Monday, May 19, 2025

And Adptee Poem / Song / Gibberish

 Trigger warning: adoption trauma.

I want to preface this with a few orders of business:

1. Yes, I am safe. These words came to me and I couldn't ge tthem out of my head so I wrote them down.

2. I consider my parents my parents. As in, my TECHNICALLY SPEAKING adoptive parents are and have always will be my parents. Mom, dad, mommy, daddy, moozie, daggles, etc. But in the context of this poem / these lyrics / whatever we are calling it at this point is in reference to TECHNICALLY SPEAKING my biological parents.

 3. I love my family and parents and this is not trying to diminish what they have done for me and the life I got to live because of them.

4. The purpose of this is to be really open and raw about what it can feel like to be an adoptee.

5. The inspiration for this was and is the fact that despite what I am told by  LITERALLY ANYONE, I find it fundamentally hard to believe I am a lovable person worth "hanging around" for when during such a formative time in my development, there was little to know stability.

 I oddly have a melody in my head, but right now all I really have is just a collection of words.

 Furthermore, I really hope this does the following: (1) resonate with fellow adoptees who are struggling (2) help people understand how damaging it is to flippantly tell someone to "just adopt".

 Healing is slow and it isn't always pretty. But, we have to start somewhere. For me, openly asking these questions to the universe is oddly cathartic.  

Daddy, why did you leave me?

Mommy, why couldn’t you stay?

I know I was too young to remember,

But my heart knew you both went away.

 

Alone and afraid, no reassurance

Strange faces come in and strangers go out

I don’t know how it’s true, but I still know it’s not you

Holding me here in your arms.

 

And in those moments, I died on the inside,

Steadfastly heartbroken and I didn’t even know.

 

So I question each day if I’m enough

Because in the beginning I didn’t know love.

I ask myself daily what else I can do

To prevent from losing more people like you

 

Daddy, what did I do wrong?

Mommy, what could I have done?

I know as a baby the answer is maybe

You were just a little too young.

 

I want to make sense of it

Untangle this web

But the aching inside my bones

Fills me with dread

I want to ask questions, but they multiply instead

Even if I hsd the answers, what difference does it make? It doesn’t lessen the soul that it takes

 

Daddy, why did you leave me?

Mommy, why couldn’t you stay?

It’s not going to matter how old I am,

I’ll still ask this every day.

K

Monday, May 12, 2025

Mother's Day and Mental Health with Unresolved Infertility


 

I remember living on Morison Avenue in my hometown prior to moving to where my parents now live. We had a neighbor with a paved driveway (I believe ours was gravel, but my memory is failing me) and I recall riding my bicycle, falling, and scraping me knee. It was your typical scrape, but it was bleeding and a fair amount of skin was exposed. This seems like an odd core memory, but I remember it because even though it burned and hurt a lot, I did not cry. That was the day I decided that I learned what it meant to be "tough" or "tough it out" and that anything less was unacceptable when it came to experiencing pain.

In that moment, I minimized the pain I was feeling and flat-out refused to acknowledge it hurt. From that moment on, that was my mantra. Sure, it hurt. But it could have hurt worse. I could have cried, but I was "strong" enough not to.

This mentality carried me through a lot. The confusion and hurt I felt as an adoptee? Meh. At least I got adopted. The physical pain I endured when I "became a woman"? Meh. It was normal. It hurts for everyone. It could be worse (even though the pain was so bad I would become physically ill and pre-load on over-the-counter pain meds to prepare). Failed IVF? Meh. It was not a miscarriage. It could always be worse, so what right did I or do I have to lament over these "trivial" events?

And therein lies the problem. For decades, I brushed things off because it "could be worse" or I was not "sick enough". Eating disorder? Meh. I was not underweight. Ever. Failed IVF? Meh. Other women had suffered much greater losses. Who am I to complain?

My mom used to tell me to not "stuff down" my feelings. I did that a lot because most of the time, I did not believe my feelings were valid OR I believed that somehow, whatever happened was MY fault.

In hindsight, I realize how infertility completely destroyed me as a person without me admitting that it had done just that.

Branson said the day our first cycle failed, he lost his wife. I hated that he said this, but he was not wrong.

I lost my spark.
I lived in a constant state of depression.
I gave up on myself.
I lost all hope and feigned hope.
I blamed myself constantly.
I hated myself.
I hated my body.
I felt like a failure.
I felt like my body failed me.
I lost faith in God.
I completely lost my identity.
I felt like I was being punished - and I deserved it.
I felt angry.
I felt sad.
I felt jealous.
I felt resentful.
I felt completely dead inside.
I blamed myself entirely and there are a lot of days I still do.

