with age, our eggs deteriorate and diminish so most people think that only older women have trouble or need help. And they may see starlets in their 40s doing IVF and having babies, making it look so glamorous and easy. But it really isn’t glamorous and it definitely isn’t easy, even for those of us doing IVF in our 20s and early 30s. Infertility effects every age, every race, every level of economical status. We are everywhere.

Please don’t assume that “we have time,” because time is only a number and it can’t change other important numbers like sperm counts or cycle days. And please don’t tell your friend, family member, or co-worker that “you’re so young” if she mentions she is having trouble. It may just make that woman feel like she is that much less of a woman, trying to do what most women her age are able to achieve effortlessly.

To learn more about how other factors (*besides age*) can lead to infertility, go to Resolve for some information.

To learn more about NIAW, go to National Infertility Awareness Week.

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Want to win a FREE micro-IVF cycle?

East Coast Fertility is having an essay contest during NIAW! They are going to pick 5 winners (one winner for each day until April 30th) and the winners will get a copy of Jodi Picoult’s new book Sing You Home (which I just added to my shelfari bookshelf) and a Spa Finder gift card. These winners will then be eligible to win a FREE mirco-IVF cycle valued at $3,900.00! You can read all the details of the contest in this post! So since you have only a few days left, start writing those essays! ;-)

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Share Hope


Clear Passage Physical Therapy is having a special campaign called Share Hope during NIAW. On their site they explain that Share Hope is an effort to raise awareness and support for the infertility community. During National Infertility Awareness Week (April 24th – 30th), Share Hope will give infertile couples the opportunity to share their stories and experience with infertility.”

So they are encouraging you to go spread awareness by sharing your story on Twitter (*using the hashtag #sharehope), write a blog post, share on FB, and/or write on a fertility forum such as Fertile Thoughts or Daily Strength. You can also share this powerful video below. As infertility effects so many of us, we could all use a little hope.

Also, grab this button and spread the word…it all leads to more awareness! ;-)

 

 

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Lovin’ all the Myth Busters!

So, tonight during NIAW, I am giving a shout out to all the bloggers tirelessly and creatively busting a whole bunch of myths out there! I’m loving these posts and I’m sure many of you are brewing up some more! It’s awesome how many are getting involved. But it’s not enough to just write your post! Submit it to Resolve and link to it on Tw.itt.er and FB! That’s when true awareness will emerge. Thank you to all who have already participated! For Blog Love Monday, I’m lovin’ all of you!

Here’s the link to the more than 75 blogs who have participated so far!

Read them, become inspired, and get some more myths busted up! ;-)

Bust A Myth Blog Submissions

Pssst…is anyone else having difficulties submitting their blogs? I tried a few times but keep getting a technical difficulty…

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Just Relax!

NIAW starts today! And I’ve decided to bust a bunch of myths!  :-)

The first myth I’m busting is to Just Relax (expressed through a poem):

 

Just Relax!

By Krissi

 

“Just relax…it’ll happen.” That’s what they say…

But that certainly won’t get me pregnant someday!

 

I can’t shut off my brain. My infertility’s a disease.

If I stop thinking’ ‘bout it, that’s just a tease.

 

If I simply sit with a glass of wine,

it won’t help my periods come on time.

 

Listening to a CD and trying to meditate

may ease my stress, but not to ovulate.

 

If I go to the beach and stick my head in the sand,

that won’t help me navigate through IF land.

 

Getting far away and taking a cruise

won’t magically help me spread happy news.

 

If I “stop trying,” even my “not trying” tries

will not help increase my guy’s little guys.

 

If suddenly my ovaries should prematurely fail,

relaxing won’t lead to a baby shower invite in the mail.

 

And relaxing really won’t help my Endo or PCOS.

I still won’t get pregnant like all the rest.

 

No matter how relaxed or stress-free I feel,

my infertility’s a disease. My infertility is real.

 

*To learn more about infertility, please go to What is Infertility?

*Go to Resolve’s page for National Infertility Awareness Week to learn more about how you can promote awareness!

