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31 October 2009

The Bitch is Back

I remember hitting puberty early, hitting it like a great brick wall of rage. My mother could offer me a cracker, and I would retaliate like she was hiding WMDs.
And here I am, back in a tsunami of hormones, and my mother and I are living in the same house again. And I have one piece of advice. Learn, if you please, from my poorly-behaved example:

Do not start Lupron and then have your mother move in with you the next week. It will not be good for your relationship.

death and the goldfish

I’ve been thinking a lot about something Nayla said in an earlier post, about how she isn’t sure whether it’s grief or Lupron that has caused her to forget how to open her front door. This is a completely bizarre time in life, and I wonder how uncommon it is. The mid to late thirties are, I guess, considered to be at end of the childbearing spectrum, but certainly still in the range of childbearing years. And most women will not experience infertility, per se, and in population groups where women have many children, childbearing is normal even into early forties (google search: Mennonite, childbearing). I suppose the difference here is that those women often already have several children, so are not dealing with the possibility of having no children, of never having children, at the same time they are dealing with ill or dying parents. Maybe it’s a little like ear piercing for children- everyone prefers to do both ears at the same time, so nobody has second thoughts halfway through. If I hadn’t already decided to have children before my father got sick, I don’t know that I would have the resolve to go through fertility treatment at this point in the game, not when I’ve seen what can happen, so to speak. Which is also bizarre, because it’s not as if I’m a four year old who doesn’t understand about death and what happened to the family hamster.


30 October 2009

A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush

aka

A living dog is better than a dead lion, Ecclesiastes IX


Yesterday, my small bichon frise found a (considerably smaller) bird on our front porch, in the same area where several other small birds have landed after flinging their small bodies against the unshuttered window on the back door. I would’ve liked to have taken a picture of Henri lightly prodding the little thing. It was sort of like something out of a Walt Disney movie, but it probably could have gone Tarantino pretty quickly. Luckily, disaster was averted and the bird, able to hop and flap his wings, but doing something with his head that was concerning way probably had some sort of head injury. You could almost see the little Tom and Jerry cartoon concussion stars. And luckily, bless their 501C3 tax status, Wildcare was accepting small patients that day.

Ok, I’m not the sort of person who would wrestle a bird, even a lovely little songbird, from the paws of a coyote. Nature is, after all, nature, and she must do things for her own reasons, or however Faulkner put it, but this wasn’t an act of nature. This was an act of my stupid plate glass window, one that isn’t clean enough for my neighbor’s aesthetic but apparently not dirty enough to prevent small winged animals from smashing into it. A plate glass window is the natural predator of absolutely nobody.

We didn't name the bird. I have no idea what type it was, a sparrow or a songbird or a waxwing. It was a brown bird. There are no ornithologists in my house.

And I guess today I’m overly sensitive, especially towards small and probably dying things. At the risk of disillusioning the many medical insurance companies no doubt clamoring to insure me, I’m going to come out and say what my friends, family, postal service carrier, and Primary and Secondary insurers already know: over the past few months, I have taken anti depressant medication, and today
is my eleventh day of not taking Wellbutrin, prescribed for depression, what with all the infertility and dying over the past two years. Obviously, nobody should put that sort of information on the world wide web. Although, I’m certainly not alone- a pretty non trivial percentage of my demographic will utilize some sort of psychiatric medication intervention. And in my case, while the collective benefits of 300 mg. of Wellbutrin outweighed the side effects, the withdrawal period has sort of thrown me for a loop, or at least that’s the best way I can describe what seems to be going on in my head, the sense of balance turned around and around in a spherical spiral pattern. My equilibrium normalizes and then just as quickly falls away; so far today I have walked head-on into a concrete pole and missed two porch steps. The ability to focus is there, and then it is not. I have two small patches of neuralgia, one on my lower rib cage and one in the exact middle of my spine, and even the brush of my cotton shirt is painful. But mostly I'm more emotional than usual - not on the level of crying while line at Rite Aid, or pulling out old photo albums, but I’m doing what I can to avoid the evening news and have definitely put aside The Lost Dog, None of this is to say that the withdrawals detract from the collective benefit of taking the drug, and no way would I have wanted to go through Wellbutrin withdrawals while dealing with chemically induced menopause, no thank you, psychotropic medication withdrawal and Lupron are, in the parlance of pharmacologic epicure, lattes and pinot noir and altogether bad news in the same sitting.

