the latest

25 10 2008

so I’m writing this post from my new iPhone. Yes, that’s correct. Manny got one for himself and thought I needed one too. After I got over the shock, I have of course fallen in love with it. The slickness is almost overwhelming and neither of us can put our damn little machines down.

I also just got a sexy new haircut bit I’ll have to post a picture from the computer as I haven’t yet figured out how to do it from here.

I shall return after acupuncture and grocery shopping with photos and tales of my mental state, along with other interesting tidbits about my new, glamorous iLife.





Taggity taggity tag!

23 10 2008

I got tagged by the most fabulous Deathstar to do this meme. 

1. Where is your cell phone? Purse
2. Where is your significant other? at work
3. Your hair color? mousy
4. Your mother? quilts
5. Your father? mumbles
6. Your favorite thing? wool
7. Your dream last night? sweet
8. Your dream/goal? babies
9. The room you’re in? office
10. Your hobby? fiber arts
11. Your fear? divorce
12. Where do you want to be in six years?  work at home mom
13. Where were you last night? home
14. What you’re not?  ambitious
15. One of your wish list items? a butt that’s not flat like a wall (Deathstar - want to split the difference?)

16. Where you grew up? Saskatchewan

17. The last thing you did? peed
18. What are you wearing? clogs
19. Your T.V.? Coronation Street
20. Your pet? the Luckster
21. Your computer? screen died
22. Your mood? quiet
23. Missing someone? the fabulous legend miss sarah 
24. Your car? 1986 Camry
25. Something you’re not wearing? makeup
26. Favorite store? Ikea
27. Your Summer? mixed
28. Love someone? of course!
29. Your favorite color? dark turquoise
30. Last time you laughed? today (check it out…)
31. Last time you cried? yesterday

I’m meant to tag 7 others, so I choose:





light a candle for me?

21 10 2008

I had my scan this morning, and to my surprise was ready to trigger already – it’s only CD11! My trusty left ovary came through again with a juicy 21.3 – woot! There was one on my right at 16, too, so I guess this Clomid stuff does work. I’m a bit tired of the headache and the hot flashes, although the latter haven’t been too bad, and I’m cold all the time anyway, so I sort of enjoy them. Overall, though, the Clomid really hasn’t been too bad. I’m feeling very fortunate about that, and also mildly bashful, as I had sort of built it up in my mind as a hellacious torture. Glad it wasn’t.

So my IUI is tomorrow at 3:30, and if you could think of me and think romantic thoughts for the 2 cells who will be meeting on their first date in the upper left corner of my ute, and hopefully uniting and taking over my ute for a good 40 weeks, that would be simply grand. While I was having acupuncture today (of which I’ve become a hopeless addict and simply can’t imagine life without twice-weekly needlings), I was visualizing my egg and a very handsome sperm meeting, merging and starting to divide, and then burrowing in to my velvety lining. Might as well be really specific, I figure. And those thoughts are much more enjoyable than the thoughts of total dread that keep trying to pop up. Mostly dread at the thought of actually being successful – weird, I know, but it struck me the other day that as much as I’ve had hope for positive results on our other attempts, I’ve never really allowed myself to think about how it will really feel when we get our BFP. And as thrilled and in love and joyful as I will no doubt be, I have a feeling that I’ll also probably mighty freaked out. One of my best friends said that when she got pregnant with her first, she freaked out and talked to her cat and laughed and cried for hours. So Lucky better practice his compassionate listening face, cause I have a feeling he’ll be needing it in 2 weeks.

I’m horrified to say that it’s only 8:50 and I am ready for bed. I guess my weekend of rock is still affecting me. Feist was amazing, by the way – if you dig her at all and have a chance to see her play live, GO! She’s great, her band is great, and the people doing the visual show for her were simply magical. I loved every minute, even though the venue was sort of lame and the crowd was a bit tepid. She can simply do no wrong in my eyes. You can check out some very cool photos of the recent live shows here if you’re interested. The visual show was led by Clea Minaker, who’s apparently a master puppetteer, but in this context was working with a light box projected onto the screen that formed the backdrop for the performance, and used paper cutouts, jewels and even finger paint to create the images. There were 2 or 3 other women working with her and at times it got really complex. It really was amazingly beautiful, and I’m so glad I went.

