Percentage of miscarriage on clomid

Taking the journey to parenthood together.

2011.05.25 04:04 Avalon81204 Taking the journey to parenthood together.

This group is for anyone trying for a baby! Come discuss fertility, sex, conception, and learn all about how your body works!
[link]


2014.04.11 18:31 dabeezkneez HPT and OPK Line Scrutiny

Welcome to a community dedicated to sharing and analyzing pictures of HPTs (home pregnancy tests)/OPKs (ovulation predictor kits)! You can ask for another set of eyes or simply celebrate here! Please read all rules for the subreddit before participating or posting. Thank you!
[link]


2014.03.31 19:49 Semen-Retention

*PLEASE READ THIS AND CLICK ON EACH DROP DOWN RULE BEFORE POSTING ANYTHING TO AVOID A BAN* Welcome brothers. SR is an ancient practice used by a small percentage of the male population worldwide. SR provides many benefits that are extremely useful to men regardless of your age, social or financial situation. The purpose of this sub is to discuss the physical and spiritual benefits of retaining. NoFap posts will not be tolerated and is insta-ban. Good Luck brothers
[link]


2024.05.18 15:10 ShoeSavings6767 Incredibly high HCG at 16dpo

TW: History of loss
Hi all!
A little history is that I’ve had 4 miscarriages, discovered some auto immune and blood clotting issues, and have since had 2 living babies on an immune/clotting protocol.
I’m sure this will get downvotes, but please have grace with me as I regret my decision and am feeling the stress of it. My cycle wasn’t really returning postpartum this time around, so I decided to take 4 days of expired clomid (from my first viable pregnancy in 2021, which was also unmonitored). On day 4 I panicked about the thought of twins and didn’t finish the dose. We still decided to try that month, and now, I’m pregnant. I’m so grateful, especially with my history of loss, but I have NEVER in my 6 other pregnancies had betas this high and I’m stresssssing that it’s twins or a molar pregnancy. I know some people hope for twins, but I’m already high risk for my clotting disorder and a history of cholestasis and I really don’t want to add a 3rd high risk factor. I also would have 4 under 3 and not to be dramatic I think that might kill me.
Has anyone had high hcg levels and just had 1 healthy babe?
My hcg has been: 12dpo - 123 14dpo - 424 16dpo - 1261
Thanks in advance. 😭🤍🫶🏼
submitted by ShoeSavings6767 to CautiousBB [link] [comments]


2024.05.17 02:10 rb521947 Are we having fun yet? 🫠

TTC 3 years, started at a fertility clinic 8 months ago. Having “unexplained infertility,” we were super excited to start IUI because it finally felt like we had some control. I miscarried at 7 weeks with the first round, ectopic pregnancy on the second round, finally ending the trilogy with a chemical pregnancy two weeks ago.
We’re now starting IVF + recurrent miscarriage testing, and my IVF drugs were just delivered today. I remember my first shipment of clomid + ovidrel and how excited I was, that package felt soooo empowering! But with each progressive shipment…it’s lost its luster. I literally just unpackaged all these IVF drugs and it just feels sad—any previous joy and excitement is just replaced with anxiety and disheartenment.
It’s a step forward but just depressing that this process has robbed us any enjoyment in starting our family 💔
submitted by rb521947 to InfertilitySucks [link] [comments]


2024.05.16 21:26 AspieComrade Our nice doctor retired, first meeting with the replacement doctor and my wife is told that she’ll be refused IVF if she continues to be upset regarding her infertility

Had to rant somewhere with people that would understand
We had a lovely female doctor who treated the matter with sensitivity and thoroughness, and when we heard she’d retired and been replaced with a male doctor my wife and I immediately knew we were in for trouble as 100% of the male doctors we’ve seen in our fertility journey have been pompous, insensitive and completely unknowledgeable in their field with a total inability to listen to any questions or concerns (my personal ‘favourite’ being when we voiced concern of (spoiler tagged for trigger warning) a higher chance of miscarriage if we conceived by chance before knowing what had been causing her lifelong issues and he responded with “well half of pregnancies end up in miscarriage anyway so…” shrug)
Having never had regular cycles in her life and other concerns, it’s taken a huge toll on my wife’s mental health and she’s had to seek mental health support to cope with the stress and anxiety and everything else surrounding it.
Having had a difficult day already with anxiety surrounding this upcoming appointment with the new doctor and with a friend sending her a picture of his baby because he forgot that it’s upsetting to her (🙄), she cried during the appointment when she was told that the first round of clomid had no effect and that she was to try again on the same dose and that they’d keep repeating the process for six months before looking at IVF. Instead of trying to comfort his crying patient, he responds to this by saying that if she’s not sorted her emotions out by that point then he’s going to personally see to it that IVF treatment is refused and that her fertility treatment is stopped there. Even the (female) nurse seemed taken aback at that comment but didn’t say anything.
So now we’re at a point where she can no longer risk seeking mental health support, lest this doctor use those appointments as receipts to refuse treatment. I’m curious if anyone else has gone through/ is going through anything similar on their journey?
submitted by AspieComrade to InfertilitySucks [link] [comments]


2024.05.16 04:21 Unusual-Tangerine987 Myo-inositol/ NAC supplements?

Hi all - I was diagnosed with PCOS after going off birth control and realizing my periods were fairly irregular (30-60 days). I have no other symptoms outside of irregular periods and cysts confirmed via ultrasound and my labs have been fairly normal (normal testosterone, normal insulin, normal glucose). BMI of 21 so I am technically in the “lean PCOS” category and have been athletic/eat healthy most of my life. I also have hypothyroidism and have been taking levothyroxine to keep my TSH levels within the normal range also, my RE says the irregular periods are most likely only caused by PCOS and that the hypothyroidism is a nonfactor since my TS has been consistent.
I am not currently TTC but am planning to soon and have been wanting to understand all potential options to regulate my periods prior to trying. My RE recommended 2000 mg myo-inositol daily and 600mg n-acetylcysteine daily as a potential supplement to regulate periods, but that I would most likely need some sort of ovulation stimulant like clomid/letrozole when we are actually TTC. I wanted to ask the PCOS community if anyone has had success with these supplements? Recommended brands? These seem branded as a diabetes medication - How does this supplement actually support ovulation in women with lean PCOS?
My RE said that I most likely am not ovulating if my cycles are long especially up to 60 days, and that if we did start trying now that there is a potential that I could be ovulating but that the long cycles could mean a reduction in egg quality… more risk of miscarriage etc… I interpreted this as “wait to start trying until your cycles are closer to 30 days”… any ideas on this?
submitted by Unusual-Tangerine987 to PCOS [link] [comments]


2024.05.16 04:13 Unusual-Tangerine987 Myo-inositol/NAC Supplements?