Now, this was the right decision for me (and, presumably, for the recipients of the 118 million antidepressant prescriptions given to Americans in 2005). It was also my personal decision to avoid getting pregnant while taking that drug. And I’d like to say right here that plenty of women make different decisions, who do take MAOIs and SSRIs while pregnant, and the literature is not conclusive on this. My own psychiatrist believes that outside of the precious first trimester organ formation period there is negligible harm done with certain anti depressants. Although this recent Medscape article sort of disputes that. I’m not saying that another person couldn’t have gotten through a similar experience with prayer, or yoga, or meditation, dowsing, interpretive dance, whatever. I won’t interrogate the subject further.

Instead, I'll settle for being the living dog.

Addendum: the intake worker at San Rafael's Wildcare reports that the small brown bird of the morning is a Thrush

29 October 2009

Yet Another Reason to Eat Candy Corn

I was so pleased to see Erin's post about National Candy Corn Day just after I received a package full of fancy Halloween candy from my in-laws. I think this series of events sparked my epiphany about why my shots have been more painful this time around--I am too skinny.

I am not bragging about my current weight. The last time I started fertility treatments, I felt stronger and healthier. My posture was better. I was also several pounds healthier. I started losing those pounds during my three days in the hospital during my miscarriage, when the doctor kept me on a regimen of morphine and ice chips because of the possibility of emergency surgery. After I left the hospital, I did not exactly maintain an appetite while watching my father vomit from chemotherapy and waste away. And finally, for the last ten days of my father's life, my mother stayed in his room with him around the clock, relying on the kindness of strangers (and friends) to bring us a meal or two a day.

(Note that I do not recommend this as a weight loss strategy.)

I am not the healthy, strong, toned person I was before I started fertility treatments the last time around. And most importantly, I do not have the same amount of belly fat.

So when you give yourself the subcutaneous injections, what you are doing is pinching the skin and fat of your belly (avoiding a two inch radius from your belly button). Today, I finally realized that I just don't have as much to pinch, and that is making the process more painful. So I will now feel free to eat a little candy corn on Halloween, in the hope that by the time I am up to three shots a day I will have gained a little more belly fat without increasing my risk of gestational diabetes.

October 30 is National Candy Corn Day


No, really, it is.


Partly because Nayla started this with her previous alliteration, and partly because I just like the sound of the word, "twinning," (a nice combinating of turning and swimming, sort of uterine verbs), and I'm sure not in small part because the RE keeps quoting at me the new and fantastic success rates for single embryo implantation (with is at least one embryo too few, by my faithless standards), I've spent the morning reading this site, derived from this study

which posits that environmental factors might actually influence twinning rates.


No, by environmental factors, the study does not mean daily injections of gonadotropins.
I think this is an interesting reversal of those studies that use twins, who have the same genetic makeup, to measure the degree of influnces of an environmental factor.

And then in other news, my next internet search will involve the impact of vast amounts of Brach's mellowcremes on luteal cycle length. Corpus luteum is Latin for yellow body, which is accurate for cows, but not for human women, in whom the corpus luteum is actually orange.



28 October 2009

the follistim pen and the feline


Follistim: the interpretive ballet

The Big Box of Needles and Drugs

The Big Box of Needles and Drugs arrived today. I cleared out a drawer in the refrigerator so the drugs would not get mixed up with the arugula and the milk.
Here is what is in the box:
Follistim
HCG
Repronex
About a million needles and syringes
Packages of individually wrapped alcohol swabs.
One container of very large capsules of antibiotics.
One container for disposing of needles and syringes.

I called American Express to confirm that they had accepted the charges for the doctor (nearly $9,000) and the latest shipment of medications (over $3000).

I do not want to swallow those pills. I do not want to give myself those injections. The puppy, barometer of my emotions, has retreated to his crate.
But, for the chance of having a baby before I am 38 years old, I will do it. I am committed.

27 October 2009

Puppy Therapy

This afternoon, I was standing in front of our house, and I suddenly forgot which key opened the front door.
I kept trying the purple key, and finally my husband took out his keys and opened the door. And I said, "But I use that key every day!" And my husband had to take my keys and show me that it was the yellow key and not the purple key that opened the door. And then I suddenly remembered that in fact, I use the yellow key every day, and every day, it unlocks the door.