Alright, my darlings. I’m off to bed to dream sweet dreams of conception.





weekend of rock

19 10 2008

Went to see Neil Young last night and am leaving to go see Feist in about half an hour. I’m super tired but sometimes a girl just has to rock.

The Neil Young show was great – he totally rocked it, as expected. He played a few newer songs but mostly played older, more familiar tunes. I had seen him before but it was still really great. The set list was as follows:
1. Love And Only Love
2. Hey Hey, My My
3. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
4. Powderfinger
5. Spirit Road
6. Cinnamon Girl
7. Oh, Lonesome Me
8. Mother Earth
9. The Needle And The Damage Done
10. Unknown Legend
11. Heart Of Gold
12. Old Man
13. Get Back To The Country
14. Just Singing A Song
15. Sea Change
16. When Worlds Collide
17. Cowgirl In The Sand
18. Rockin’ In The Free World

19. A Day In The Life

The encore was a total surprise but they totally made some serious motherfucking noise on that one. He finished it by using all his broken guitar strings to wail on his pickup, and then left the guitar feeding back to go up and play the vibraphone. Totally rad.

The other awesome part of the evening was that Death Cab for Cutie were the opening band, and they were amazing. They just have so many good songs, and everyone is such a good player in that band that it’s kind of hard to believe. Ben Gibbard’s voice sounded excellent, and the sound was surprisingly good for the Agridome (yes, that’s what it’s called) so I could actually hear all the words. Plus he has a really cute butt. Nice.

One thing I will never understand is why people pay $80 and up to see a show and then spend it talking to their friends, texting, or just screwing around. Weird. I guess it’s part of those larger venue shows (not like the space is that big – I think it’s about six thousand people for a show like that.) I just don’t get it, though. Ditto the getting completely bladdered. We saw quite a few people getting hauled out looking like they’d been clubbed in the head and had lost the power of movement and balance. To each their own, I suppose, but it all just seems like such a waste to me.

I’ve seen Feist a few times before, too, but I’m excited to see her in a larger venue. Each time I’ve seen her it’s been a bigger and bigger space, and she is always so fabulous live. She has amazing presence and always has supremely excellent musicians in her band, and you can just tell they all really love playing live. Hopefully the crowd will be into it tonight and I’ll have enough fun to make up for how tired I am.

Substantive posts to follow about the support group meeting last week (awesome), my women’s circle meeting yesterday (awesomer), and life on 100mg daily Clomid (jury still out, but slightly hot-flashy and weird, final verdict Tuesday morning at first follicle tracking scan.)

Over and out.





where to even begin?

10 10 2008

Yeah, I know. I’m a bad, bad blogger. I linger around, commenting on the details of everyone else’s life, but with me, it’s only borscht and surface details once or twice a month. Pathetic. 

Well, it’s not for lack of interesting things going on. I’m not quite sure why I haven’t been posting lately – partly that things were going pretty well for a while and I was busy and distracted and therefore less in need of pouring my guts out, and partly that I had procrastinated for so long and felt so guilty and ashamed and at a loss as to where to jump back in again that it was just too daunting to start writing again. 

Lucky for you, internets, the craptacular-ness has returned. Nothing really serious, just feeling blue and vulnerable and scared and all that.  So let’s bullet, shall we?  There are lots of little things I need to catch you up on. 