Hi all - I was diagnosed with PCOS after going off birth control and realizing my periods were fairly irregular (30-60 days). I have no other symptoms outside of irregular periods and cysts confirmed via ultrasound and my labs have been fairly normal (normal testosterone, normal insulin, normal glucose). BMI is 21 and have always been athletic/eat healthy. I also have hypothyroidism and have been taking levothyroxine to keep my TSH levels within the normal range also, my RE says the irregular periods are most likely only caused by PCOS and that the hypothyroidism is a nonfactor since my TSH has been consistent.
I am not currently TTC but am planning to soon and have been wanting to understand all potential options to regulate my periods prior to trying. My RE recommended 2000 mg myo-inositol daily and 600mg n-acetylcysteine daily as a potential supplement to regulate periods, but that I would most likely need some sort of ovulation stimulant like clomid/letrozole when we are actually TTC. I wanted to ask the lean PCOS community if anyone has had success with these supplements? Recommended brands?
My RE said that I most likely am not ovulating if my cycles are as long as up to 60 days, and that if we did start trying now that there is a potential that I could be ovulating but that the long cycles could mean a reduction in egg quality… more risk of miscarriage etc… I interpreted this as “wait to start trying until your cycles are closer to 30 days”… any ideas on this?
submitted by Unusual-Tangerine987 to LeanPCOS [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 13:25 StyleCompetitive9197 2 day period

Hi I know I’ve been a frequent on here lately so sorry for that. I started my period the month after a 7 week miscarriage and it was only two days of heavy bleeding and on the third day barely anything. Kinda just spotting now on the fourth day and this has never ever happened to me. I’m supposed to start unmonitored clomid tomorrow on day 5 and I’m kinda freaking out about the unmonitored part. I’m going to call tomorrow but I just don’t know if I should take another month to get my cycle fixed. Have any of you only had a short period the month after miscarriage? It’s just so unlike me. My others were chemical and ectopic so it was just different this time
submitted by StyleCompetitive9197 to recurrentmiscarriage [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 13:21 TeeCee90x3 FIL told me to “please take care of the baby”. 18 weeks pregnant and triggered. Should I feel triggered? Is it the pregnancy hormones?

My FIL is a nice man but he has the tendency to say stupid and ignorant shit without thinking.
My husband and I were dropping off my FIL and step MIL at the airport and before he got out of the car, he said “please take care of the baby”. The comment seemed harmless but I couldn’t help but get anxious and I just felt triggered. I replied by telling him “of course”. Personally, I just felt insulted. In my mind I was thinking: what does he think I’m doing? Of course I’m taking care of my baby, I’m the mother and obviously I don’t have any control on whether or not I have a successful pregnancy. What he doesn’t know is that I had an early miscarriage in November so this really triggered me. It probably seems like a harmless comment but the last time we saw him was a few weeks ago when we told him that I was pregnant. The entire time he was like “our last name lives on! (I’m having a boy) and he was just talking to my husband and not us as a couple. I told my husband that his dad treats me as if I’m a random surrogate who is having his grandchild and not the wife of his son who is having her own first child.
I personally think there is a lot of annoying subconscious generalizations going on. I am my husband’s second wife. He got married in his early 20s to an au pair from Brazil. It was unfortunately a situation where everyone else knew it wasn’t going to work out except for my husband. It turned sour really quick and she was after her US citizenship at the end of their short marriage (she straight up begged him to stay with her for three more months to meet the requirement). Now here I am, this US born Asian American feeling like I am indeed just the second wife. My FIL treats me as if I am fresh off the boat and as if I’m not really there. Some of it is comical, some of it is annoying and some of it is straight up ignorant.
Examples: He once made boom boom shrimp and had chopsticks for us to eat at Christmas dinner. His dad once texted me a menu from a lao/Thai restaurant and asked me what Lao is. I am Vietnamese American btw and of course I was like why is he asking me this? He knows how to Google. So I had to awkwardly tell him it’s a country in Asia. Last Thanksgiving my husband casually told my FIL that maybe we will host next time. My father in law then said “just no cat, I heard countries in Asia eat cat”. I was in total shock. I get that a small percentage of people unfortunately do eat cats in certain countries but I am American born and I love animals. I have a very well taken care of cat who is insured and has an expensive prescription diet. I also have two dogs that I absolutely love. My FIL has cat sat for us before and he knows this is my cat from when I was single. Luckily my husband checked him there and then brought it up again and made my FIL feel bad about it (as he should because my FIL initially denied remembering saying that). Other than that, my FIL doesn’t think to respect boundaries because my husband is passive (he’s trying not to be). My husband and I both paid for our house and my FIL acts as if this is my husband’s house. Not that it should matter but we are both college grads who work for major global companies. (I quit once I got preggo because I plan to be a SAHM).
submitted by TeeCee90x3 to pregnant [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 20:12 AlecMaiz0 Article: Gender Disappointment in 2024 is Almost Always About Boys "A shameful secret kept from the public eye but omnipresent in online mom spaces"