To what do I attribute this? I looked up the potential side effects of Lupron, and memory loss is not among them. Is it the grief? Is it fatigue? Is it a side effect of the persistent headache that is a side effect of Lupron? Is it the fact that last night's Lupron shot, which previously seemed fairly painless, was painful, even with use of my trusty icepack? Or is it the fact that today, I read a chapter of a friend's novel-in-progress that was all about the painful death of a parent from cancer and I spent the day having flashbacks of my father's last days?

But there is a great treatment for all of this sadness and discomfort and awkward, splayed hope.

There is a puppy.

We adopted him from a shelter a few hours away just before the first appointment with the only fertility specialist in town, after a really terrible few days of feeling sorry for myself. The puppy displays the typical exceptional cuteness of his kind, even while doing mundane things like sitting on a bookshelf or chasing a ball. This kind of entertainment is enough for the usual level of stress and sadness.

But for my case, I have self-prescribed a special kind of therapy. I give this puppy an ice cube, and hilarity ensues.

fertility work-up: the second time is twice as nice!

Nearly three years have passed since I last went through a fertility workup, and I am due for a repeat. The standard workup consists of a battery of tests. All things being equal, in terms of number of tests, simple blood analysis make up the majority. I couldn't give you an exact number, but I have learned that it's best not to count the number of vial labels that the lab tech exchanges for the lab requisition slip (one label per tube, at least three tubes per work up). Also-note that the pre test instructions are not theoretical. During my first work up, in my mid twenties, I made the mistake of having an FSH analysis (I think it was an FSH analysis, anyway) shortly after taking a dose of Clomid. I wouldn't recommend that particular course of action unless you are the bizarre sort of comedian who wants your ob/gyn to think you are a candidate for premature ovarian failure.

Certain other tests, including follicle counts with the craftily designed transvaginal ultrasound, (in the interest of not getting booted off Blogger, I’m not going to include a link) do not exactly rank high on the fun list, but can be gotten through. Others, such as the HSG, are rather unforgettable and I will in no uncertain terms drink bleach if I am made to repeat that particular test again. I will say, with regard to the HSG, that I object to the idea far more than the actual procedure, which was uncomfortable but not painful. Luckily, the only tests I need to repeat are the labs and the follicle count.

Because no test has ever indicated a definitive cause of infertility, there's not a good reason for me to worry about the results, which doesn’t mean that there aren't plenty of other shoddily constructed and weakly articulated reasons. I'm one of those people who subscribes to the idea that if you don't believe in the principle of induction, (not to be confused with a similarly named step in the IVF procedure) the principle of induction doesn't apply to you, much like ghosts for children or hell for athiests. I am absolutely aware that people who go around verbally articulating these things are irritating to be around, but by God, I've earned it, what with the rare cancer lottery and all. So just because a test has come back normal five out of five times, doesn't mean that, say, the sixth time, it's not going to indicate that I am not only in full-blown premature menaupause, but have contracted liver flukes and will any day now express a latent gene for supernumary teeth, because I've always had sort of questionable orthodontia.

All this is to say that I’m not having the tests re run until my next appointment with the endocrinologist, which will be in approximately 33 days +/-.

25 October 2009

Long Long Lupron

And now a bit of the practical. I have started the Long Lupron IVF protocol.

For most people, this protocol begins with going on birth control pills, and I had already started to take them after a surgery I had to remove uterine fibroids in August. (The fancy name is a laparoscopic myomectomy.)

I have recently moved to a small town in Oregon, and there is only one fertility doctor in town. He uses the birth control pill and and an injectable called Lupron to get everyone in the current protocol on the same calendar. This allows him to organize his time so he can do all the egg retrievals and embryos transfers in the same week, which apparently leads to better results.

If you don't count the time on birth control, I am on day three of my protocol. If you want to know the nitty gritty of the process, here's my current nightly fertility regimen:
  1. The birth control pill
  2. A prenatal vitamin
  3. A baby aspirin (the purpose of which is, I think, to increase blood flow to my ovaries.)
  4. 10 units of Lupron in shot form (with a needle, not a glass.)
The idea is that this use of Lupron puts you into chemical menopause for two weeks before you start the other shots, the ones that stimulate the growth of the follicles that produce the eggs. Erin, are these the right verbs to use?