  • Got my period today and start Clomid tomorrow. Am freaked and excited. Am also dreading possible hormonal nightmare during our first joint family Thanksgiving – Manny’s parents, sister, and BIL and my grandparents, uncle, cousin and her boyfriend. Could be good, could be ugly – 2 old ladies with dementia! Yay! As long as I don’t have a hot flash or crying jag in the middle of it, it will be bearable. I think. 
  • Got my period today after a week of hormonal weepiness. Feeling so raw and sad all the time sucks. Especially when I was expecting my period last weekend and kept having crazy pregnant fantasies.”Maybe just one sperm jumped the turnstiles and made it to my egg the one time in the past month we actually had sex! It’s possible, right? Right? RIGHT??????????????”
  • Fuck, I hate my mind and her stupid tricks. 
  • Read some blog by a donor conceived guy in Australia who used to be totally fine with being donor conceived until he had his own child and now he’s totally against it. Fucking great. Why do I read those things? I have this idea that I need to be compassionate and open my heart to all possibilities and try to hold them all with love and tenderness, but all it really does it make me circle the bowl of doubt and freak out that I might be dooming my future child to a life of torment and anguish. Ugh.
  • Support group has first meeting next Tuesday and is going AWESOMELY! I’ve talked to 3 women now and everyone is so happy I’ve made this happen. It’s so good to get that kind of validation from others who are in or have been through the trenches, hearing that they need it and are grateful for the work I’ve done so far. I still haven’t found anyone to facilitate the group, but I’m still trying. I think it’ll be ok either way, but will take a lot of pressure off me if I’m not the one doing it. Must remember to take care of self…
  • Women’s circle is also coming together. I met with two women who have been involved in another circle for many years, and they are going to help me create a new one. I’m excited about this and am feeling way more at peace with the uncertainty of it all. It’s all very wide open, which is not something I really excel at, but I’m learning to trust the process. Slowly, though. 
  • It’s really fall here – leaves are mostly off the trees, it’s getting colder and colder every day. We might even get snow over the weekend. I like fall but the fact that it precedes a long and miserably cold winter seriously puts a damper on my enjoyment of it. 
  • We have tickets to see Neil Young in a couple weeks, and I might go see Feist the night after that, too. There is an absurd amount of good music coming these next few weeks – Bob Dylan is coming in November, I think, but we were planning to be away for that weekend. Too many choices…
  • All I want to do right now is drink tea, cuddle my dog, and weep. But I’ll probably get up soon and start cleaning up my house and also hiding all the copies of “Creating Families” and IF books I have lying around. The last thing I need during Thanksgiving dinner is a slightly batty old lady asking me what’s up with that. 
I heart you all. Thank you for not abaondoning me completely. My blog stats are oddly busy considering my totaly flakiness in posting. Will seriously attempt more regular posting in near future. Truly. 
ETA: One more thing – it’s my wedding anniversary today. Four years ago today, Manny and I got married to each other for the second time. The first time was seven years ago last Sunday. Go us! Although I am super lame and can’t find any wedding photos in this computer…




Barren Bitches Book Tour: Eat, Pray, Love

17 08 2008

Welcome one and all, strangers and friends,  to my very first excursion on the Barren Bitches Book Tour. When I heard the book for this tour was Eat, Pray, Love, I jumped at the chance to participate. I’d already read the book and loved it, and was dying to find out what others thought and what questions they might come up with. And of course I have not been disappointed with my blogo-sisters’ brilliance. What follows are a few of the questions asked by my fellow barren bitches, and my responses. If you’d like to read others’ thoughts on this amazing book, check out the main list at Stirrup Queens. While you’re there, you can also sign up for the next book on this online book club: Baby Trail  by Sinead Moriarty (with author participation.)

While I don’t believe infertility can be cured by positive thinking, do you think the impact it has on our life could be minimized if we learned to control our thoughts like she talks about in chapter 58?