Article: Gender Disappointment in 2024 is Almost Always About Boys
"Recently, a Slate article came out about the parents who are seeking IVF—not because of fertility struggles or even genetic diseases, but strictly for the purpose of having a daughter instead of a son. Selfishly, as an IVF mom, I don’t love articles like these. The vast majority of people who choose IVF do it for infertility reasons, and a much smaller percentage to it to avoid serious familial diseases. The people doing IVF solely for gender selection (let alone absurd things like height or eye color- nearly impossible to do anyway) are few and far between, so rare in fact that articles like these almost seem like hate-bait, describing a rare phenomenon as if it’s a growing trend because almost everyone reading about it will disapprove. This is especially prescient with extreme right-wing disapproval of IVF. We’re dealing with that already, and now you’re gonna try to get everyone else on their side because you’ve painted IVF parents as vain, self-absorbed, baby-designers. Okay.
What is a common trend, however, is gender disappointment—a strong feeling of sadness or anxiety that happens when parents discover the sex of their child isn’t what they hoped. Technically it should be “Sex Disappointment,” not to be confused with how I’d describe losing my virginity.
Gender disappointment isn’t new. For most of human history, parents have wanted sons instead of daughters. During the one-child policy era in China, baby girls were aborted, killed after birth, abandoned, or adopted out. Other cultures around the world still practice infanticide, mostly targeted at baby girls. If we resurrected everyone who has ever lived, and told them that people in modern-day America often feel gender disappointment, they would naturally assume people were disappointed about having girls. But that’s not the case.
Modern-day gender disappointment is primarily an online phenomenon (mom groups, Reddit, etc.) because people don’t want to be judged. It’s not acceptable to want anything other than a “healthy baby.” In fact, when I was pregnant and I jokingly mentioned that I hoped our first born would have my husband’s beautiful eyes, a relative chided “all you should care about is that the baby is healthy.” Even a minor, innocuous preference for one gender is met with judgment—every mom must insist they don’t care. So naturally, online mom spaces are where moms go to voice their fears and sadness around gender disappointment. And 99% of the time, they’re disappointed to be having a boy.
The disappointment when popping a balloon filled with blue confetti or simply opening a Sneak Peak test at 8 weeks and discovering XY chromosomes can be boiled down to multiple things. Let’s start with the most simple and harmless reason. I think almost every parent has a slight preference toward having a child of the same sex as themselves, not because they find their own sex superior, but rather because one of the fun things about being a parent is getting to introduce your child to all your favorite things from childhood (and if you’re a feminine woman, there’s a lot of fun in dressing up your daughter—dressing up your son can be fun too, but the options for boy clothes aren’t as cute.) In 2024, we have to pay lip service to the idea that “of course my son might like dolls and my daughter might like monster trucks,” but I do think boys are generally, on average, more likely to gravitate toward some things and the same goes with girls. Even in my super-progressive circle, where everyone says they raise their kids gender-neutral, I’ve noticed that all the girls in my son’s class love the movie Frozen, even if they also like dinosuars, and almost all the boys in his class love superheroes, even if they also play with baby dolls.
When we found out we were having a boy, my husband was excited to introduce him to basketball, and when I found out I was having a girl, I got excited to gift her my old dollhouse which I designed with my mother over years of attending dollhouse trade shows and shopping at antique dollhouse stores. That doesn’t mean we’d love our children any less if they weren’t gender conforming, or that we wouldn’t adjust our plans if we turned out to have a son who loved dolls and a girl who loved basketball, just that it’s fairly reasonable to assume your average girl is going to get some enjoyment from a dollhouse, and your average boy will get some enjoyment from sports. They may not, and that’s okay too! But it’s reasonable to fantasize about it, as long as you aren’t strongly tied to that fantasy.
But maybe it’s deeper than a sadness about Carter’s only offering camo-pattern cargo shorts after age two, or about never getting to use Felicity the American Girl Doll’s pet lamb Posey again. I can’t help but notice that all the positive traits that used to be associated with boys are now considered gender neutral (strong, capable, intelligent, ambitious), while most of the positive traits that used to be associated with girls are still associated with girls (nurturing, empathetic, detail-oriented, polite). Meanwhile, boys have been assigned plenty of negative traits: they will embody “toxic masculinity.” They will be difficult. They won’t be kind. They’ll grow up to be obnoxious frat bros. They’ll be violent. Many of the women who express these concerns, paradoxically, are progressives who claim to believe that there are no innate differences between men and women. Perhaps they’re concerned that the negative traits associated with boys will emerge because of “society,” but to be honest, I’m not really buying it. I think they do believe in some differences, and there’s cognitive dissonance when belief in those differences collides with paying lip service to the idea that men and women are interchangeable and the insistence that all gender preferences are morally repugnant.
Perhaps, most terrifying even to women who don’t believe in the other gendered stereotypes: boys apparently won’t visit you when they’re older, provided they are heterosexual. They will become absorbed by their wives’ families, and pay more attention to their mother-in-laws than to you. “Boy moms” across social media post short videos joking about their fears of becoming “the paternal grandmother” or “the mother of the groom.”
My mother-in-law has two sons and I asked her if she ever wished she had a daughter. She emphatically said no, and I believed her, mostly because she’s not a big girly-girl herself, and she never felt overly sentimental about her kids being dependent on her. She happily worked when they were younger and valued her career, and notably, looked forward to her kids getting older and becoming more independent instead of looking misty-eyed at their old baby clothes. My guess is, women like this are not the ones expressing gender disappointment.
I didn’t think I was capable of gender disappointment. I did IVF and I knew before I even got pregnant that my first child was a boy. I happily decorated a boy nursery, bought boy clothes (I did have to get creative to avoid the onslaught of construction vehicles and dingy gray, but I managed!) and happily referred to myself as “Team Blue” on my mom group polls. But crucially, I planned on having more than one child. I knew we had a chance for a girl next. I knew I would love my kids the same, but on some level I think I’d have been disappointed if I knew having a daughter was completely off the table in the future.
Unfortunately, I got a mini-taste of that reality when I got pregnant again. My embryo was a girl, and I miscarried. It was early, but because I knew the sex, and had a name and nursery plan picked out, I reacted more strongly than one would expect for such an early loss.
While I never felt gender disappointment with my son, I did feel some during my miscarriage. Losing my pregnancy—even as early as it was—felt like losing the idea of a daughter. I had built up eighteen years of mother-daughter bonding in my head, and for the first time since our infertility diagnosis, I felt deep dread that I might never get to experience that. Yes, I would experience bonding with my son and perhaps another son, but unless one of them expressed extremely feminine interests, what if I never had many hobbies in common with them? What if my future was spent at soccer tournaments, wrestling matches, and Little League games, while my old dollhouse my mother and I designed together collected dust until it got auctioned off in my mom’s estate sale someday? I would still be happy—certainly much happier than if I never had children—but would I always carry a tiny nugget of sadness that I never got to do “girl things” with my kids?
Of course, I didn’t want to express that feeling because every time I did, people would insist that my kids might turn out to be trans or nonbinary (true! and I would accept them and love them!) or for all I knew, my son would grow up to love Barbies. It felt unhelpful. Of course, if my son loved Barbies, I would get him Barbies, but it seemed like an odd thing to place my hopes on. I did not want to find myself subconsciously pushing my son or sons into girl-coded activities with the hope of relinquishing some fragment of a mother-daughter dream I once had. That, to me, felt more toxic than the assumption that all boys like trucks and dinosaurs.
Another reason I didn’t want to express this feeling to anyone other than my closest family members was the inevitable guilt tripping—what about women who can’t have children? Why should I be so selfish as to care about gender when some women can’t conceive at all? This felt especially hurtful because I was one of those women! Well, technically we did IVF for male factor infertility, but we struggled nonetheless. This guilt-trip didn’t make me feel better about the prospect of never having a daughter, but it did make me feel worse about myself as a parent and a person overall. Many infertility moms (myself included) struggle with feeling like we don’t deserve our kids, and that we certainly don’t deserve to ever complain or experience anything other than gratitude. So anyway: not helpful!
I did wind up having a daughter next, and unsurprisingly, gender had no bearing on my bonding with my kids. I truly love them equally, and would continue to feel that way regardless of how much they adhered to gender roles. And I promise I’m not just saying that!
There’s no real fix here, because this type of gender disappointment is largely tied in with the progressive ideals of gender equality, while holding onto some benevolent sexism. If boys are no longer important for the purpose of continuing the family lineage, serving as capable family farm workers, being the heirs to family businesses or being responsible for providing, then what’s special about them? While we extoll the virtues of girls on a regular basis, we’re afraid to do the same with boys, just in case we fall back on harmful antiquated stereotypes. And even as a card-carrying liberal, I think this creates a pretty toxic dynamic. You don’t have to be a Tucker Carlson viewer to admit something bad is happening with boys, who often don’t feel like there is anything just for them, while there are multiple things just for girls. A six-year-old boy isn’t going to “check his privilege” and acknowledge he benefits from a legacy of male privilege so it’s the girls’ turn.
That’s not to say that we are living in some kind of matriarchy, or that men are oppressed in some kind of systemic way. Just that, at least during childhood, we talk about what’s great about girls but are afraid to talk about what’s great about boys, while paradoxically, insisting there are no differences between girls and boys. And as the mom of a boy: boys are pretty great too!
I think most moms who never have daughters, even those who were initially upset about it, turn out fine. Most of the posts I see about gender disappointment are met with a multitude of comments saying “I felt the same way, and now I can’t imagine ever feeling that way again, because my son is awesome.” I believe them. A hypothetical baby isn’t the same as a real baby, and often the love for a real baby will vanquish any previous feelings of gender disappointment. I know many women who initially felt gender disappointment during a pregnancy but none who fail to bond with their sons. So all things considered, this is a temporary state. But it’s causing distress even if not permanent distress, and that’s bad for everyone."
submitted by AlecMaiz0 to MensRights [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 20:06 AlecMaiz0 Gender Disappointment in 2024 is Almost Always About Boys. "A shameful secret kept from the public eye but omnipresent in online mom spaces"

