Dust fluttered into the air as I moved boxes around our
storage shed. I had chosen to spend Day 1 of my spring break sorting through
all my Boxes of Really Important Memories, hoping to make progress in widdling
down my collection. I mean, was my high
school career so illustrious that I really need three Rubbermaid bins full of
broken trophies and hand-cut photo collages to document it? Will our future
children be satisfied with mere stories of my escapades as the 1999 clarinet
section leader in marching band, or will I need to supplement them with photo
proof? You have no IDEA the number of questions I field on a daily basis about
this. It’s overwhelming at times, really.
As I debated about what the world would miss if it didn’t
have access to my 1997 JV skiing trophy, another box caught my eye. Future Baby Stuff. Inside were a few of
my favorite children’s books, a few baby clothes that used to belong to my
brother and I, and THE cutest baby sweater that I just HAD to buy from un mercado when I was studying in Mexico
a couple years ago.
As I made my piles of Things to Donate, Things to Bring
Inside, Things to Throw Away, and Things I Will List on Craigslist for Months
Until Finally Coming to Terms With the Fact That No One Wants My Crap, I kept
passing over the Future Baby Stuff box.
The logical part of my brain told me to leave it in the shed. We had no
immediate use for anything in it, save when I had the sudden urge to trigger a
crying fest late at night. Yet, despite all rationality, the box found its way
into the Go Inside pile.
I’ve often referred to how oCur infertility journey had us
feeling like we were perpetually sitting on a bench on a train platform, slouching
with our chins in our palms, itching to embark on the journey of parenthood but
unsure what train would take us to that destination. We had tried to board the
Baby Making Train on many occasions, and then the Baby Making Train With
Supplemental Catheters, and finally the Baby Making Train with Supplemental
Catheters, Shots, Pills, and Significant Emotional Lability. Most of these
trains never left the station. Two moved forward for a few short weeks before
the word Miscarriage flashed across
the screen and the train began the heartbreaking trip back to the station. We
were tired of the station but weren’t sure which train, if any, would lead us
to our desired destination.
Bringing some of the baby stuff inside wasn’t necessarily
picking a train, but it was at least standing up off the bench. It was expressing some modicum of faith that,
someday, our train would arrive.
************
After our last miscarriage, I sat in my doctor’s office,
once again discussing next steps. We’re
done, I was ready to tell him. We’re
tired. We need a break. Miscarriages are hard. Treatments are expensive. We
can’t keep bleeding money without hope of success. We were ready to stop,
or at the very least pause, fertility treatments and begin the encyclopedia of
adoption paperwork ahead.
Of course, this didn’t go as planned. Instead of my geriatric eggs being the topic
of discussion, this time my uterus got to share some airtime as well.
Over a decade ago, an ultrasound showed that I had what’s
called a septate uterus, which basically means there is a wall of tissue down
the middle. If substantial enough, this condition can increase the risk of
miscarriage. Before and during our quest to become parents, I had asked several
times if it would make sense to have the minor surgery to remove it. Each time,
however, I was told that the imaging showed that the septum wasn’t big enough
to cause complications, and the risk of scarring causing issues was greater
than not having the surgery at all. But
after my second miscarriage, when I received the lovely diagnosis of “habitual
aborter” (you can always count on the medical community to be sensitive with
their terminology), my doctor wondered if the septum was bigger than diagnostic
imaging could show. He recommended we consider it.
I drove home heaving what felt like one big, gigantic sigh.
I felt a strong desire to embrace my inner two-year-old by sticking my lower
lip six inches out from my face, stomping my feet repeatedly, and shouting, “IDON’TWANNAIDON’TWANNA IDON’TWANNA!” The surgery was pricey and I was tired. I was
ready to take a break. I felt like infertility had sort of become like that
boyfriend whom you really want to be with but he just won’t commit, so you wait
around for a bit and give him time to find himself and backpack Europe and
spend lots of Friday nights with his motorcycle until you are finally like, look Pierre, this could be something great,
but at some point I gotta know IS THIS GONNA HAPPEN OR NOT. So I’m going to
move on. I’ll consider leaving your number in my phone so I know it’s not a
doorbell salesman in case you ever decide you’re in, but emotionally I can’t
stay here. I wasn’t ready to shut the door on having biological kids, but
it was starting to feel unhealthy for me to sit around hoping it would happen.