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Awards!

So, I just recently got two lovely awards and I am so incredibly honored!  (And, I decided to combine them into one post!) ;-)

OK, so first Disheartened at Will You Knock Me Up Tonight gave me the Versatile Blogger Award! Thanks! It means a lot to me that I inspire you! So the rules are: you are to grab the award, link back to the person who gave it to you, share 10 things about yourself, nominate 15 recently discovered blogs, and let them know you awarded them…so since it’s ICLW week, I will start off with things about me:

  1. Every day, I know I am blessed and fully appreciate being a mom to 3 incredible miracles and I will never take that for granted.
  2. I am a teacher. I have taught 6th, 5th, 2nd and now 1st grade.
  3. I am a twin. My identical twin sister never had any trouble getting pregnant which was a heavy burden for me since we shared everything in life except this experience.
  4. I’m a capricorn which means I’m quite determined. If I set myself to do something, it gets done (usually).
  5. I live in NY (just an hour outside of the city) on Long Island.
  6. I lived in Colorado for a year and loved the mountains there! So majestic!
  7. I LOVE all kinds of pasta!
  8. Every single episode of Friends makes me laugh, even the re-runs that I’ve watched a dozen times.
  9. I would love to see how other cultures live on the other side of the world and travel to many distant lands.
  10. My husband and I will be married for 8 wonderful years this July and he still makes me smile everyday.

Here’s that list (in no particular order) of very recently discovered blogs ALL participating in ICLW:

  1. The blogger at Dealing With Dorr
  2. Alec at I Want to be a Daddy
  3. Krista at Diary of taking small steps to baby steps
  4. S at Misconception About Conception
  5. Sara at empty whole
  6. marilyn from Trying to Conceive
  7. Tippy from Tippy & Tidy’s Tumultuous Trip to Toddlers
  8. Kat from I’m Very Far Away
  9. Sarah from Bio Girl
  10. lostintranslation from We say IVF they say FIV
  11. angela and david from a toddler, a triathlete, and an entrepreneur
  12. baby steps from Baby Steps to Motherhood
  13. Marianne from The Daily Miracle
  14. Carmela from The One in Eight Couple
  15. SJ from sunshine on jupitor

Now, Keiko at Hannah Wept, Sarah Laughed gave me the Stylish Blogger Award! Thanks Keiko! I feel so stylish and you really are awesome and a true inspiration to me! ) ;-) So these rules are, I am supposed to snatch the image, link back to the person who gave it to me, share 7 things about myself, award 15 other bloggers and contact them so they know they’ve won. So this time, my list will be all about infertility.

  1. Being an infertility advocate is a real passion of mine. I make the time for it because it means a lot to me to be able to help others through such a difficult disease.
  2. I hope to continue to advocate for this disease for a long time to come.
  3. I hope one day insurance companies will cover any treatment that is needed for all patients.
  4. I hope in one way or another, every person affected with infertility has the child they long for.
  5. I hope more research can be done so we can all become more aware of answers to infertility problems and be able to fix them.
  6. I hope one day the fertile world becomes more aware of what infertile couples go through so they can be more supportive.
  7. I hope one day we all can speak up about our infertility and not feel ashamed, lost, or alone.

Here are the blogs I chose: (*straight off the ICLW list in no particular order!)

  1. daega99 from Are We There Yet
  2. Tillie from a nuttier life
  3. Rebecca from The Road Less Traveled (even though I know she won it already)
  4. Jenna from Among the Blossoms
  5. Lisa Marsh from Your Great Life
  6. Whitney from Whitney and Erick
  7. Jess at A Greater Yes
  8. Mrs. Bushey from The Bushey Life
  9. Maria from Mission: Fertile Soul
  10. Lu at The Inadequate Conception
  11. Kate from Busted Plumbing
  12. Aly from The Infertility Overachievers
  13. Jasmine from My Hopeful Journey
  14. Ashlee G. from Savor the Moment
  15. cainml from Raising Cain (someday)
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