Chemical Menopause: "Egads," you exclaim. "The whole point of this is to beat menopause! To outsmart my infernal biological clock!" You might be agitated, and cranky, and you have not even started the Lupron yet. Well, I will share that so far, chemical menopause has not been as terrible as I feared. I don't know about you, but I mostly associate menopause with hot flashes. What I have had is more akin to the feeling you might get from a warm brandy. This is not a problem right now, as I am adjusting to a cooler, rainier climate here in Oregon and have not had alcohol since the day my father died. (One token glass of white wine with my mother at a restaurant, when she couldn't bear to head home to an empty house.) But the warm brandy flush might be alarming if you were not expecting it, or if you were giving yourself Lupron shots in Texas in August. The only other symptom I have so far, which has little to do with the weather, is a headache. Not a migraine, not a sinus headache, nothing too out of the ordinary. Just another hormonal headaches like all of the other hormonal headaches I have had in life. Irritating and persistent, but manageable. I have not had the crazy mood swings or nausea, or any of the highly unpleasant symptoms other women have reported on other blogs. But there is still time!

After all, it must be called the long Lupron protocol for some reason other than the charms of alliteration...

Will Someone Die Every Time I do IVF?

As you may recall, my father was diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer just after I went through my embryo transfer for IVF. And, as I started this process again, and tried to articulate the particular strands of trepidation I was feeling, the thing I was not telling people was that I was wondering whether someone would die every time I did IVF. To be clear, even though I am an only child, I don't really believe that everything in the world revolves around me. But I know about the circle of life, both from the Lion King and from that movie where death takes a holiday, and I know that usually, someone, somewhere is leaving this mortal plane when someone else is arriving via birth. Really, God, I get it. It does not have to be illustrated for me with such a direct connection as it was in the spring.

But apparently God, or the Powers that Be, or the Great Narrative Arc of my life feels otherwise.

Because I started my Lupron shots on Friday night, and today I have learned that another loved one is dying of cancer in the very near future.

Last Thanksgiving, while my parents were visiting us in California, we found out that a close friend of theirs, Virginia, was diagnosed with lymphoma. She had started treatment, but, with a variety of pre-existing conditions (including congestive heart failure), no one thought she had long to live. When I started IVF and my father was diagnosed, my mother and I were really not able to call or help or even really think about Virginia's condition. Luckily, she has a nephew who really stepped in. While my father was on life support and in his final days, the nephew moved Virginia to an assisted living facility near his house.

Now, Virginia has not had an easy life. Her first husband was a fighter pilot, and was MIA in Vietnam. She remarried a squadron-mate of his, and they had a son. When their son was 8, he was killed by a drunk driver on the sidewalk in front of their house. We met them a few years after this, and Virginia and her husband Bob took an instant liking to me. They took trips with us, to Hawaii, and the Caribbean and France. They wrote cards and called and spent holiday after holiday with us. And then, in 1991, when I was caught up in the whirlwind of college, Bob died of cancer. Virginia was alone. She did not have any siblings. She had lost both of her parents. Really, her nephew was her only relative. And we were the next closest thing.

A week after my father's funeral, I drove my mother down to see her. We had a terrible dinner in her assisted living facility, but she was happy to see us. She complained about her room; she complained about the food; she complained about how old and boring and lifeless her new house-mates were. Honestly, she didn't even seem sick anymore. She sent us out to buy some bottle of wine and some Doritos. And then my mother and I drove back up to my mother's house to continue the strangely sad and technical work of executing my father's estate, writing a new will for my mother, and preparing for the other major life transitions I was about to go through (including a surgery and a move to a different state.)

And now, just as I've started the long Lupron protocol for IVF, Virginia has moved to a hospice. There is a tumor in her spine and possibly one in her brain. She told her nephew that she is not afraid of dying, she is only afraid of dying alone. And he has promised her that he will be there for her.

And I will continue my protocol. I will not make plans to fly across country to see her, because, as my Reproductive Endocrinologist reminded me, I am not as young as I was six months ago.

And if Virginia does die alone, I will always feel I have failed her.

Nayla, by way of introduction

Nayla is a rare sort of person, clever and beautiful and uber articulate. I remember reading her fiction writing (even when my head was full of Clomid, a feeling not dissimilar from the one you get after eating confectioner’s sugar straight from the box) and being enthralled by it. These were during the days when a single digit countdown to atomic war could have put me to sleep.

Still, Nayla and I should probably not be friends. For the past two years, we have shared the same misfortune, one after the other, from fertility treatments to fathers with similar cancers. We've even had the same weird and complicated miscarriage. I mean, honestly. If I happen to get a rash on my face, or she hits a deer with her car, under no circumstances should either one of us share that information with the other, because the next week we are likely to find ourselves exchanging auto repair resources or the best type of antihistamine. It’s true that she’s lovely and charming and one of the most intelligent people you’ll probably ever meet, one of those people so clever and beautiful that you really don’t expect for them to be a nice person, in addition to everything else, but for the past two years, eerily similar crummy luck and statistically improbable travails have followed us. For that reason, and because she’s a more proactive person and certainly a stronger person, and going through active treatment right now, I expect her to change our luck substantially. No pressure, Nayla.