Gender Disappointment in 2024 is Almost Always About Boys.
"Recently, a Slate article came out about the parents who are seeking IVF—not because of fertility struggles or even genetic diseases, but strictly for the purpose of having a daughter instead of a son. Selfishly, as an IVF mom, I don’t love articles like these. The vast majority of people who choose IVF do it for infertility reasons, and a much smaller percentage to it to avoid serious familial diseases. The people doing IVF solely for gender selection (let alone absurd things like height or eye color- nearly impossible to do anyway) are few and far between, so rare in fact that articles like these almost seem like hate-bait, describing a rare phenomenon as if it’s a growing trend because almost everyone reading about it will disapprove. This is especially prescient with extreme right-wing disapproval of IVF. We’re dealing with that already, and now you’re gonna try to get everyone else on their side because you’ve painted IVF parents as vain, self-absorbed, baby-designers. Okay.
What is a common trend, however, is gender disappointment—a strong feeling of sadness or anxiety that happens when parents discover the sex of their child isn’t what they hoped. Technically it should be “Sex Disappointment,” not to be confused with how I’d describe losing my virginity.
Gender disappointment isn’t new. For most of human history, parents have wanted sons instead of daughters. During the one-child policy era in China, baby girls were aborted, killed after birth, abandoned, or adopted out. Other cultures around the world still practice infanticide, mostly targeted at baby girls. If we resurrected everyone who has ever lived, and told them that people in modern-day America often feel gender disappointment, they would naturally assume people were disappointed about having girls. But that’s not the case.
Modern-day gender disappointment is primarily an online phenomenon (mom groups, Reddit, etc.) because people don’t want to be judged. It’s not acceptable to want anything other than a “healthy baby.” In fact, when I was pregnant and I jokingly mentioned that I hoped our first born would have my husband’s beautiful eyes, a relative chided “all you should care about is that the baby is healthy.” Even a minor, innocuous preference for one gender is met with judgment—every mom must insist they don’t care. So naturally, online mom spaces are where moms go to voice their fears and sadness around gender disappointment. And 99% of the time, they’re disappointed to be having a boy.
The disappointment when popping a balloon filled with blue confetti or simply opening a Sneak Peak test at 8 weeks and discovering XY chromosomes can be boiled down to multiple things. Let’s start with the most simple and harmless reason. I think almost every parent has a slight preference toward having a child of the same sex as themselves, not because they find their own sex superior, but rather because one of the fun things about being a parent is getting to introduce your child to all your favorite things from childhood (and if you’re a feminine woman, there’s a lot of fun in dressing up your daughter—dressing up your son can be fun too, but the options for boy clothes aren’t as cute.) In 2024, we have to pay lip service to the idea that “of course my son might like dolls and my daughter might like monster trucks,” but I do think boys are generally, on average, more likely to gravitate toward some things and the same goes with girls. Even in my super-progressive circle, where everyone says they raise their kids gender-neutral, I’ve noticed that all the girls in my son’s class love the movie Frozen, even if they also like dinosuars, and almost all the boys in his class love superheroes, even if they also play with baby dolls.
When we found out we were having a boy, my husband was excited to introduce him to basketball, and when I found out I was having a girl, I got excited to gift her my old dollhouse which I designed with my mother over years of attending dollhouse trade shows and shopping at antique dollhouse stores. That doesn’t mean we’d love our children any less if they weren’t gender conforming, or that we wouldn’t adjust our plans if we turned out to have a son who loved dolls and a girl who loved basketball, just that it’s fairly reasonable to assume your average girl is going to get some enjoyment from a dollhouse, and your average boy will get some enjoyment from sports. They may not, and that’s okay too! But it’s reasonable to fantasize about it, as long as you aren’t strongly tied to that fantasy.
But maybe it’s deeper than a sadness about Carter’s only offering camo-pattern cargo shorts after age two, or about never getting to use Felicity the American Girl Doll’s pet lamb Posey again. I can’t help but notice that all the positive traits that used to be associated with boys are now considered gender neutral (strong, capable, intelligent, ambitious), while most of the positive traits that used to be associated with girls are still associated with girls (nurturing, empathetic, detail-oriented, polite). Meanwhile, boys have been assigned plenty of negative traits: they will embody “toxic masculinity.” They will be difficult. They won’t be kind. They’ll grow up to be obnoxious frat bros. They’ll be violent. Many of the women who express these concerns, paradoxically, are progressives who claim to believe that there are no innate differences between men and women. Perhaps they’re concerned that the negative traits associated with boys will emerge because of “society,” but to be honest, I’m not really buying it. I think they do believe in some differences, and there’s cognitive dissonance when belief in those differences collides with paying lip service to the idea that men and women are interchangeable and the insistence that all gender preferences are morally repugnant.
Perhaps, most terrifying even to women who don’t believe in the other gendered stereotypes: boys apparently won’t visit you when they’re older, provided they are heterosexual. They will become absorbed by their wives’ families, and pay more attention to their mother-in-laws than to you. “Boy moms” across social media post short videos joking about their fears of becoming “the paternal grandmother” or “the mother of the groom.”
My mother-in-law has two sons and I asked her if she ever wished she had a daughter. She emphatically said no, and I believed her, mostly because she’s not a big girly-girl herself, and she never felt overly sentimental about her kids being dependent on her. She happily worked when they were younger and valued her career, and notably, looked forward to her kids getting older and becoming more independent instead of looking misty-eyed at their old baby clothes. My guess is, women like this are not the ones expressing gender disappointment.
I didn’t think I was capable of gender disappointment. I did IVF and I knew before I even got pregnant that my first child was a boy. I happily decorated a boy nursery, bought boy clothes (I did have to get creative to avoid the onslaught of construction vehicles and dingy gray, but I managed!) and happily referred to myself as “Team Blue” on my mom group polls. But crucially, I planned on having more than one child. I knew we had a chance for a girl next. I knew I would love my kids the same, but on some level I think I’d have been disappointed if I knew having a daughter was completely off the table in the future.
Unfortunately, I got a mini-taste of that reality when I got pregnant again. My embryo was a girl, and I miscarried. It was early, but because I knew the sex, and had a name and nursery plan picked out, I reacted more strongly than one would expect for such an early loss.
While I never felt gender disappointment with my son, I did feel some during my miscarriage. Losing my pregnancy—even as early as it was—felt like losing the idea of a daughter. I had built up eighteen years of mother-daughter bonding in my head, and for the first time since our infertility diagnosis, I felt deep dread that I might never get to experience that. Yes, I would experience bonding with my son and perhaps another son, but unless one of them expressed extremely feminine interests, what if I never had many hobbies in common with them? What if my future was spent at soccer tournaments, wrestling matches, and Little League games, while my old dollhouse my mother and I designed together collected dust until it got auctioned off in my mom’s estate sale someday? I would still be happy—certainly much happier than if I never had children—but would I always carry a tiny nugget of sadness that I never got to do “girl things” with my kids?
Of course, I didn’t want to express that feeling because every time I did, people would insist that my kids might turn out to be trans or nonbinary (true! and I would accept them and love them!) or for all I knew, my son would grow up to love Barbies. It felt unhelpful. Of course, if my son loved Barbies, I would get him Barbies, but it seemed like an odd thing to place my hopes on. I did not want to find myself subconsciously pushing my son or sons into girl-coded activities with the hope of relinquishing some fragment of a mother-daughter dream I once had. That, to me, felt more toxic than the assumption that all boys like trucks and dinosaurs.
Another reason I didn’t want to express this feeling to anyone other than my closest family members was the inevitable guilt tripping—what about women who can’t have children? Why should I be so selfish as to care about gender when some women can’t conceive at all? This felt especially hurtful because I was one of those women! Well, technically we did IVF for male factor infertility, but we struggled nonetheless. This guilt-trip didn’t make me feel better about the prospect of never having a daughter, but it did make me feel worse about myself as a parent and a person overall. Many infertility moms (myself included) struggle with feeling like we don’t deserve our kids, and that we certainly don’t deserve to ever complain or experience anything other than gratitude. So anyway: not helpful!
I did wind up having a daughter next, and unsurprisingly, gender had no bearing on my bonding with my kids. I truly love them equally, and would continue to feel that way regardless of how much they adhered to gender roles. And I promise I’m not just saying that!
There’s no real fix here, because this type of gender disappointment is largely tied in with the progressive ideals of gender equality, while holding onto some benevolent sexism. If boys are no longer important for the purpose of continuing the family lineage, serving as capable family farm workers, being the heirs to family businesses or being responsible for providing, then what’s special about them? While we extoll the virtues of girls on a regular basis, we’re afraid to do the same with boys, just in case we fall back on harmful antiquated stereotypes. And even as a card-carrying liberal, I think this creates a pretty toxic dynamic. You don’t have to be a Tucker Carlson viewer to admit something bad is happening with boys, who often don’t feel like there is anything just for them, while there are multiple things just for girls. A six-year-old boy isn’t going to “check his privilege” and acknowledge he benefits from a legacy of male privilege so it’s the girls’ turn.
That’s not to say that we are living in some kind of matriarchy, or that men are oppressed in some kind of systemic way. Just that, at least during childhood, we talk about what’s great about girls but are afraid to talk about what’s great about boys, while paradoxically, insisting there are no differences between girls and boys. And as the mom of a boy: boys are pretty great too!
I think most moms who never have daughters, even those who were initially upset about it, turn out fine. Most of the posts I see about gender disappointment are met with a multitude of comments saying “I felt the same way, and now I can’t imagine ever feeling that way again, because my son is awesome.” I believe them. A hypothetical baby isn’t the same as a real baby, and often the love for a real baby will vanquish any previous feelings of gender disappointment. I know many women who initially felt gender disappointment during a pregnancy but none who fail to bond with their sons. So all things considered, this is a temporary state. But it’s causing distress even if not permanent distress, and that’s bad for everyone."
submitted by AlecMaiz0 to LeftWingMaleAdvocates [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 21:51 KGforthree16 Low egg maturation rate

