Sometimes, the best advice and support comes from those who have walked the same path. There’s a strong sense of understanding, and an immediate bond that’s felt when someone understands your feelings, purely from their own experience. This is why we launched “In Your Words” a place where you can offer advice, give support, share your feelings and frustrations – all in the hope that you’ll help someone else who is experiencing and feeling the same thing.
This article discusses loss. Please make sure you’re feeling mentally strong when reading this. While it’s a very difficult read, you will fall in love with Anita, and I am sure you will gain from her experience here. She is one very incredible woman.
In Your Words, Anita. PART 2.
Plan C (or are we up to Plan Z?!)
I found while still in hospital that the raw sadness of what had happened was met with some sort of relief. I felt relieved that I wouldn’t need to go through the horrendous experience of miscarriages again. The constant stress, the worry, the doubts, the heartache. Suddenly, the decision of not being able to fall pregnant was taken out of my hands.
However, I am a control freak – at work, at home, and in life – I need to be in total control of the situation. So, for someone like me who typically sets a goal and goes about achieving it, this situation completely threw me. I no longer was in control of something I thought (naively) would just come easily. It has taken so much work and time for me to understand and appreciate that being in control of everything is a complete myth. So, I focused on what I could control, the next step in this journey. And guess what that meant, Plan C. While still in hospital and yet again with the blinkers on, my whole world became researching and understanding surrogacy. From joining forums to understanding how it works within Australia and across the globe, my mission was to jump into this next part of our journey with a renewed energy focused towards surrogacy. Rightly or wrongly, this next chapter gave me a distraction from the past trauma.
It wasn’t just emotional recovery this time
Arriving back at home after a week in hospital, I was confronted with a 6-week recovery which meant that I had to learn to, (not just metaphorically and emotionally this time), get up and learn to walk again. You see the surgery left me with no strength particularly around my stomach and meant I needed a lot of help at first to do the simplest of things like get out of bed. Being so fit and healthy, this was a new struggle I was faced with. When the DRs said 6 weeks, boy did they mean it! And what an incredibly hard six weeks it was. It was dark and lonely and reflecting back on it now, I actually don’t know how I got through it. That period was completely isolating, and I felt stuck in quick-sand while the entire world kept moving forward. Although I had friends and family visit, and Netflix at my disposal, I was on my own at home mostly during the day, with my thoughts, but also with a determination that I would get through this and move onto the next chapter of my story.
I finally understand what grace is
In my own time I finally realised that to be vulnerable is to be strong. I thought strength was in the resilience I had shown time and time again. But it is also letting your guard down and getting out of your comfort zone. For me, that meant sharing our story publicly on social media. So I did just that – I wanted to control the dialogue (see, told you I am a control freak!) and I wanted friends, family and the wider community to hear in my words what had happened and what we were doing next – looking for a surrogate. And with that vulnerability came such an outpouring of support that it literally left me speechless (something my husband will tell you is a very hard task). After communication with a number of women, there was one that I found an immediate connection to, and after spending time with her and her partner, we all came to a decision that we would embark on a surrogacy journey together.
To find grace, true grace, is something that is indescribable, but I finally understood what grace is. I have found it in the patience I have had to find and learn over the last 5 years, I have found it in surrendering and understanding so much is out of my control and I have found it mostly in the amazing woman who is completely selfless in wanting to give me and my husband the opportunity to have a baby, when I have the inability to physically do it myself. I feel grace every day in the little moments where I am grateful for all that I have rather than focus on what I don’t have.
I thought finding a surrogate would be the hard part
When we ventured down this path, my husband and I talked at length about how difficult it was going to be to find a surrogate. We talked about me reading on the forums about women searching for 10 years and still not able to find someone. We talked about seeing the demand for a surrogate far out way the number of surrogates. So, we made a decision that we would give ourselves a certain number of years to find someone then call it a day. But to our absolute surprise we found our surrogate within a couple of months of searching. By the time we did, we had a few frozen embryos as I did multiple rounds of IVF when I could, to ensure we had some ready to go. We went through the entire process during the 2020 lockdown – legal agreements, 9 hours of intense counselling and everything in between. The ability to find the process so easy was down to not only our surrogate and her partner being some of the best humans on earth, but that the four of us were connected in a way that we were always all on the same page. I thought finding a surrogate and the entire surrogacy process would be the hard part…..damn I hate it when I am wrong!
Gee, the universe can be cruel
As I write this, we have now had three frozen embryo transfers to our surrogate without success over a period of about 12 months. I cannot explain the emotional rollercoaster going from the hope that comes from believing that no matter what you have endured physically and emotionally you will have your baby, to the excitement of finding a surrogate and having this amazing team working together to make a baby, to the heartache and sadness of it still not working. The cruel, cruel, universe that she is – giving me this amazing selfless woman, and still not being able to make our dreams a reality.
The fat lady isn’t singing…..yet
We have one more frozen embryo. One more shot. So the fat lady is standing there on the stage but she ain't singing yet.