I’ve never met either one of Nayla’s parents, but she has a sort of generosity about her that you either have or you do not. My husband, who is French, translates that attribute “to be educated correctly,” and what he means by this is to be educated about the general way to go through life, how to look at people with kindness, and to remain gentle in the face of obstacles. I bet Nayla would tell you where she gets that from, and I’d agree with her, which I suppose touches on what we are trying to get at in these entries.

So while we’ve shared some past experiences I believe we both could have lived without, I’m grateful to be going through this particular one with her.

when you hear hoof beats

Don’t look for zebras. Unexplained fertility is a misnomer. It is a transitory point in time that comes after the failure of fertility treatments based on the educated guess of the moment. It’s the fall back when the injections, hormone replacement, hormone suppressant, radioactive dye insertion, catheter procedures and prodding and altogether too much poking around, fail. Sometimes there is a post treatment regroup, and it comes after this too, after you’ve tried the acupuncture needles, the boiled seed pods and east Asian herbs and possibly, if you haven’t disclosed your vegetarian status, gecko. It comes after you, a lifelong agnostic, have visualized your uterus to be a metaphysical white glowing nest of life, after you have publicly banned your husband from the spinning bikes at the gym, after you’ve taken the drain from the bath and placed it in the linen drawer, where it can’t be used to take hot water baths, that mortal enemy of male fertility. Behind every unexplained fertility diagnosis are the best guesses of the OB/GYN, endocrinologist, andrologist, urologist, mother, mother in law, inquiring neighbor, well-meaning friend. Unexplained fertility exists to prove Hickam’s dictum. And now, I can bid that diagnosis goodbye, good riddance, certainly a well-earned good luck, because a little over a month ago, I turned thirty-five, which puts me unambiguously in the infertility category of “advanced maternal age.”

How do you like them horses?

Infertility hasn’t consumed my life. In 2006, just as I was in the middle of a series of IUIs, my father, then sixty, who was probably my closest friend in the world, was diagnosed with adenocarcinoma of the ampulla of Vater. This is a bad cancer, a rare cancer, so rare that there is no real treatment protocol, a bona fide fascinoma. The current course of treatment for ampullary cancer follows the one used for pancreatic cancer. After a few months of the roller coaster that Nayla referred to earlier, my husband and I decided to delay our fertility treatments. And why not, after all? I had plenty of time. We adopted a shelter cat named Lola, and two years passed.

In the summer of 2008, three weeks before my appointment to resume fertility treatment at a large medical center in the neighboring county, my mother asked if I wouldn’t mind taking my sister to the airport. Our mother had a medical appointment that day, and might not be feeling so well after. My mother, a non-smoking, non-drinking, near vegan, has never been less healthy than a horse (that mythical creature) so I didn’t think too much about it. One week and a few days later, she was diagnosed with second to third stage squamous cell esophageal cancer, a rare cancer seen most often in heavy drinkers and smokers.

I am a congenitally pessimistic person. I’ve never quite been able to convince myself that lilies will bloom at room temperature, so I either buy them past the bud stage, or worry the petals until they turn a filthy brown and then lop over. Even so, I did not see this coming.

During the next eight months, my mother went through chemotherapy, radiation, and a certain surgical procedure colloquially referred to as “the mother of all surgeries,” while my fathers’ health declined precipitously, as the cancer metastized to his spine and meningeal layer. One morning in December, as I sat in traffic on Highway 101, my mother, in the passenger seat, vomited into the small plastic container that now followed her everywhere. I dialed AT&T directory assistance, and asked them to patch me through to the local hospice agency. That morning, on the two-hour drive to my mother’s chemotherapy appointment, I arranged for in home hospice.

Outside of the bay window of my parent’s house, there is a hummingbird feeder that has created a generational welfare state among the birds of our street. It’s a lovely thing to see in summer, above the green lawn, the American Beauties and the plum tree, but in winter we let the lawn go fallow, and bright red plastic of the feeder is something garish against the brown grass and bare thorns. Still though, I believe that the easy availability of sugar water has offset normal avian reproductive constraints, because hummingbirds visit the feeder year round, or at least they did that winter, when I spent plenty of time staring out the bay window, at the hummingbirds on the other side of the glass, the dead lawn and the desiccated rose hedge, the county road that is never quite maintained and the field beyond that, the jackrabbits and the pheasants and even, like an awkwardly timed joke, the Appaloosa horses kept by our neighbor. After my mother and I returned from chemotherapy that day, we moved a hospital bed into the living room, moved my father to the bed, and that is where he died six weeks later.