Every pregnancy announcement was a knife to the heart. Not because I was not happy for the expecting couple, but because once again...it was not me. I prayed I would see two lines. I would be a day or two late or experiencing pregnancy "symptoms". Within three to five days those hopes came to a crashing halt. Rinse. Repeat. Every month. For years.

Enter the doctors. Numbers looked good. Everything looked promising. Weeks of preparation and hope were instantly destroyed with one phone call.

I typically spend part of my blog post acknowledging that even "resolved" infertility destroys mental health. And it can and does. But this post is for my fellow warriors who ultimately lost their battle.

Those of us with empty arms. Every. Single. Mother's Day.

I never recovered because the ending of my story is final. I will never see a biological version of myself and my husband staring back at me. And as an adoptee with zero biological connection to anyone I know, this stings even more. Trust me when I say I am well aware biology is not everything. My family is my family. Period. No biological connection needed. But, when everyone else in my family has that but I do not? I feel like the odd one out.

I (stupidly) thought that after a decade, the pain would subside. Especially when I made the decision that this would be our fate because five surgeries in five years for Stage 4 Endometriosis was becoming not only ridiculously expensive, but increasingly painful and unmanageable.

This year was the most difficult year I have faced since our first year.

Maybe next Mother's Day.
Maybe next Christmas.
Maybe next Father's Day.
Maybe some random day.
Always a maybe. Never a yes.
Month after month.
Year after year.

After awhile, no matter how much you try to "fake it 'til you make it", those hopes just become empty words.

I try to remain positive. I try to tell myself that this was and is God's plan and that there is a bigger picture at play. Some days I believe this. Some days I do not.

The good news is, it does eventually get "easier". The bad news is...it takes a long time and it will never go away. A dream unfulfilled creates a hole in the heart and the spirit that nothing can ever fill.

By the way, being an infertile when your husband has a child from his first marriage is a special kind of (pardon my language) hell. Especially when it is thrown in your face. And especially when your true support system - those who actually step up and show true sympathy and cry alongside you - live three hours away.

It has taken me a decade to fully accept that what happened to us was traumatizing enough to warrant a major shift in my mental health.

I can think of ONE person I know who understands this pain. That creates an even deeper feeling of loneliness on an already lonely journey.

Infertility worsened my anxiety, my depression, my cPTSD, and my ED.

I cannot in good conscience just write a blog post that offers no hope or advice on how I am managing or trying to move forward. So let us talk about Mother's Day 2025.

There are times we really need to grieve. Sometimes we need to cry or scream and release the feelings that are there. Acknowledge them. Allow them to just be without judgement. Judgement creates more shame, and in my experience, shame is a feeling I am way too familiar with. And although the grief I felt this year was not just for myself, I spent Monday - Saturday leading up to Mother's Day in a deep state of grief, helplessness, and hopelessness. All while also feeling incredibly selfish for feeling this way when others I love dearly are suffering unimaginable battles. It occurs to me THAT is what prevents healing. By constantly having the mentality that someone else has it worse and we just have to "suck it up", "be strong", and pretend we are okay, we are NOT allowing ourselves to grieve our own losses properly.

On the morning of Mother's Day this year, I slept in, which is not saying much because when you are childless, that is a luxury you can afford. Had I not allowed myself to grieve all week, I do not think Mother's Day would have looked the way it did yesterday.

Sometimes, even on my dark days, there is a small part of me that recognizes that I have two choices: continue grieving because it is necessary for my healing process and preventing me from burning out OR take the small spark I have, push myself to do things that make me feel positive about myself, tell the cat and the dog they need to move, and get out of bed. There was a small spark in me on Sunday that decided that I had enough in me to TRY to turn things around. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it does not.

This time, it did. I got out of bed. I put on make up. I curled my hair. And I put on a dress I have not worn in nearly a decade (more on that in a bit).

I had told myself if our cycle failed, we would do something special. We never went on a honeymoon, so on a whim we went on a "Mini-Moon" over Memorial Day Weekend to Redington Beach. It was a time to escape the hurt and just enjoy each other's company away from all of the reminders of what we had lost. I dug out a dress I bought specifically for our trip and wore it on Sunday as a reminder of those days of reprieve.

I will leave the summary of our day at this: it was a much-needed reminder that at the end of the day, I am not broken. We are not broken. My value did not diminish because I could not have children even though that is what society and people in my life have tried to tell me. My husband does not see me and has never viewed me as a means to procreate. He loves me for me. And maybe one day, I will feel that love for myself.

In the meantime, I realize I have a lot of hard work and healing to do. Right now, I do not "fight" for myself. I fight for those I love and for those that love me. It is my hope that one day, I will rediscover my worth and begin healing for myself.

