How we got here (AKA medical jargon and probably TMI)

Infertility really takes a lot of patience. Like, a lot. And I’m not talking about waiting until you FINALLY get that positive pregnancy test. (can’t wait until that happens btw ;)) There’s a lot of patience in the whole entire process. I wish you could just snap your fingers and say ‘ok, we’re doing invitro!’ No, the doctors won’t let that happen. Because in their eyes they want to try everything else because it is such a big process that’s tough on your body. And who knows, one of those might work and you don’t need to fork over the money for IVF. In our case, they didn’t work…so we’re forking away!

Here’s a list of what we’ve done until now. I probably forgot a few things here and there but I think this covers a lot of it.

I got off birth control in 2012. But I got the depo shots which stay in your system for who knows how long, so my period didn’t actually come back some 9 months later. That brings us to February 2013, almost 3 years ago. We started trying and after about 6 months of no pregoness, I visited my lady doctor. He said for us to keep trying into the new year and if nothing happened by then, to call. Yep, no Christmas miracle for us. So January 2014 came around…and still nada. Laryen and I went to to meet with him to go over the next steps. At the time we lived in Springfield, Missouri — a wonderful city that we loved. But there was one thing that sucked about Springfield… there were no fertility doctors there! Like none, at all! The closest ones were in Kansas City or Tulsa…a good 3 hours away from us! So our doctor could only do so much to find out WHAT was preventing us from getting pregnant. (Yet ANOTHER hurdle in the infertility game of life!)

One of the first things he did was put me on Clomid. Clomid is medicine that helps you ovulate. I’ve never missed a period in my life so I knew I was ovulating, but this would make sure that I was. We tried that for three months in a row, took a month off, then did one more round. The problem is if you take too much Clomid, it could do the opposite and prevent you from getting pregnant — and backwards is not an option for us!

We also got Laryen’s swimmer’s tested. They could only test a couple of things though. Fertility clinics can test way more, but this office didn’t have those means. Laryen’s numbers were great! His swimmer’s were swimming (motility) and there were a lot of them (count). Motility and count were the only things they could test, and with good results we knew we could check that off the list! I got a little more blood work done at the end of the 3rd round of Clomid and they discovered that my progesterone was low. Progesterone is what makes your uterus fluffy and nice for the little embryo to live in! If you don’t have enough of it, then the embryo can’t implant, thus no pregnancy.

We finally felt like we had a light at the end of the tunnel! FINALLY something wasn’t “right” to medical standards. Everything else was great, so this one thing could be the reason why we can’t get pregnant! Let me tell you, during infertility anything that comes up wrong or low makes you so happy! Because at least for us, it gave us something to grasp — something to hold on to. We knew that if they fixed that one thing, and if everything else was good … our bundle of joy would get here!

WRONG! haha, I just have to laugh at myself sometimes. It lightens the mood for me, because this list is a lot longer than I was thinking, lol.

Anyway, I got progesterone suppositories prescribed to me… and lemme tell you, those are not fun! You take them for 14 days and you have to put one in you (yes, up there) twice a day and you feel like you’re leaking everywhere!! But hey, it’s a little thing and I didn’t care because I knew we were moving forward. But still no positive test.

Fast forward to October 2014. We are in a new city! Being a TV anchor means you move around a lot. Now we’re settled into Lubbock, Texas and we love it! And guess what? There are fertility clinics here — a couple of them! Hallelujah! So I establish myself with a lady doc who gives me a referral to a fertility doctor but you can’t just walk right in. No… there’s a waiting list. (it just shows you how many people are going through the same thing as us!)