I had my egg retrieval on Thursday and I was not prepared for the low percentage of mature eggs I received-I feel blindsided by my early attrition of eggs. Protocol/results are as follows:
Baseline AFC: 24, Age: 33
Protocol: 150 IU Menopur; 300 IU Gonal-F, 2 Clomid, dexamethasone
Trigger: Day 9, dual trigger: 5,000 IU of Novarel 35 hours before retrieval, Lupron dose 1 hour after Novarel, and a second Lupron dose 12 hours after the first. Retrieval was a running a bit late so had ER about 35 1/2 after initial trigger shot.
Follicle sizes day of trigger:
Eggs retrieved: 16
Mature eggs: 6
Fertilized eggs w/ ICSI: 5; they are going to see if any eggs mature overnight and if so, they will try and fertilize those as well.
Throughout my stims, I kept getting positive feedback from the ultrasound technician of how I had a lot of follicles and she even said "I think we are going to get good results out of you." I asked my nurse on trigger day if I should be worried about the varying size of follicles and she said no. Based on that, I was thinking I would have the standard 80% maturation rate so I am really disappointed with the maturity level of the eggs.
Have others had this issue? If so, what changes did your doctor recommend for future cycles and did you find better egg maturity with those changes? I would like to have a productive conversation with the my doctor about how to improve future egg maturity but I am not finding a lot online specific to low egg maturity levels that would help me have this conversation.
I feel so deflated after these initial results, I went from feeling very confident about this cycle to mentally preparing myself for another one.
submitted by KGforthree16 to IVF [link] [comments]


2024.05.06 01:51 EstablishmentNeat650 Desperately tried to conceive, had kids, now hate parenthood.

