On A Much Happier Note
A long time ago, before this blog (so, more than four years ago), I was still at the bottom of the mountain we had to climb to get Tori. I was just beginning to go through the tests to find out the extent of our infertility. I didn't know anyone in person that had gone through anything like this, so naturally I turned to online forums to find support and comfort.
Back then, this site was free, and the forums were full of women trying to have babies. But so many of them were super chipper and hopeful, and they all got pregnant so quickly. I started checking out the threads of those of us that had bigger problems, and somewhere in there, somebody started a thread for my city.
We were a diverse group, but we all shared a bitterness and humor and even--dare I say it--a hope that we would all one day be parents. These women read the first writings of mine that would later become blog entries. They held my hand through IUI after IUI that didn't work, through my first and only IVF cycle, through my OHSS and eventually the Frozen Embryo Transfer that turned into the boys. They never yelled at me for complaining about my morning sickness, and when the time came that I lost the twins, they sent me food, and love, and comfort. I helped when they lost babies too, some to miscarriage, one to Trisonomy 18, one through a domestic adoption where the birth parents changed their minds.
Somehow, we all kept going forward. A couple of times, we actually got together in person. The first time was at a restaurant at a mall, and we all laughed so much the waiter had to ask how we all knew each other. Eventually, we moved off the forum we used and began staying in touch more directly.
We all celebrated as, slowly but surely, babies began to arrive. Some (and some others, and some others) came through adoption. Some of us had babies with the help of IUIs, and some of us had babies via IVF. Some used gestational surrogates. And a couple actually got pregnant, unexpectedly, without medical intervention. Some folks even began considering second babies.
But some still waited.
Until now.
Last night, at 11:56 am, the last baby of our online group arrived (via surrogate). Welcome, Charlie, welcome home. You have no idea how many of us have been waiting so, so long for you. We're so glad you are here.
Now, nearly five years (five, you guys, FIVE) we are no longer a group of infertile women, but a group of mothers. Tears of joy are running down my face for all of us.
Congratulations, everyone. Ellen, Tara, Liana, Chrissi, Barb, Julie, Michele, Shelly, Margie, and of course, me. I'm not sure I would have made it this far without you. I'm so glad--so fucking glad!--that we have all made it to the other side. It's pretty fucking great here.






