CD11: Gobs of Fertile CM...Improvement?
So here's the scoop: Yesterday I nearly screamed when I saw a huge glob of red tinged fertile CM on my TP. I'm not sure why on day 10 I'm still spotting...but I was. TMI? Yes. But it's kind of significant because it's been going on for nearly three days. Three days of the stretchy stuff. Dr. Hungarian would say this is ominous that his treatment is working. If it weren't for my absent tubes, I'd be fertile as all hell. My gawd.
So we're in the midst of an entire month of Zithromax and Flagyl and I'm having second thoughts about doing that Cyclin E/P27 endometrial test that they do over at Yale. I think I'm going to plunk down the $459 and just do it. I'd had to think that we overlooked something.
What else? Had friend with a non-IF buddy the other day who I haven't seen all year long. She asked how the IF journey was going. I told her we've blown something like $35,000 trying to have a baby this last year and she DID IT. She said the bad thing.
Why don't you just adopt?
Yep. She said it. It rolled off of her tongue like a marble.
I don't have to tell you the sound of silence that ensued after those fateful words. A long deadness. Then I said, "J doesn't want to." We talked a bit more about adoption, and how an Asian baby for J is totally out of the question as he feels it is hard enough for the child to be adopted but to never be able to "get away" with it is just too much. I understand that. I'm adopted. My mother adopted me when she was 47 and I was 11 months old. Everyone assumed she was my grandmother. Hell, she's my grandfather's sister so that's a safe assumption. But we were never able to "get away with it". My fact of being adopted was always pushed in my face and in hers. So adopting a child that looks nothing like either of us just propagates this for another generation. I know how that child would feel. I've BEEN that child. Enuf said on that.
But the shock that yet another friend didn't have the awareness that one doesn't JUST ADOPT. At least for us we don't. For us it would symbolize the end of hope for a child of our own.
I still dream and get teary thinking of our blonde baby with it's daddy's beautiful blue eyes. Of how J's careful heart will melt into a shimmery blob when he holds his child.
We're just not ready to stop hoping. I wish our friends would hope along with us. You know?
Labels: Trying to get to IVF3
Comments on "CD11: Gobs of Fertile CM...Improvement?"
We'll be in Monterey tonight as well, but at the aquarium for the big fancy soiree. I'll drink for you, OK? I doubt we'll cross paths tonight but I'll be thinking about you. It would be nice if everyone in our lives was on the same page and were great cheerleaders for our efforts (in whatever category), but I've long ago given up on that dream. Just know there are friends out there who are behind you, 100%.
Do you think it might be better for a kid to grow up without any parent than have an adopted parent? I don't mean to judge. I'm just thinking about the concept of adoption for quite some time and it's the first time I heard an opinion from the kid's point of view..
Hi Gula,
I can actually think of some family situations where a child might be better off being taken care of the "state". Those are usually extreme cases but, sadly, they do exist.
The "kid's point of view" isn't often considered when adoptions occur. I do believe that everyone tries to do everything in the child's best interests though, but it isn't quite the same as asking for the child's opinion. Obviously infants and toddlers aren't capable of sharing their opinions.
I do strongly feel that for infants and toddlers there is a "separation pain" or trauma that occurs when they are taken from their mother. I know it was there for me. When my biological mother came to visit me when I was about three years old I am told (by my adoptive parents) that my reaction to her showing up was of anger. They said that I refused to let her in the house and that I tried to shut the front door on her. You would think that an 11 month old infant would not remember the separation process, but I seeminly did.
I was also named Helen when I was born and my adopted parents changed my name to Linda when I was adopted at 11 months of age. I grew up always hating my name. I felt foreign to me and I never knew why until my adopted mother gave me my adoption papers when I was in my early 30's. There in black and white: Helen. No wonder I felt weird as a Linda. :)
So I am in a peculiar space. I know the pain of being an adopted child, and it hurts so much on so many levels that I don't know if I can in turn parent and adopted child. Seeing their pain would just kill me, perhaps more than anyone else. But what my friends tell me is that my experience would make me a great parent to an adopted child. I just don't know. Hopefully I'll come to peace with it all one day.
Thanks so much for stopping by and visiting. :)
Why don't you guys just 'relax'... or 'take a vacation'...?
(rolls on floor laughing, pounding fist)
Hi Linda, Thanks a lot for taking your time to explain. I'll definitely need to think and read some more.