We got an appointment for February 2015 (2 years after we started trying). In the meantime, we got some more tests done so when we saw the doctor we could know what the next step was. They did blood work and scheduled an HSG. An HSG ( or hysterosalpingogram) is a test where they put dye in your uterus and with an x-ray can see if the dye goes all the way into your tubes and into your ovaries. If it does, then everything is clear and you’re good to go! If it doesn’t, that means something could be blocking the tubes, which means the sperm isn’t getting close to the egg. They tried to get the dye flowing 3 times … nothing. As heartbreaking as this was to hear, we were positive about it. As weird as it sounds, it was ANOTHER thing to hold on to. Something is wrong with my tubes, and that’s why we’re not pregnant.

We FINALLY meet our fertility doctor, Dr. Huang. He’s originally from Houston and over 20 + years he’s helped hundreds of couples get pregnant. He’s super nice and understanding, but also straight forward which both Laryen and I appreciate. We don’t want anyone to b.s. us around…we’ve already spent a lot of money and time getting to this point. Dr. Huang says based on the HSG x-ray and the blood work, it’s inconclusive. He wants a closer look which means surgery.

I had surgery at the end of February 2015. They checked for two things. One, they repeat the HSG to see if my tubes are working and two, they check for any other abnormalities in my uterus such as endometriosis or PCOS. Endometriosis is a disease where the tissue that normally lines the uterus grows outside the uterus. PCOS (or polycystic ovary syndrome) is a disease where your ovaries grow too big and get cysts on them. MILLIONS of women have these diseases and they’re a huge factor in infertility. (remember 1 in 8 couples have infertility).

My tubes are GREAT! The dye goes through no problem and if anything was in there blocking anything, it’s flushed away! They did find a teeny teeny bit of endometriosis but they burned it off. So it’s like my whole reproductive system is brand spankin’ new! Dr. Huang tells us to give it another few months. I get put back on Clomid and with a lot of faith and hope we give it another whirl.

May 2015: Still nothing. Back to the doctor. Dr. Huang explains they do everything they can to see if there’s a problem with the woman. We are just complicated. So many different things going on inside us that can prevent us from doing what nature wants us to do. Since I was pretty much good to go now they move on to Laryen. Remember, he was tested before and his motility and count is good. But fertility clinics can test so many more aspects of the microscopic sperm, it’s unbelievable! And we get another nugget to hold on it.

So we test Laryen again. And let me tell you, it’s crazy how they do it. He gives them a sample and they put 200 INDIVIDUAL SPERM under a microscope. Can you believe they can do that?! All the numbers are great, except for one.

Morphology. It’s pretty much the shape of the sperm. Sperm has to have a certain shape to get into the egg. They need to have a pointed head so they can dig their way into all the cells surrounding the egg (go back to 5th grade sex-ed class) Pretty much it’s one of the most important parts of what makes a sperm a sperm. Because if it’s not the right shape then no matter how fast the guys are or how many there are, if the morphology is low the swimmers just hang out outside of the egg … there’s no partying going on on the inside — which is what you want. Out of Laryen’s 200 swimmers, 0 had the correct morphology.

You might be thinking — that’s it! That’s why they can’t get pregnant! His swimmers don’t want to party with Lauren’s egg, we FINALLY solved the mystery. Well, kind of. It was the first thing out of the past 2 years that made sense as to why we couldn’t get pregnant. But his numbers weren’t really that far off from “normal.” In regular couples, who aren’t infertile, on average only 4 sperm have the correct morphology. 4/200…which equals 2 percent. (when you break it all down like this, it’s amazing that ANY of us are actually here! Being pregnant really is a miracle!) And Dr. Huang made a good point. He said in another sample, there might have been 1 or 2 or more that had good morphology because in nature there isn’t zero like there isn’t 100%. We’re all somewhere in the middle. But based off of all of our results over the past 2 1/2 years, it felt like we were finally getting somewhere. The hardest hurdle next was knowing that we couldn’t get pregnant on our own. We needed help from the fertility doctor, and that’s a hard pill to swallow. We needed help. And when you realize that and move on, another hurdle. We need help to get pregnant, and we have to pay real dollars to get there. EEK!

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