Wednesday, January 18, 2012

What About Those Dismal 'Pregnancy Over 40' Statistics? I Was 44 When I Had My beautiful Daughter

,

Ok, I know you've heard it all before, the fertilization statistics over 40 are dismal. As far as I'm concerned, statistics are for statisticians. What about the fact that the estimate of unintended pregnancies in women in the middle of 40 and 44 is second only to teenagers? Many women in their 40's think their too old to get pregnant, they get limited lax with their birth control, and bingo!

I would speculation to guess most women over 40 aren't trying to get pregnant (and many have had sterilization procedures). I wonder what would happen to those statistics if all women over 40 tried to get pregnant. I think we'd all be surprised. Our community and media is so 'age obsessed' that women begin to believe their life is over at the age of 40 (heck, now it's more like 35). The message is you'll need plastic surgery, you'll be replaced by a trophy wife, you'll have a hard time getting employed, and your chances of having a baby are less than your chances of winning the lottery.

As far as I'm concerned, I won the lottery, but it wasn't by luck. I was 44 when I had my daughter who, in my totally unbiased opinion, is perfect. I had a general fertilization and general delivery and I conceived without fertility treatments. Yes, I'm the oldest mom at the playground, but so far, nobody's asked me if I'm her grandmother. As a matter of fact, I've been asked more than once, "Are you having another?" I'm in the best shape of my life, and even though my very active daughter wears me out occasionally, I'm keeping up just fine. As a matter of fact, I remember babysitting my niece and nephew when I was in my 20's - it wasn't any easier back then.

Being an 'older' mom is such a blessing. I'm wiser, more patient, and totally skilled at dealing with the trials and tribulations of a two-year-old. I have no private agendas for my daughter. Since I've already complete all things I wanted to do in my life, I'm not trying to live my dreams through her. It's her life, and I'm behind her no matter what path she takes. The commentary I hear most often is, "She's such a happy limited girl."

I will admit I had an spicy journey to parenthood. My own childhood was less than perfect. I grew up with parents who were totally mismatched leaving me with a negative impression of marriage and family. As a result, I waited until I was practically 37 to get married and didn't even start trying to get pregnant until I was practically 38. After a year of trying on our own, we went in for fertility treatments. I spent over two years trying medications, inseminations and Ivf twice. The medications and inseminations didn't work at all, and the Ivf's ended in miscarriage and the discharge of my left fallopian tube. I became disillusioned with the assembly line practice of my fertility clinic and the estimate of drugs and hormones I was pumping into my system was totally inconsistent with my 'all natural' way of life and personal philosophy. I notified my physician that I was spicy on to 'childfree'.

I was over 40 at this point and as if to spur me on, no matter where I went or who I talked to, I would hear yet another story of a woman giving birth in her 40's. I met a woman at my niece's graduation party who gave birth to triplets at the age of 45 (without fertility treatments), a tenant in our rental asset all of a sudden tells me she gave birth to her son at the age of 45. A local radio personality said his mother had him at the age of 48 (before the days of fertility treatments). I was standing in the ski lift line and some teenagers behind us were laughing that their mom was going to have another baby at the age of 43. I started researching my own house history, and both my grandmothers were in their 40's when they had their last child. I couldn't get away from it!

I realized I wasn't ready to give up on getting pregnant but I legitimately did not want to go through anymore fertility treatments. I started researching natural methods to improve fertility. I quit a high stress job, I started a totally new way of eating, and I went back and confronted all the unresolved issues I had with my parents and my less-than-perfect upbringing. I also researched natural methods of balancing hormones, increasing pelvic circulation, and I changed my 'pregnancy mindset' through visualization and meditation.

I was shocked when I became pregnant plainly just months after completing fertility treatments. Unfortunately, I was miscarrying by the time I realized I was pregnant. Even though my miscarriage was heartbreaking, I was ecstatic to finally know I could get pregnant on my own. Now, more motivated than ever, I continued researching natural methods to improve my fertility and I continued adding things to my 'getting pregnant' protocol.

To make a long story short, I got pregnant two more times, but miscarried both. Why was this happening? I had the fetal tissue examined after a D&C, and wouldn't you know it, my baby was chromosomally normal. So much for the well-meaning condolences, "Something was probably wrong, it was a blessing". I continued trying to get pregnant, even though I was now 43 years old. I could feel my baby hovering over me. I needed to give her life. But, when I was 43 and 11 months, I practically gave up. I idea maybe my 'internal barometer' was broken. I was so sure I was going to have a baby, but here I was, practically 44, and still childless. My baby was out there but I couldn't get to her. I reluctantly decided that it was legitimately time to move on to childfree and get on with my life.

Two weeks later I found out I was pregnant. I was a limited angry that I finally made a firm decision to move on to childfree, and here I was, pregnant again! I guess preparedness finally met opportunity (I think I was the healthiest human being on the planet by then). I was cautious but excited nonetheless. We decided not to tell anyone or to see a physician until any 'normal' person would. I didn't want a 'blow by blow' accounting of my hCg numbers or a depressing speech about the risks of fertilization at my age. When I finally did see my physician (one who was quite negative about women in their 40's getting pregnant), he was bouncing off the walls with excitement! My ultrasound looked great! This one was going to make it.

The moral of my story is "trust your instincts". If you know deep in your heart that you can do something, you probably can. I'm sure many doctors would use my story as an example of how difficult it is to have a child over 40. But, fertility treatments were probably the most detrimental factor working against me. There's a higher incidence of tubal pregnancies with Ivf and I'm sure all those injections of drugs and hormones threw the delicate equilibrium of my reproductive system added out of whack. If I would have started my 'all natural' fertilization protocol earlier, I would have saved myself years of frustration, ,000 in fertility treatments, and I would have had both my fallopian tubes essentially doubling my chances of getting pregnant naturally. I partially blame those over-quoted statistics. I can't tell you how many times I read that if you're in your late 30's or 40's you should "run not walk" to the closest fertility clinic because time's running out fast!

The lowest line is I overcame all of my challenges and succeeded plainly at the age of 44. So, for all you statisticians out there, I'd like to ask, "What are the odds of that?"

Copyright © 2005 Sandy Robertson

0 comments to “What About Those Dismal 'Pregnancy Over 40' Statistics? I Was 44 When I Had My beautiful Daughter”

Post a Comment

 

american history Copyright © 2011 -- Template created by O Pregador -- Powered by Blogger