Did anyone else have struggles with fertility and desperately want kids, only to become a parent and realize you aren’t cut out for it after all? That’s where I’m at in life.
7 years ago, I had a miscarriage. My then-husband and I were desperate to become parents so we TTC for a while and were one cycle from starting clomid when I fell pregnant with my now 5.5 year old son. Before he even turned 2, my now 3.5 year old daughter was born. So we ended up going from a couple losing a baby and struggling to conceive to parents of 2 under 2.
My now-ex husband completely bailed on parenting in every way but financially. He had no desire to learn how to parent and absolutely no patience for our oldest child (5.5 year old son) who we’ve recently learned has level 2 autism. There was no shared parenting load while we were married. He would pay for sitters and not complain what I spent money on for the kids, but his support as a coparent begins and ends there. He always treated the kids like gifts he gave me that I am solely responsible for caring for alone. Now that we’re divorced, he voluntarily gave me full legal and physical custody. He gets 2 weekends per month and doesn’t exercise all of that parenting time. But he does pay child support on time.
I suffer from parental burnout off and on. Since becoming a mom, I’ve had suicidal moments, idealized running away, usually don’t want to wake up in the mornings, and fantasize about taking the kids to my ex’s apartment or his workplace and just dropping the kids off and saying I’m out.
Hearing the kids cry for me and demand things of me evokes this primal rage inside that makes my blood boil. I’m so tired of not sleeping because my son’s autistic brain doesn’t need sleep. Daily meltdowns are hell. Constantly being touched and having some small human in my face literally overstimulates me. Waking up and getting 2 uncooperative kids ready for the day just fills me with dread.
I think my kids are beautiful and do love them. But I don’t know if it was the best idea for my life to become a parent. I just genuinely have very minimal joy in parenting. I resent my ex and feel like I would’ve been just as well off conceiving from a sperm bank. Sometimes I think the miscarriage should’ve been my sign that parenting wasn’t for me.
submitted by EstablishmentNeat650 to regretfulparents [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 16:03 DragonflyFairies Baby

Our first was born early and subsequently passed away in the NICU. I spent years doing metformin, letrozole, and clomid trying for another - unable to get pregnant. Then we moved to IUIs and when that didn’t work - tried IVF. First IVF cycle didn’t take, second transfer which was frozen resulted in a miscarriage , a couple others didn’t take, final transfer we transferred two - and I got my wonderful spitfire of a 4 year old. Here we are, I am almost 39. And Mounjaro helped me get pregnant when I most definitely wasn’t trying.. Moral of the story is you don’t think you can get pregnant and are on mounjaro you may be able to… what a blessing, but also a shock ❤️
Not sure if my flair should be success stories or what..
submitted by DragonflyFairies to Mounjaro [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 23:36 AwkwarddTurrdle Cycles have been abnormally long 6 months after miscarriage

TW: brief mention of miscarriage.
Hi there. I (32 F), and my husband have been trying to get pregnant again after finding out I have PCOS after my son was born. Turns out I’ve always had it and my extreme diet and exercise helped me get pregnant the first time without even knowing. We know this based on my history of PCOS symptoms since age 13. After my son was born I didn’t have a period for 6 months even though I wasn’t breastfeeding (I couldn’t produce andthat’s a whole other tangent that turned out to be a PCOS red flag). My doctor recommended we start by putting me on 6 months of bc to re-regulate my cycles since it helped me in the past and it worked. I got off and was regular again until I had a chemical pregnancy last fall. Ever since I have only had a cycle every other month. My doctor put me on clomid and I just finished my 1st round. I have had 3 LH surges this cycle and am on Day 50 of my cycle. My last cycle was only 38 days which was the shortest one I’ve had since the miscarriage. I just took another LH test after noticing some egg white discharge and it’s high again.
I am SO confused about what is going on with my body. I already had bloodwork and ultrasounds done to see if they could fine any indicators in that and they found nothing out of the ordinary.
Are the multiple LH cycles common with clomid? I wasn’t testing ovulation the previous cycles so I don’t know if this has been happening the whole time or not.
submitted by AwkwarddTurrdle to PCOS [link] [comments]


2024.05.03 08:24 shangkhang Drostanolone Propionate (Masteron)

Drostanolone Propionate (Masteron) is an androgenic steroid based on dihydrotestosterone originally developed to improve conditions derived by breast cancer. It is considered a medium or mild strength steroid. There are two variants: Drostanolone Propionate and Enanthate. The first is universally regarded at Masteron. It was introduced in the early 70s and it is available only in injectable form. Drostanolone Enanthate was never released as a pharmaceutical human grade product and is not as popular as the Propionate version.
What is Masteron used for in bodybuilding? The basic benefits of both Propionate and Enanthate are a lean and harder-looking physique, but only after it has been built with other steroids. Many bodybuilders consider it a sort of cosmetic sterod to add the final touch to an already toned body. Also, being regarded as a mild anabolic steroid, Masteron has various positive effects and less side effects. Masteron delivers solid muscle mass combined with strength and at the same time helps the loss of water, but it does not actually help losing body fat. In facts, this steroid is useful only if the athlete’s body fat is already less than 10%. Masteron also accelerates metabolism and helps increasing energy and endurance. Drostanolone Propionate has a half-life of 2,5 days while Drostanolone Enanthate has a half-life of 10 days. Masteron is commonly used in cutting and pre-contest cycles. It is often stacked with Winstrol, Testosterone and Trenbolone. Masteron is not the first choice when bulking, as its effects will be rather weak. Bodybuilders anyway use it for bulking together with other steroids to add the benefits of losing fat. Masteron is of little to no use for those who do not have a stringent fitness routine aimed at cutting. Also, those who have substantial fat in their body will not benefit much from the steroid. The steroid does facilitate the loss of water but it does not help the loss of fat from the body. There may not be any impact on the weight of a person. The reduced water retention has a nominal impact on body weight. The effect is more aesthetic. It is best to achieve a low body fat percentage, at the most twelve to fifteen, before taking Masteron.
What are Masteron side effects? Even though Masteron is considered a mild steroid, its usage has side effects that may, or may not, affect the user. The most common is hair loss, especially to people already balding. Acne is another possible effect of a prolonged usage. Tendency to aggression and excessive rage has been reported. However, all side effects cease to appear as son as the cycle is over.
Masteron cycle for beginners A common Masteron cycle for beginners would last 8 weeks, with 100 mg per week injected every other day.
Masteron cycle for intermediate users Drostanolone Propionate needs to be injectied once in two days or on alternate days, with dosages ranging between 200 and 350 mg per week, for a cycle of 8 weeks.
Masteron cycle for experienced users A common cycle of Masteron for experienced bodybuileers involves Testosterone Propionate. Cycle will be longer, between 8 and 10 weeks, with dosages of 500 to 700 mg per week, combined with Testosterone Propionate at 350 mg per week. The Enanthate form needs less injections (2 injections per week), with dosages ranging between 400 and 600 mg per week, on a standard cycle between 6 and 10 weeks.
Masteron Cycle PCT Contrary to popular belief, the PCT phase should never start immediately after finishing a Masteron cycle, as the compound has to leave the system before starting any form of therapy. Therefore, the PCT cycle should start 3-4 days after last administration of the Propionate and 14 days after last administration of the Enanthate. Commonly used products are Nolvadex, Clomid and HCG. A Nolvadex cycle following a mild Masteron cycle will last 4 weeks. For the first 2 weeks the dosage will be 20 mg/day, while for the second 2 weeks dosage will be 10 mg/day. A stronger PCT will also last 4 weeks. On the first week, dosage will be 30 mg/day, on the second it will be 20 mg/day, and for the last 2 weeks dosage will decrease to 10 mg/day. With Clomid, a typical cycle following a mild Masteron cycle will last 4 weeks. For the first 2 weeks the dosage will be 50 mg/day, while for the second 2 weeks dosage will be 25 mg/day. A stronger PCT will also last 4 weeks. On the first week, dosage will be 75 mg/day, on the second and third week it will be 50 mg/day, and for the last week dosage will decrease to 25 mg/day. HCG is only used after a heavy Masteron cycle, therefore mainly by experienced bodybuilders. The common strategy is to use a short cycle of HCG before starting a longer one with Clomid or Nolvadex. In a 3 weeks cycle, HCG dosage will be 2000 IU every 3 days on first week, 2500 IU on second week and 3000 IU on the last week. Alternatively, one can run an intensive 10 days cycle injecting 1000 IU/day from day 1 to 4, then 750 IU/day from day 5 to 7, and 500 IU/day for the last 3 days of the cycle.
submitted by shangkhang to superbolic_express [link] [comments]


