Posts Tagged M&Ms

A Medal in My Bra

Each month I run a local peer support group for RESOLVE.    Someone recently asked me why I continue to run the group, almost 3 years later.  What do I get from it?  Call it a personal form of therapy, call it what keeps me humble and able to appreciate all the good that has come into my life.  Call it a mission – I love to put people in touch with others – to help create life bonding moments.

Each month, for better for for worse,  I am given the opportunity to remember the many, many, moments that loosely define my personal struggle to build a family.

Some are good memories, like the monthly breakfasts with my good friend, as we bitched and whined our way though eggs and bacon.  I get to fondly remember my husband proclaming himself the ‘Ass-Master,’ a nickname in honor of his ability to deliver my intermuscular progeterone in oil shots without a bruise to my backside.  I remeber the thrill (odd word choice, but others who have been there will understand) of our first transfer and carefully trying not to pee out the embryo.  I smile, almost secretly, at the hope that I felt walking out of a meeting with our adoption agency director.  Frustrating moments abound.  It seems like only yesterday I was waiting for a nurse to call with my HSG levels.  And  don’t even get me started on listening to the co-worker inform the office she is pregant – again – and this time they didn’t even plan it.  And can anyone please tell me why the clinic never seems to have my file on hand when I show up for an appointment!

Some memories I have all but pushed out of my head because they take up to much energy to revisit them:  a hard night spent crying so that the blood vessels burst under my eyes, hours curled up under a blanket, wishing for more than the miserable existance of living in this infertility fog, walking around the track thinking up baby names and wishing for a miracle as life passed me by, losing our baby to a miscarriage early in the pregnancy.  That one still brings tears to my eyes. To be sure, my husband, a handful of close friends, tons of peaut M&Ms, and the occassional glass of wine got me through some of the worst times in my life.  In my efforts to become pregnant, I  have tried most of the traditonal and downright bizzare methods known.  Anyone else would have done the same.  I recently came across a journal entry from that time and thought it would be appropriate to share.

***

How did I go from being a fun-loving, relatively intelligent Jewish woman to wearing a St. Gerard medal in my bra?  St. Gerard, in the Catholic religion, is the patron saint of expectant mothers.  This fact comforted me as I slipped the blessed medal underneath my shirt.  Immediately, little nagging voices started to fill my mind.  Maybe you should put the medal on a chain and wear it around your neck instead?  I pondered this as I walked over to the refrigerator to grab a handful of M&Ms, my favorite staple these days.  The medal fell out of my bra and I bent to quickly retrieve it from my dog’s waiting jaws.  I shoved it back inside, this time in the space right between my breasts.  The dog went back to sniffing the floor.  You are crazy, this won’t work.  I sat down at the kitchen table and reviewed the card, a lovely sentiment from my friend that had arrived in today’s mail.  My friend Ellen is a religious person.  I had recently shared with her the devastating news of my miscarriage this past winter.  She indicated in her card that some years ago, she had given a St. Gerard medal to a former co-worker who had suffered several miscarriages.  The woman wore the medal in her bra, to keep it close to her heart.  After one year, she conceived a healthy boy.  We aren’t Catholic,” my voices insisted.  I adjusted the medal with the full knowledge that I had done many strange things during the past 2 ½ years in my struggle with infertility.  As I saw it, wearing the medal in my bra met the basic criteria of where I was at in my journey, mentally and physically:  it didn’t cost any money, cause me any bodily harm, and didn’t require getting up at the crack of dawn.  Harmless,” I thought, as I shoved more M & Ms into my mouth.  Besides.” the voices continued, “this may just be the thing that works.” 

Add comment March 26, 2008


Categories

Adoption

Blogroll

Infertility

POF

Archives

Tags

Adoption adoption day adoption misconceptions barking Birthmother Breast Cancer Bumpy Road conference costs of domestic infant adoption DES DSS exhaustion first meeting with birthmother Happy Adoption Day heart HRT Infertility life-altering moments love M&Ms Medals memory loss Mother's Day nationalities and folk ways nature vs. nurture oncology team open adoption parenthood POF potty training Questions radiation therapy radiation treatment raising toddlers rudeness social worker Social Workers St. Gerard struggle Support talking to your child about adoption Telephone Call think before you speak Tired