Edmonton Journal

The hidden world of in vitro fertilizat­ion

Women cast light on dark experience­s

- SARAH BOESVELD National Post

“Women come in the morning: give blood, have ultrasound­s, get injections. And then to work, silent on the early violations of their day.”

With that tweet from a Toronto fertility clinic last week, Siri Agrell delivered a rare, raw and powerful descriptio­n of what it’s like to pursue in vitro fertilizat­ion.

She revealed a world of awkward run-ins with colleagues and acquaintan­ces, of stacks of porn waiting for men as they make their contributi­ons, and described how she found herself holding her young son “like a shiny gold star” the day she had to bring him. One woman she met was there to harvest her eggs before cancer treatment rendered her sterile.

Her tweets quickly reverberat­ed beyond Twitter — lauded as an act of courage and perceived as a bold backlash against societal norms that connect a very common experience with guilt and shame.

But the communicat­ions strategist publicly shared her experience because she feels something of a “sea change” happening in the way women share their stories of infertilit­y, loss and other reproducti­ve issues.

“Like many women, I’ve spent a lot of my life listening to other people discuss women’s choices and their right to make them,” she told the National Post. “I think some of us are saying, ‘OK, if you want to tell me what you think about my decisions, let’s talk frankly about the experience­s that led me there.’”

In a culture that celebrates and idealizes pregnancy while flooding social media platforms with every adorable move a child has ever made, there is a real silence and caution around revealing the full, and sometimes painful, fertility picture for many Canadians. Fifteen per cent of pregnancie­s end in miscarriag­e. Sixteen per cent of couples struggle with infertilit­y. And for those whose path to parenthood — already a minefield of social judgment — is not as smooth as society suggests it will be, it’s a vicious cycle: something that’s already painful to discuss becomes even harder when nobody understand­s.

Some people, like Agrell and like Emma Hansen — a Vancouver model and daughter of wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen, who wrote a heartwrenc­hing blog post about giving birth to her stillborn son last month — are looking to change that by sharing their own experience­s. In the United States, the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights is relying on the strength of personal stories to keep states from passing laws that will restrict access to abortion and contracept­ion. As they prepare for Infertilit­y Awareness Week later this month, IVF advocates in Canada are encouragin­g those who’ve been through cycles of fertility treatments to speak out about an experience so many describe as isolating and misunderst­ood.

“I couldn’t have talked about this two years ago ... out loud.”

SIRI AGRELL

While some are speaking up, many are dealing with these experience­s privately — and may even prefer it that way. In the reporting of this story, the National Post heard from a dozen Canadian women who have experience­d infertilit­y or pregnancy loss. Most of them did not want to attach their names to their stories. But they wanted people to know about the grief, the physical and psychologi­cal struggles, the pain and hopeful determinat­ion, the prohibitiv­e costs, the difficulty navigating the maze of social judgment and fielding well meaning questions that cut like a knife.

“There is the occasional person that says something a little hurtful, like ‘It happens to a lot of people,’” said one Mississaug­a woman who miscarried at 10 weeks. “I didn’t know why that bothered me and then I read somewhere that it’s like saying to someone if someone died in a car accident or died of cancer, ‘Oh, it’s really common.’ You would never say that.”

The 31-year-old accountant says that, in hindsight, she wishes she had told more people about her loss and her complicate­d pregnancy before it, if only to have received more support and avoided the stress of making excuses. Danielle, a 20-something profession­al in Alberta who miscarried twice — the second time in a ruptured ectopic pregnancy that saw her lose a litre and a half of blood — says she too did not find comfort in hearing her experience was statistica­lly common. The gap for her was the fact that she did not know anyone in her life who had experience­d losses too — at least not until her girlfriend told her she had suffered a miscarriag­e.

“I’m a hypocrite for being angry because if people had talked about it, I maybe wouldn’t have felt that shame and that brokenness,” says Danielle, who did not tell even her parents about the couple’s first loss. Many of their friends still don’t even know. “But at the same time I wasn’t willing to talk.” Not discussing it helped protect her from pain.

Danielle feels the way we talk about pregnancy is “limiting the conversati­on” when infertilit­y or a miscarriag­e occurs.

“Pregnancy is really romanticiz­ed, right?” says Danielle. “It’s a miracle, it’s a gift. And so if you’re not capable of being pregnant or you can’t keep your pregnancy, what does this mean for you? That you’re cursed?

“It makes people who’ve been through it feel like they can’t talk about it because there’s this voodoo superstiti­on around fertility: ‘If you just relax, it’ll happen for you’ or ‘This wasn’t the time,’ ‘It wasn’t meant to be.’ It’s said with the best of intentions but there’s a sincere lack of empathy behind it.”

Agrell (who is a former reporter and, full disclosure, a friend) thought carefully before dispatchin­g her string of powerful tweets as she sat in the waiting room of her fertility clinic last Thursday.

After having one healthy child, her second pregnancy ultrasound at 21 weeks revealed a severe genetic condition called osteogenes­is imperfecta — a condition in which bones don’t form correctly. This particular type was “incompatib­le with life.”

Rather than be induced and deliver a stillborn, the couple chose to have a terminatio­n at 22 weeks. They conceived again a few months later and delivered another healthy child. Agrell later suffered damage to her uterus that makes it impossible to conceive naturally, which led her to pursue a round of IVF.

“Both with this and when we had our loss, you realize how many people its happened to,” she says. “No one talks about it until you say ‘Hey, this thing happened to me.’ Then the floodgates open.”

In the hours and days after sending out her tweets, she heard from people who hadn’t talked about their experience with anyone.

“And to talk about it to people, that the thing that everybody should be able to do you can’t and to talk about the loss, I couldn’t do it,” she says.

Of course people should not feel pressured to discuss something so personal and painful, but they should know, she says, that there is a choice.

“They should recognize there’s an environmen­t in which they can if they want to and when they’re ready to.

“I couldn’t have talked about this two years ago, I couldn’t have talked about it out loud.

“But now I’m in a place where I’m reconciled with what’s going on.”

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 ?? JILL COLPITTS ?? Emma Hansen, the daughter of wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen, wrote a heartwrenc­hing blog post about giving birth to her stillborn son last month.
JILL COLPITTS Emma Hansen, the daughter of wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen, wrote a heartwrenc­hing blog post about giving birth to her stillborn son last month.
 ?? LOIC VENANCE/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES/ FILE ?? In a culture that celebrates pregnancy, some may be cautious about revealing the details about their infertilit­y.
LOIC VENANCE/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES/ FILE In a culture that celebrates pregnancy, some may be cautious about revealing the details about their infertilit­y.

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