2024.05.03 04:53 LizG12345 First ultrasound measuring different... would love input

Hi all, I am going to lay out my very long rambling thoughts after a long day. As a preface, I had a second trimester miscarriage (triploidy) previously, so going into this pregnancy emotional and scared. This was a clomid cycle, after 6 months of acupuncture and thyroid medication to get my body ready for pregnancy.
I know this post is a lot of information overload but i'm going crazy and hope someone out there may have some insight. FF Chart
March 19 - Period [CD1]
March 21-25 - Clomid [CD3-7]
April 3 - Fertility Friend ovulation [CD16]
April 6 - Ultrasound dating based "conception date" [CD19]
April 8 -- Day 21 test confirmed ovulation, progesterone at 13.8
April 14 - Positive home pregnancy test [CD27 / 8 days after ultrasound "conception date"] - this was not a faint line, just regular positive; how could that be possible this early?
April 15 - Progesterone 34.2, HCG 91.9 [CD28 - 9 days after ultrasound "conception date"]; again, too high?
April 17 - HCG 286.9 [CD30 - 11 days after ultrasound "conception date"]
April 19 - HCG 611.1 [CD 32 - 13 days after ultrasound "conception date"]
April 21 - HCG 1,147.3 [CD 34 - 15 days after ultrasound "conception date"]
May 2 - Went for ultrasound thinking I would be 6 weeks, 1 day pregnant; measured at 5 weeks, 6 days pregnant
I'm not worried about being off from my due date based on my last period... but:
UPDATE: Got another ultrasound yesterday, was actually in the ER for a subchorionic hematoma, but for what it's worth, the baby measured exactly in line with what FF had predicted and had a strong FHR of 124. Scared about the subchorionic hematoma, but the doctors seem positive.
submitted by LizG12345 to CautiousBB [link] [comments]


2024.05.02 19:19 DemonMel1noe Losing Hope.

Hi guys! So we are on year 2 of TTC, I’m 24 almost 25.
We got pregnant first round a year ago on Femora. We miscarried at 7 weeks. We switched to Clomid, I was not ovulating. Last cycle was Clomid I got the highest Progesterone of 3.7, I was not pregnant. This Cycle we switched back to Femora, and I got a 10.8 which is the highest it’s ever been and I had 1 follicle at 2.3 and one at 1.79.
I am supposed to start my period today or tomorrow…. But I have no lines faint or otherwise. All my tests are negative.
To make everything worse, my little brothers newborn is 2 months old now, him and his girlfriend are getting married Sunday. They accidentally got pregnant while broken up right after my miscarriage. My husband and I are struggling to be around the baby and my family everyone except my brother and SIL take care of the baby. They barely feed or change him, SIL yells at the baby for crying and it’s just a mess.
At the same time, our foster daughter has gotten to go back to her dad and her mother wants to just sign away rights so she can go back to getting high. Her EXACT words.
I’m just lost at this point and putting my body through all of this to constantly be crushed….i just need advice on how to stay hopeful and not be so angry and jealous with the people I love.
submitted by DemonMel1noe to TTC_PCOS [link] [comments]


2024.04.28 15:34 Gandoofadoof Those of you with endometriosis (specifically chocolate cysts or ovarian endo), what is your plan? Seeking second opinions because my RE isn't addressing it!

TW: mention of a loss
Some background: I'm 37, my husband is 35. I was shocked to find out I had endo, as I had never had any symptoms (until recently that is!) Those symptoms were probably masked by 20+ years on hormonal birth control and the Mirena IUD.
We started trying over a year ago. I noticed that my luteal phase was only 7-8 days. My regular OBGN put me on progesterone suppositories that resulted in a CP and a missed miscarriage at 6 weeks. Since my D&C in September, I haven't had another positive test. However, since December, I have been noticing increasing ovarian pain during ovulation and during my period. It gets worse every month.
I am now seeing an RE who immediately diagnosed me with Stage 4 Endometriosis based on my symptoms, infertility, and a 2cm chocolate cyst on my right ovary (weirdly enough, its my left ovary that causes me the most pain, but he didn't see a cyst on that one).
However, he does not want to treat the endometriosis. He said that surgery comes with significant risks, and that it would compromise my egg quality and quantity. He wants to start with Clomid + IUIs, and the move to IVF if those aren't successful.
Everything I've read seems contrary to this plan. I think the endo is keeping me from getting pregnant and leading to losses when I do end up pregnant from the inflammation. Its also causing me increasing pain, and I'm worrying about what it is doing to my ovaries! Additionally, I don't see how an IUI would be effective AT ALL in this situation? And endo seems to complicate IVF a lot, especially transfers and it seems like without treating it, transfers fail.
Those of you with endo and chocolate cysts, what was your REs plan? Egg retrieval, a lap, and then a transfer? Surgery before starting any fertility treatment at all? Did you leave it alone? Did you do Depot Lupron? I could really use some guidance as I am so overwhelmed!
submitted by Gandoofadoof to IVF [link] [comments]


2024.04.28 09:14 Theslowestmarathoner Why are spontaneous birth rates better than IVF rates?

This is a math question and I’m confused.
I’m 41. When discussing my odds with IVF, we usually talk about the IVF funnel- 70% retrieved will me mature, 80% will fertilize, 50% make it to blast, and the percentage correct depends on age- so for me, around 30% would be euploid.
If we transfer the euploid and it’s high quality then it has a 60% chance of a live birth.
That works down to something like a 12% chance of a live birth or something. (Don’t quote me I may have mixed up some of the percentages but I’m sure people here know them).
Now, a spontaneously conceived pregnancy at 41 somehow has a 60%+ birth rate and a 33% miscarriage rate. HOW? Shouldn’t the IVF rates be so much better? What am I missing? And yes, the chance of spontaneous conception at 41 is 5% per month but if you get pregnant, what’s the likelihood it results in a live birth?
Question answered: this compares the two at different points. Proper or closest comparison would be at the time of blast. PGTA has the higher chance against essentially an untested embryo.
submitted by Theslowestmarathoner to IVF [link] [comments]


2024.04.28 04:10 Elegant_Spring_979 Pain and bleeding any advice?

