Fertility Success Story for a PANK
Written By Savvy Auntie Staff Writers
Special Guest Writer: Lisa Matkowsky is an all-around late bloomer, professionally
and personally, and proud of it. A law school dropout, Lisa finally
found her
calling as a writer/editor and psychotherapist. She lives in Riverdale,
New
York with her hard-won Mr. Right and her two hard-won sons, ages two and
four, and she treasures her 12 wonderful nieces and nephews.
As a professional, cosmopolitan woman immersed in New York's vibrant
Upper West Side dating scene, I had no worries. At 25 I assumed that
romance, marriage, and children (5, I decided) were a given. I planned
to have a lot of fun for 2-3 years, then get married and start a family.
And so I began my quest.
Two years passed, then three. A lot of drama ensued, but no Mr.
Right. Still, I really didn't worry. The anxiety began when my little (9
years younger) sister got engaged at the age of 22. I was 31. Soon
after, I became a proud PANK. I adored my little nephew, but I worried.
When would it be my turn?
I worried as my sister made me a devoted aunt several more times. I
worried as my 12-years-younger brother got married (imagine the pointed
questions and remarks I got at that wedding). My turn for love finally
came when I was 35. After a rough, 4-year, dead-end relationship, Mr.
Right sauntered into a party - in a tough-guy leather jacket with a
flask in his pocket.
When we got married, I was 36, and unsure about my fertility
prospects. Popular culture today conveys a rosy picture: glamorous
celebrities have children whenever they choose. I gave my new hubby a
few months of newlywed bliss, and then I pounced.
I dragged him to a fertility specialist. I will never forget the
first of several brutally insensitive phone calls I received on my
fertility journey as a late bloomer: Dr. VB called, matter-of-factly
announcing, "My tests indicate you'll never have children. At least
without in vitro fertilization."
As a PANK, I was a mother with no children. My yearning for
biological kids was a burning desire. We went to a well-known fertility
center where we endured weeks of tests. The verdict: my eggs were
"older." We decided to start with a round of IUI (Intrauterine
Insemination). It didn't work. The next month, we tried again. It didn't
work. The next month, we tried yet again. It. Didn't. Work.
My nerves were frayed. I was over-hormoned, dejected, and a little
hopeless. I thought Jennifer Anniston could have kids whenever she
decided she was ready. Women were postponing childbearing for all kinds
of reasons. Didn't that imply that they would ultimately CONCEIVE?
We tried the more advanced and complex IVF the next month. This
involved much higher doses of injectable hormones and a surgical removal
of eggs. First they tell you how many eggs you've produced (say 15).
Then they tell you a few days later how many of the 15 they were able to
inseminate. This number is fewer (say 9). A few days after that, you
get a call about how many fertilized (say 6). Then they tell you how
well the embryos developed (say 3 are viable to transfer back to your
uterus). Then you wait to see if any "take."
We waited. I'll never forget the snowy Friday afternoon when they
called with the results. The voice on the other end said
"Congratulations!!! You're pregnant!!!" I felt the room swim. Then she
added the unexplained "Your HCG is 81. Come in Monday for your next
blood test." I walked on air the rest of the weekend.
As a matter of course, I went in for the follow up blood test on
Monday, not knowing what it was fo. Later that day I received the
following phone call: "Your HCG is 102. So we have to decide whether to
end it or wait for the miscarriage to happen on its own."
It seems that the "HCG" blood levels should double about every two
days if a pregnancy is viable.The HCG kept going up, but never doubled. I
miscarried at 8 weeks. My husband comforted me that we would try again.
We waited an interminable 2 months for my body to recover. Then we
started the IVF process again.
Again, the congratulatory phone call. I had steeled myself, only
letting a tiny bit of hope seep in. But it didn't protect me. Again, the
numbers didn't double but kept rising. Afraid I might have an ectopic
pregnancy, putting my life in danger, they told me they'd have to give
me an injection to end the pregnancy.
Now what? Three failed rounds of IUI. Two failed rounds of IVF. I was 37.
We
decided to try a third emotionally and physically grueling round of
IVF. We waited for my next period to get started again. It never came.
I took a pregnancy test one day. Taking home pregnancy tests is a
frequent occurrence when trying to get pregnant, so it was really just a
game. Except it said POSITIVE.
My HCG was 500. Two days later it
was 1000. Then there was a tiny, fluttering heartbeat. We had what they
called a "spontaneous pregnancy." Which means we got pregnant all by
ourselves.
We gave birth to our much-wanted, most wondrous little boy in
February 2008. I was 38. It was a "high-risk" pregnancy because of my
age. Nevertheless, he was perfect, beautiful, and a mind-blowing amount
work. The experience was all I dreamed of.
When our baby was 6 months old, we went to a fancier clinic for IVF
round number 3. It failed profoundly: my "older" eggs were so
"fragmented' that not a single egg even fertilized. The doctor
pronounced my childbearing years over. I was deeply grateful for my son
but I was devastated that I could not give him a sibling. I thought, I
just got started and now it's over? I cursed myself for "playing around"
for so many years and for not being "focused" on getting married.
Determined, we went to a non-traditional fertility clinic. We did
IVF number 4 with the highest levels of injectable medications
possible. It failed, again producing not a single transferable embryo.
Sadly, our new doctor concluded, IVF would never work for us. But he was
as committed as we were, and said he was game to continue the more
basic, less costly (but also less effective) IUI every month in hopes of
catching one of the few good eggs this former PANK still had left.
I conceived on the first try. We gave birth to our second miracle in December of 2009, 22 months after our first. I was 40.
So
now, at 42, we do IUI every month with the prayer we might be blessed
one more time. I had one more cutting-edge IVF (round 5) after our
second son, but it failed. We have had many ups and downs, but we keep
our eyes on the prize. The sons we are blessed to have help us keep the
little gleam in our eyes for future blessings.
However, I would not have had to go through all this trouble if it had
been clear to me early on that conceiving would not always be easy. If I
had known when I was 25 and 30 what I would go through to have my sons
later in life, I would have frozen my eggs. If you know you want
children someday, and aren't willing to settle for anyone less than Mr.
Right just so you can have kids, that is definitely something I would
recommend doing.
Published: November 16, 2011