Having a surgery felt like I would still be waiting around for Pierre to figure
out whether he was in this or not.
Seth and I debated the pros and cons. There were no
guarantees, but there was a chance it could decrease the likelihood of another
miscarriage should conception occur again. On the other hand, we had already
devoted a lot of time and energy and money to things that had “a chance” of
working. It felt like we were rolling a set of 100-sided dice with a baby on
one side. Sure, there was a chance, but our wrists were sore from rolling.
Eventually, though, we realized that even though we were
going to take a break from fertility treatments, if we were to not have the
surgery, conceive naturally, and then miscarry, the What Ifs would haunt us
forever. So, we decided this would be
our last “intervention”, at least for awhile. Fine, we told Pierre. You get
ONE LAST CHANCE.
The surgery involved pumping me with anesthesia that
“usually doesn’t make people sick” and essentially “buzzing” the wall off.
(Ladies, if you’re looking to get buzzed, may I recommend a day-old, room
temperature Lime-A-Rita mixed with your best friend’s backwash instead.) To
keep the uterus from collapsing in on itself
(are we talking about my uterus or a sandcastle during high tide?), my
doctor then inserted a balloon all up in there to hold things in place while
the wound healed. A BALLOON. INSIDE OF ME. And not just any balloon. You know
the kind of balloons that have a plastic stick on the bottom instead of a
string? THAT kind. Wait a minute, you
ask… if the balloon was in there, the
stick was… Yes. Yes, that is correct. And while I’m not easily embarrassed
and I believe in using the correct terms to describe reproductive anatomy, if
you want any more detail, you need to take me out for a REALLY fancy
dessert. Because I’m classy and
becausemydadreadsthis.
(Also, if the above description was too much, may I point
out that when ladies are describing their birth story, they often talk about
“how many centimeters” and “how long I pushed” and other intimate stuff like that
and no one bats an eye.)
After surgery, Seth drove me home and I did a really good
job keeping it together until I barfed in our driveway. I then took up
residence on the couch and spent the next 24 hours dozing in and out with
episodes of Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee in the background, which, when
combined with narcotics, can lead to some pretty trippy dreams about Jerry
Seinfeld. In addition to the typical joys of recovering from surgery, I got to
augment my experience by taking hormones and a course of antibiotics strong
enough to cure an elephant’s syphilis.
I was a real joy to live with that week.
At my one week follow up, my doctor removed the balloon
(angels sang) and I celebrated by walking normally. He gave me instructions on the pill regimen
I’d be on for the next two months. I ran through my list of questions, which
unfurled like a verbal scroll across the floor. My most pressing concern: How
successful was the surgery?
“Well, the septum was a lot bigger than we thought from the
imaging. I think this could really help decrease your chances of another
miscarriage.”
Great!... wait, if it
could have an impact on my miscarriage rate, what are the chances that the
septum caused at least one of my miscarriages?
“Oh, I’d say it’s about a 50/50 chance.”
A fifty-fifty chance
that the surgery I asked for multiple times in the last decade could have
prevented a miscarriage?
“Yes, this could really help you going forward. Do you have
any other questions?”
Sure do. But the rest
of my questions are for my therapist.
When we began pursuing parenthood, I remember being
surprised by the power of my own emotions.
Sometimes these primal feelings would rise up inside of me, almost on a
cellular level. This experience was no different. I drove away from the
doctor’s appointment with a profound sense of loss. I felt like I was miscarrying
all over again. Against all rationality I kept repeating “I’m sorry, I’m sorry,
I’m sorry” through a thick stream of tears. I was apologizing to the babies we
lost. “I should’ve advocated for the surgery more. I should’ve demanded it. I’m
sorry.” My rational brain knew this wasn’t helpful. I knew it was entirely
possible the miscarriages had nothing to do with what the surgery supposedly
fixed. Yet what I couldn’t get out of my mind was the image on the last
ultrasound screen of a slow but visible heartbeat. Life. For a moment, it was
there. To believe that that loss was outside of any human’s control – somehow,
that was easier to swallow. To even briefly entertain the thought that a simple
outpatient surgery could have kept that heart beating – this brought me to my
knees.