Knowing when to draw a line in the sand
It’s the latter half of 2021 and after a lot of talking it out, we have made the decision that I won’t do any more IVF. My beautiful husband says it is my call. But it is our call. We are a team. The sad reality is that now given my age, the chances of a viable embryo and successful transfer gets lower with each passing few months. I could physically do another 10 rounds of IVF, the process never bothered me, it is the mental and emotional load, that even for someone as strong and resilient as myself that takes its toll. It is all consuming and relentless and I need to start moving to a place of acceptance and learn to let go. There is often the tension between head and heart when making this sort of decision. Head says stop, heart says keep going. When my head and heart started saying the same thing, I knew it was time to start letting go. I don’t know how to start getting to that destination, but I know it is the path in front of me and I need to walk it.
One embryo left – we haven’t had success yet, so although we still have hope, because that is all we have, we are very realistic that our chance to have a baby is very slim.
Our surrogate had some surgery to ensure that her uterus was still ok, not only from our procedures but from a termination she went through after falling pregnant herself during this process (you couldn’t make this sh*t up I tell you!) Anything that could have happened on this journey, has.
And just like that…
For those Sex and The City fans, the recent release of the next chapter ‘And Just Like That’ may sound familiar. But for me, “and just like that” means the end.
Three weeks ago, in the early morning of a day in late November 2021 (the day we were to receive the pregnancy blood test results), I received a text message from my surrogate saying that she got her period the night before. She didn’t have the heart to tell me that night, for she needed to deal with this and process it in her own way, which I completely understood. This was an incredibly heavy load on her too. But, “just like that” it was the end of our journey. It was the end of 5 years of going to hell and back to have a baby. But not everyone gets their rainbow baby.
You see there is a side to infertility that is rarely told, a side that doesn’t end with the “happy ending” of a rainbow baby that most stories do. A side that needs more of a voice and needs to be told. A side that finds you in a situation where you need to start finding joy and happiness that isn’t in a form of a baby. As you have read, it has been a long, complicated 5-year journey (and this is the short version!) but I need to point to out:
We did not fail. We have given it absolutely everything we could.
We did not give up. We are letting go. There is more strength sometimes is letting go and knowing when to draw a line in the sand than to keep fighting a battle you just won’t win.
We are not wanting a pity party. We are being open and raw and honest so we can tell our story, give it a voice and let others in a similar situation know that you aren’t alone.
I can do 10 more rounds of IVF, physically the IVF process never really overwhelmed me, it is everything else that comes with this journey.
Am I ashamed? Hell no. I learnt a while ago that this, infertility, is nothing to be ashamed of.
Am I grieving? Yes. So much. I am grieving the loss of the hopes and dreams we had. Of not having any of “the firsts” together. Of things like not being able to sit in bed and read to him/her at bedtime. At not being able to use the name we picked out. At not being able to use the clothes and toys I have had packed away in the attic.
Am I carrying guilt? More than you can imagine. Not being able to give my husband a biological child is something so heavy that sits on my shoulder and not something that will ever fade unfortunately.
Am I angry. F*ck yes. This is completely unfair. To go through hell and back, almost die, find an amazing woman to be my surrogate and still not be able to have a baby. What a cruel trick the universe has played.
But, I am more determined than ever to help other women who are struggling with infertility, dealing with IVF and trying to cope with miscarriage. I am more determined than ever to have our feelings validated and worthy of a voice. Maybe I had to go what I had to go through to do help others, who knows. But this next chapter will be one of healing and giving. There is so much I want to do.
I have friends who are pregnant or have just had a baby and they don’t need to walk on eggshells but they do know that I may be distant sometimes. I may not come to the gender reveal, the baby shower, I may not look at things on social media. I have said don’t be angry and don’t judge because I am so over the moon happy for them, I just need to look after my mental health and sometimes that takes the form of stepping back from triggers.
My support crew was amazing (they know who they are). They may not have been able to empathise or understand exactly what I was going through, because it is impossible unless you are walking these shoes, but they leaned in and held my hand, they accepted me for who I was the last 5 years, my Jekyll & Hyde personality, and they didn’t judge. I’ve lost some friends along away and that’s ok. I have met some amazing women I have interviewed on my podcast so far, most of who I now call dear friends. They mean the world to me.
And of course the 2 amazing people who came into our lives because of this journey, my surrogate and her partner, they saved me in more ways than one. I am not going to go into detail here about them – some things are private. We have our own way, “Team Thompson” of holding each other and the love we have – well, we are family no matter what.
So now I need to find out who I am. I am not the person I was before the trauma, I will never be her again. And I am not the person who had infertility and IVF and miscarriage following her like a shadow anymore. So, who am I? I don’t know but it is scary and exciting and empowering to start finding out. We have one life to live and we are going to do just that.
Everyone gets their happy ending, but for me it isn’t a rainbow baby. There is joy after infertility. And there is happiness after not being able to have your baby. I am still a work in progress and there are still very, very, dark days. Days where I am angry, days where I don’t want to get up and days I just cry. But if I can get to where I am after everything, you can too. It is hard to find the sun behind the clouds, but I am finding it in little ways each day. So just as the sun rises each day (even behind the clouds) you will rise too.
Anita x
Anita has kindly offered to answer questions on her journey in The Amber Networks (first) Instagram live coming soon! Follow us on Instagram to find out when. Please also follow her on Instagram – @heartache_2_hope