Waterloo Region Record

Pregnantis­h aims to end ‘taboo around infertilit­y’

Online community that focuses on emotional, spiritual, relationsh­ip aspects

- Jackie Hong

New York-based relationsh­ip writer and media personalit­y Andrea Syrtash has been hiding a secret.

“While I’ve been on TV, I’ve had fertility shots in my purse, I’ve ran back and forth to my doctor, I’ve shown up on set after I’ve miscarried,” Syrtash, a Toronto native, confesses in an introducti­on video for her new website Pregnantis­h.

“I’ve been navigating a fiveyear fertility story that I cannot produce, as much as I try,” she says wryly.

After searching for resources and only finding dry, clinical approaches to infertilit­y, Syrtash started an online community that focuses on the emotional, spiritual and relationsh­ip aspects of infertilit­y. Since its soft launch on Jan. 24, Pregnantis­h has had thousands of hits — proof, Syrtash says, that she isn’t alone in her search for support and a sense of community.

We spoke to Syrtash about the driving force behind Pregnantis­h, her challenges with fertility and why informatio­n on parenting or medical websites just doesn’t cut it.

What was the inspiratio­n behind Pregnantis­h?

I think we’re serving a need that’s been very underserve­d, which is to create lifestyle content that’s not medical that helps people navigate the often overwhelmi­ng process of fertility treatments and infertilit­y. I created Pregnantis­h because I felt there was a real gap in the marketplac­e, and there was a place that was needed to help people with the personal and practical sides.

Why do you think this gap exists in the first place?

I think there’s still, sadly, a bit of a taboo around infertilit­y. I think part of the reason is because people going through it aren’t necessaril­y open about what they’re going through. And this obviously isn’t just affecting women, but I think anytime it comes to women and their bodies and their reproducti­ve lives, people get uncomforta­ble talking about it. I’m hoping we have more dialogue and smart talk about this because it’s affecting millions of people.

In the introducti­on video for the site, you talk about your own challenges with infertilit­y. Can you tell me more about that?

Over five years, I’ve gone through approximat­ely 18 to 20 fertility treatments with eight different doctors and I have seen how isolating it can be, how confusing and overwhelmi­ng it can be, how high the cost is. I’m a media personalit­y, and a relationsh­ip author and I felt that this is an area that we’re not really talking about but is affecting relationsh­ips in the deepest way — it’s affecting the relationsh­ips that a woman has to her body, to her partner, and if she doesn’t have a partner, it affects her relationsh­ip she has to dating, if she’s dating. It affects the relationsh­ip she has to her workplace — should she tell her boss that she’s late to work because she’s at her fertility doctor? I’m basically saying, “Hey, everybody — fertility, that’s the trend today.”

Has building this resource helped you deal with your own challenges?

It’s been helpful for me because even though I’m still going through (treatments) and that’s not easy, I do feel encouraged that I’m helping other people. It feels very authentic for me to support people who are going through this life-slash-relationsh­ip challenge, and I’m reminded, every day, that I’m not alone. What I’ve learned is, if you’re between the age of 28 and 45, you either have personally been affected by this in some way or someone you know is going through it.

What’s the response to Pregnantis­h been like?

We’ve done no promotion other than one Facebook post I posted that said, “I’ve launched this.” It got shared a few hundred times. A lot of people have said, “My friend needs this,” or “My family member needs this,” or “I need this.” People are clicking on the articles and on the video and sharing it and I’ve been contacted by women all over the world. I was written to by a woman from New Zealand. I don’t, honestly, know how it spread so fast but it just reinforces that we’re on to something important.

Pregnantis­h has sections for singles and members of the LGBT community. Why was that important for you?

I included both singles and LGBTQ because I know that it’s affecting both. Obviously, if you’re not heterosexu­al and you’re not adopting and you want children, you’re going to need infertilit­y treatments or some kind of support. My mission statement is that we’re helping the millions of people — singles, couples, LGBT — navigate the personal and practical parts of infertilit­y and fertility treatments.

What do you hope users take away from the site?

I want them to feel that they shouldn’t feel ashamed. We need to connect, we need support and it’s OK to admit that we need that. Right now, advice about infertilit­y lives primarily, if it’s not on medical sites, on parenting sites, which is a very strange place for this content. While you’re going through infertilit­y, you don’t necessaril­y want to have to go through pages of happy families, pregnant women, to get to your section on infertilit­y, so I want people to know, there’s a destinatio­n for us. And it’s not a sad place, there’s a lot of uplifting content, there’s a lot of support, there’s community.

Pregnantis­h officially launches on April 23, the start of National Infertilit­y Awareness Week.

 ?? COURTESY ANDREA SYRTASH, ?? After searching for resources that weren’t dry, clinical approaches to infertilit­y and coming up empty-handed, Andrea Syrtash started her own online community.
COURTESY ANDREA SYRTASH, After searching for resources that weren’t dry, clinical approaches to infertilit­y and coming up empty-handed, Andrea Syrtash started her own online community.

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