TW: Miscarriage meantioned
Hi,ite history first. I'm 9 days from the start of my period and about 5 days past ovulation and I have endo and PCOS. 3 1/2 yrs ago I had a miscarriage and nearly bled out due to a reaction to medication. Been trying for another but scarring from the mc and issues from my other two conditions means my chances are slim. I've also had one surgery in 2022 and been on clomid for 6mths last year to get pregnant without any hit of success.
Today I had sharp cramps below my belly button and went to the toilet thinking I needed to poop but when I wiped I had a mix of old and new blood coming from my lady hole. Been to the toilet since and bleeding had gotten a bit heavier. Pain isn't as bad as my periods but isn't usually a sharp pain. 2 paracetamol and a heat pack have helped. Usually I take 3 ibuprofen to even touch my period pain.
Seeing my doctor is an expense I can't afford currently, ER is an option but 6-8 hour wait time and I don't feel it's bad enough to go there.
What could of caused this issue? Is it possibly implantation bleed?
submitted by Elegant_Spring_979 to WomensHealth [link] [comments]


2024.04.26 09:54 doomerinthedark Walked to my future death spot again

This time I walked under the bridge instead of standing at the top. Perhaps I want to subconsciously measure the fall distance, making sure it could kill me. I decided not to directly into the shallow creek at the bottom, though. Perhaps it’s a spiritual representation of my constant flirting with death contrasted with my cowardice keeping me from going through with the final act. Or perhaps I just don’t want to get my shoes wet. Of course, reality has no real meaning. And yet my mind is filled with nothing but an endless barrage of scattered tragic poems, constantly growing in intensity and insanity. A small percentage of these massive blocks of invasive texts are thrown out into the digital world as my fingertips blindly dance on a screen with the artificial light burrowing deep into my eyelids.
There is a constant feeling of emptiness, and yet the emptiness is a feeling in itself. A feeling so overwhelming. Is despair the right word? I don’t have the words to properly describe it anymore. No matter how much pseudo-poetic waxing and absurd sentences I try to throw around both inside and outside the dark corners of my mind, I cannot describe what I am going through anymore. My true reality is so boring and unsatisfying and depressing that it has wrapped around into some kind of crushing madness. I should be humble. I should be content. I should at least be okay with this. But I can’t. My brain is broken. My soul is shattered. I try to pick up the shards of glass to repair what once was whole, but they never connect. Sometimes I try to make some beautiful mosaic, but even those manage to break apart in time.
I have so many promises I want to break. I promised my best friend that he wouldn’t have to suffer another suicide from a friend. I promised my online friend I wouldn’t leave her and would always be there. I promised my mother that she wouldn’t lose another child following her miscarriage. I promised my brother that I would look out for him and our family. I promised my friends that I would repay the favor and never let them down. I promised to myself that I would never make my grandmother cry for me. Etc etc. but those matters seem to wain over time. And I can’t wait for the day I don’t care anymore. It’s selfish but I am tired of indecision when there has been one thing on my mind for so fucking long. For more than 10 years. I will kill myself.
I’d like to think that is my destiny. But the certainty in this life is that nothing is truly certain. I will likely delete this post when I wake up in the morning out of shame and embarrassment. But if I am less of a coward, I will keep it up. There is no hope of living but there is no escape of dying. I don’t live. But I want to. I want to die. But I don’t really want to.
Under the bridge there is a small waterfall that leads to this shallow creek I sit next to. The soothing sounds of running water radiate my mind with a sense of uneasy peace among the chaotic panic that reigns in my heart and mind. Look around. Look at the grass. The graffiti on the dry concrete. Do you try to make sense of it all? Give it some meaning, hopeful or tragic? Does it really need one? Should you imagine your dead body in the creek? Or should you walk away? Are you tired of this? Tired of my whining? My constant repetition of this unending state? Tired of my stubbornness to refuse to get it over with?
I don’t know who I am anymore.
submitted by doomerinthedark to Doomers2 [link] [comments]


2024.04.25 22:03 aaaaaarae Does anyone else have a history of Partial Molar Pregnancy with Triploidy and gone on to have another pregnancy with a high risk NIPT result?

Does anyone else have a history of Partial Molar Pregnancy with Triploidy and gone on to have another pregnancy with a high risk NIPT result?
Does anyone else have a history of Partial Molar Pregnancy with Triploidy and gone on to have another pregnancy with a high risk NIPT result?
I am currently age 35 and 11 weeks 3 days pregnant. I have no living children. I have been pregnant 6 times.
I have seen that the Natera NIPT test has sometimes given false positive/negatives due to fetal fraction percentages, but I’m not sure if my history of triploidy comes into play. Has anyone had a history of this, had a similar Natera NIPT result and gone on to have a healthy baby?
Natera NIPT results say high risk due to fetal dna fraction 2.2%. 1/17 for Triploidy, Trisomy 18 and Trisomy 13.
This is my full history: 1 2009: Age 20. Miscarriage 8wks
2 2019/2020: Age 30. Triploidy/Partial Molar - Girl 20wks. Natera NIPT was inconclusive and the baby formed perfectly. CVS then DNC. Because of GTD I had to wait 6 months to try again.
3 2020: Age 31. Miscarriage 5wks
4 2021: Age 32. Triploidy/Partial Molar - Girl 18wks. I did not do the NIPT this time because how could this happen again? I was wrong. CVS then DNC. Because of GTD I had to wait 6 months to try again.
5 2021: Age 33. Miscarriage. 6 weeks
6 2024 Current Pregnancy: Age 35. Currently 11 weeks 3 days.
*2022-2024 I tried IVF unsuccessfully. I did two egg retrievals to get 2 embryos that we froze and PGT-A tested and both were healthy. I transferred the Boy embryo and that failed. I transferred the Girl embryo and that also failed. Due to financial reasons I couldn’t keep doing IVF but did 4 rounds of IUI and they all failed.
My currently pregnancy was conceived naturally and I am due 11/12/24.
I have my NT scheduled for 5/2/24.
submitted by aaaaaarae to NIPT [link] [comments]


2024.04.24 17:24 franberry7 First time starting stims

Hi everyone, this is my first time posting but I have been following along for a while. I just started stims for my first round of IVF. I am 40 in 2 months. Had one miscarriage 2 years ago and two rounds of Clomid+trigger resulted in nothing. My AMH is 5.... my partner has 32 percent sperm dna fragmentation, which we just found out, am a bit annoyed they didn't test that earlier.
I also just found out I have adenomyosis but my fertility dr doesn't seem too bothered.
I am doing the process in a Latin American country next door to the one I live in. Started stims last night, will have my first scan on Monday.... and no word of any bloodwork.... which doesn't quite jive with what I read other people have done during the process.
(I did do a scan last month and all the relevant hormone blood tests before the process)
I am starting on Rekovelle and will add Menopur in a few days. We will do Zymot, ICSI and PGT.
Excited but trying to not have too high expectations.
Any comments welcome!
submitted by franberry7 to IVF [link] [comments]


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