I’m going to pause for a second to take a moment and say
that I don’t fault my doctor here. He gave the best medical recommendations
with the information at hand. But sometimes we have to make decisions of which
road to take with a map that is incomplete. We do our best, and sometimes that
works out. Sometimes that takes us to sad places. Sometimes our experiences
leave parts of our lives not neatly combed but with frayed, ragged edges. And yet, onward we march, frayed ends and
all.
************
I brought the baby clothes, along with a few children’s
books, inside the house. I opened the
door to the “gray room”, the room that we hope will eventually be a nursery but
is currently our second guest room. In the closet sits a dresser that I
intentionally put out of sight. Recently, kid-type stuff had started to appear.
A wooden caterpillar on wheels made my by carpenter uncle. A few of my favorite
children’s books I had collected throughout the years. Teddy bears that belonged to Seth and I when
we were kids. I opened the top drawer and began laying items in. A denim dress
I wore as a toddler. A little Carhartt jacket that belonged to my brother. The
sweater from Mexico. All entirely impractical things to be in the top drawer of
a dresser that I hope will belong to an infant soon. Yet they laid there like
little beacons, symbolizing a way forward.
Forward. I knew that was where we wanted to head, but which
direction was it? I tried to imagine all the paths in front of us that could
lead towards parenthood. Biological kids. Private adoption. Foster to adopt. I am so tired of trying to convince my body to
do what it was “supposed” to do naturally, yet there is something inside of me,
something intimately primal, that seemed to block every step I tried to take
away from it. The what if’s kept pulling at me, and now there were even more of
them. What if the doctor is right and the surgery really helped prevent another
miscarriage? Am I giving up? Shouldn’t I be more hopeful now than ever? Is
there something wrong with me that I don’t feel that way?
And yet, at the same time, when I consider more fertility
treatments or continuing to “just relax and wait” for it to happen naturally –
I can’t do it. We’d been rolling those
100-sided dice for awhile. Talking to others that are also on the infertility
journey - we’re all just standing at the table rolling dice. Some people’s dice
have more sides than others. Some are able to keep rolling longer than others.
But eventually, it seems that one of two things happens – they either land on
the baby side or they step away from the table. You can stand at the table
forever, because the reality is that, unless there is a clear, definitive you-cannot-get-pregnant
reality at hand, the next roll of the dice could be the one. And this thought
can be maddening.
Or, maybe there is another option. One can step away from
the table but not pull their dice out of the game. They can look at other tables
and see if there are other ways to “win”. And maybe some of those other tables
will bring “success”. Or maybe a miraculous breeze will blow through the place
and the baby making dice will land baby side up. Maybe, stepping away from the table doesn’t mean
cashing out. Maybe we can leave the
possibility of biological kids open but divert our energy and resources towards
other ways of begetting a human child. Because at this point, we aren’t picky
about how a kid gets here. We just want
to be parents.
Thinking of it through the lens of the train metaphor –
maybe getting on a train at the train station doesn’t mean that’s the only
possible train to be on. Maybe it leads to a place that’s even better than what
we see on the postcards. Or maybe, the next train we get on takes us to a new
station with different trains. Maybe we
stumble on a train that doesn’t seem exactly right at the beginning but we soon
realize is exactly where we should be.
Sometimes it’s good to sit in the station for awhile to
collect yourself and try as best you can to determine the next route you should
take. Sometimes we need to take a deep breath and refill our water bottles and
go buy an overpriced snack. But the thing about train stations is that no one
wants to live or vacation there. They aren’t meant to be the place we stay.
Sometimes, you’ve got to study the map as closely as possible, throw your
backpack on your shoulders, and just climb aboard. You don’t know what lies
ahead or what direction the track will turn. But you get on, and you settle in,
and you look out the window, and you say – the scenery might look different
than I envision, but I’m going to stay open to being surprised by how beautiful
it can be.