There are two separate ways through which I measure time; the first is the thirty-five year mark, an alarmingly red chronological demarcation line that increases medical costs at the fertility clinic and decreases odds of conception. The second is in the passing of time since last winter, in they way I’m never quite sure what month it is, whether I should look for potholes in the road, or replace the air conditioner filters. In sense, I’ve not moved past last January, while my body, consistently uncooperative, has moved on into another, more precarious phase. So it is with some misgivings that I am going to be starting fertility treatments. Some. But less than I would have had, had I not met Nayla.

I’m sorry, how rude. Let me provide an introduction:

24 October 2009

Comrades in ART(s)

Two years ago, I started trying to get pregnant. And then, because I was 35, about six months later, I started fertility treatments. In January, I amped up the intensity of that project by starting an IVF cycle. This is an intense thing, with lots of shots and appointments and nausea, and maybe that’s why I was able to ignore the frequency with which my mother was taking my father to doctors to address his fatigue. Maybe.

In March, the doctor retrieved a bunch of eggs, and my husband made his contribution, and then, like magic, there were these embryos sitting in a cryopreservation facility in San Jose California. My parents were thrilled. They talked about their hypothetical grandchildren as long as I can remember. Three days after the creation of these embryos, I went back down to San Jose and the doctor transferred two of them back into my uterus. A week later, while waiting to find out whether I was pregnant, my parents told me that my father had stage-four pancreatic cancer. He had between six and nine months to live. I was devastated. I was also, unbelievably, pregnant. Nine months, I thought. Nine months for my father to live. Nine months of gestation for his grandchild. Could I beat that deadline?

I spent the next few months in Florida with my parents. I went with them to the doctor appointments. I went with them to chemo. And one day, I drove myself to the emergency room and found out I was probably having a miscarriage. I went into the hospital for three days, because it was not a normal, routine miscarriage. And then the normal terrible series of events of cancer unfolded. My father died on May 31. I did not beat the deadline. I did not give my father the grandchild he had talked about all of my life.

And now I have started round two of IVF. Is it a sad, tragic time? Is it a hopeful adventure? I have no idea. What I do know is that in the books and blogs on fertility, they like to talk about a Fertility Journey, which makes it sound a lot more like a Carnival Cruise than the malarial jungle trek that it has been for me. Which bring me to the top three reasons for writing this blog, right here, right now, with Erin:


  1. I am a Compulsive Information Gatherer: When I started IVF the first time, I went on Amazon and purchased a whole bunch of books. I did random internet searches, and scared the estrogen out of myself with those. I kept hoping to find the source that would tell me exactly how to give myself the shots, exactly what they would feel like, exactly when it was okay to feel hopeful, and exactly when it was okay to be annoyed that I have to go through all of this crap. I read all the books, and they gave some modicum of information about the process, but Erin was really my go-to person. As a bonus to her natural intelligence and writing skills and her personal experience with fertility treatments, she also has a medical background, so she actually knows how things work.
  2. Erin is Entertaining: I find conversations with Erin to be endlessly witty, informative, and fascinating. Other people should have the opportunity to be entertained by her posts. Especially women going through IVF, who need all the entertainment and understanding they can get. And especially, especially women who are going through IVF after the recent loss of a parents, because, well, life just kind of sucks for them in a very particular way.
  3. Comrades in ART(s): When my father was dying of cancer, I started to get the feeling that I didn’t want to be around people who hadn’t gone through a tragedy. Not that that there weren’t lovely, empathetic people who supported me through my first round of IVF and then through my miscarriage, and then again through my father’s hospitalizations and death. I was blessed with an amazing set of friends all through all of that. It’s just that the people who had lost a loved one, they really knew. It made me understand why people who go through war together have such a bond, because no matter how empathetic or well-read or a good listener, no one else really understands. And to add to that the Big Crazy that can be a result of Assisted Reproductive Technologies like IVF, well, it makes Erin my comrade in Assisted Reproductive Technology and Grief, it puts me in her elite Special Forces Unit of Fertility and Mortality.