Here are some highlights from our adventure:





 



 
As I say this, I admittedly do not fully believe it, but it does not make the statement untrue just because I am not (or you are not) there yet. Your worth is not based on procreation. This did not happen to you because you are being punished. This did not happen to you because you lacked faith. This was a crappy hand you were dealt. Take the time to cry. To grieve. To heal in bits and pieces as you are able. Try not to put a timeline on grief. There is no "right" or "wrong" way to do so. And I want you to know that above all else, you are loved.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Redifining our Rainbow: National Infertility Awareness Week 2025

 

Hello! For those who are new to this blog, welcome! I know this isn't exactly a "club" anyone wants to be part of, but considering 1 in 8 couples will experience infertility, it's an important topic to continue having open, unfiltered conversations about.

Allow me to introduce (or re-introduce) myself. My name is Kristy. I started this blog and our Facebook page almost a decade ago as a way to communicate with family and friends (and even strangers) about our journey through infertility. The concept was inspired by someone who also fought the awful battle that is infertility. The thought (early on) was that one day, we would rise from the murk like the lotus does as we came out the other side of infertility with a successful pregnancy and baby in our arms.

Unfortunately, life had other plans for us. Six years of trying. Three IVF cycles. Two different clinics. Five surgeries and four surgeons for Stage 4 Endometriosis. Nothing to show for it but debt, broken hearts, broken spirits, and empty arms. No answers. No resolve. I really think the last two were the toughest to stomach, especially as someone who always wants to know the "why" behind something.

I stopped blogging after awhile because I really did not have anything "new" to say. Does it get easier over time? Yes. Does it take a long time? Also yes. There are a lot more days of being "okay" than not being "okay", but I would be lying if I said that some days hit just as hard as the day I got the phone call that our first cycle's only fertilized egg arrested (stopped growing) on Day 5, which was our transfer day. St. Patrick's Day 2015 to be exact. I blogged as an outlet for myself. I also didn't want others to feel as alone on their journey as I did. Even knowing there were people out there who knew what it was like, the idea of "burdening" others with the same stories and tears became overwhelming. I figured people were sick of hearing it and that it was time to "move on".

But the fact is, you never just "move on". Even those who manage to have their "rainbow baby" (or babies) never get to fully "move on". The hurt is still there. The scars remain. The fear remains. I imagine all parents are fiercely protective over their children. Parents with miracle babies I feel carry an entirely different level of fear after the trauma they endured.

So, for awhile I have felt "stuck" and only post every once in awhile when something is on my heart. This is what has been on my heart for almost two years.

Since the failed cycles, I lost pretty much all confidence in myself. As a high-achiever and person with pretty strong perfectionist tendencies, I blamed myself and my body for "failing" me. If I couldn't even manage to do something I as a woman am "supposed" to be able to do, how could I possibly succeed at anything else? It was as though life came to a complete standstill as I stood frozen and afraid to even approach my school work due to my intense fear of doing it "wrong" and "failing" yet again. I couldn't handle any more "failure". When something can't be explained, the easiest thing to do is often to blame yourself - even if it is NOT your fault - because having SOMETHING to blame it on makes it more "tolerable" in some sick and twisted way.

The fact of the matter is...in 2019, after the endometriosis kept returning despite several excision surgeries, I decided it was time to reclaim my health and let go of any dreams of holding a baby in my arms that carried any of my features or my husband's features. I used to joke that he (my husband) would be "in trouble" because we were going to have a dark-haired baby girl with almond shaped blue eyes.

For awhile, I thought it was the end of the line for this blog and for this project since we are no longer pursuing having children. Until I got to thinking about the fact that our "rainbow" and rising from the murk as a beautiful lotus flower did not exclusively need to pertain to fertility.

Take a moment to think about the challenges you have faced in life. I'm going to guess there have been many, all with varying degrees of intensity. Each of those is a lotus flower just waiting to bloom. Each of those is a rainbow waiting to break out and show that even though it was not the outcome we wanted or expected, there can be beauty in it.

That's why I have decided to continue this blog and this page, but with a new vision.

Let's keep talking about the hard things in life. Let's keep talking about the subjects that are "taboo". This isn't me saying you must publicly profess your struggles. This is me recommitting to talking about things that not everyone is comfortable sharing about their lives. I don't share because I want any pity. I share because if I can help even one person feel seen, heard, and feel less alone, then it is worth the time.

Our rainbows and miracles do not have to be big. Sometimes they are in the little successes, like finding the energy to shower after a long depressive episode or finding the courage to try something new even when anxiety tries to hold you back.

If you take only one thing away from this blog and our page, I hope it is this: You are loved. You are worthy. You are seen. You are heard. You are not "broken'.

So this is me...openly inviting you to continue to try to rise out of the murk even when the murk feels so thick and heavy it seems impossible to bloom. It is always possible to bloom...sometimes, it might just take a decade.

Love,

Kristy