I know it can, cause I try to do this, and my life is much better for it. And not just in terms of infertility, but in terms of all the places in my life where I feel less than whole. I think, though, that it’s necessary to make an important distinction between thoughts and emotions. I don’t believe we can choose emotions – I believe emotions visit us, and we don’t get to decide who visits when. I do try to treat my emotions with compassion and forgiveness, though, the same as I do my thoughts. I try to remember that my emotions don’t mean anything about me; that is, that there is no need to have judging or unkind thoughts about myself just cause I happen to have emotions that I might not enjoy, or I might not feel are conveniently timed, or I just wish were different. Emotions tend to come and go pretty quickly, if I’m really paying attention, and they really don’t wear patterns in my mind the same way the thoughts can. But the thoughts, well, they’re another thing entirely. They can stick around, wearing grooves in my mind, refusing to let me go. Thoughts can take over, they can wear out their welcome, and often, they are most unhelpful. Thoughts like “I’m not good enough,” or “I need to figure this all out to be ok,” or “What the hell is wrong with me?”  These kinds of thoughts (and I have a lot of them) are ways I learned to cope with life when I was a little girl. They come from woundedness I inherited from my family, who in turn inherited their own woundedness from their families, and back and back we can go. Those thoughts are part of what made me a perfectionistic, scared, uptight, driven child, who grew up to be a perfectionistic, scared, uptight, driven adult. But in the past 4 years or so, I’ve started to learn how to release some of this stuff, how to forgive myself for not being perfect, how to experience joy, how to heal. One of the things I loved about this book was how honest Elizabeth Gilbert is about how difficult it is to change our minds and to find our spiritual paths. It’s really hard, and it takes a lot of work, a lot of effort, and a lot of awareness. But for me, anyway, living right now as I do with a hugely different mind than I had 4 years ago, I know that the work is worth it, and that it has meant real change in my life, especially in how I’m dealing with our infertility. As I said to Manny yesterday morning over coffee, I’m so proud of myself for learning how to stick up for myself, as I related in my last post. A few years ago, I would have taken all that on. I would have let that woman make me feel stupid, I would have accepted her word as the truth, and not only that, but I would have blown it all up into something that it never was in the first place, namely that my body was screwed up, and I was a failure, and I would probably never have a baby, and there must be something else wrong with me. And now, well – those thoughts still try to come, but I basically tell them to fuck off. So I’m sticking up for myself to other people, but also to my mind, whose habits are hard to break.

All this to give the following answer to the question you left behind so very long ago: yes.

In Chapter 60, the plumber/poet from New Zealand gives Liz some Instructions for Freedom. #7: “Let your intention be freedom from useless suffering. Then, let go.” To what extent has any suffering you’ve experienced in response to your own struggles (such as infertility, loss, illness) been inevitable? Natural but unhelpful? Useless? Does the suffering serve any purpose for you? Is that purpose enough to justify ongoing suffering?

This is such a great question. I do believe that a lot of suffering – maybe even most of it – is useless and avoidable. But I don’t think all suffering is either one. A lot of suffering can wake us up to the realities in our own lives, or can open our hearts to compassion for ourselves and others. So it’s clearly not useless. It’s just that we can lay such incredible trips on ourselves and compound the suffering that is natural and useful and unavoidable. A lot of the suffering I’ve experienced in dealing with infertility has been useless – it’s been about things that haven’t even happened yet, like “what if this never works and I never have a baby?” or “what if my child hates me for using donor sperm?” or “what will I do if people pick on my kid for being donor-conceived?” These thoughts have tortured me, and I’m sure similar ones will continue to torture me. But what do I gain from this kind of suffering? Nothing really. Maybe I get to think through certain scenarios in advance, so I might be more prepared if they actually happen. But really, they have not happened, and they might never happen. So why should I be living through them and feeling pain? I can’t really think of a good reason. And I don’t think anything really justifies dragging out this kind of suffering – it only tortures me and doesn’t really help change me or make me a more loving, kinder person.

There is, however, a lot of ongoing suffering with IF that I think is inevitable. I feel sadness because I don’t have a baby, and I’m going to feel that sadness until I have a baby. I’m angry at the whole situation, and I feel it’s unfair, and I doubt I’ll be able to fully let that go unless I have a baby, although I’ve made a lot of peace with my situation, so maybe it’s possible. But this is the kind of suffering that I think is useful – it’s the suffering that makes me part of our blogging community, that has made me take on the work of starting a support group in my city where none currently exists, it’s the suffering that helps me to see that nobody gets a free pass in this life, and we all have our struggles, and life is so much better when we can reach out to each other with gentleness and understanding. But although this suffering can serve a purpose, I don’t think we need to feed it, or try to dwell in it, or draw it out. As long as we allow ourselves to feel the pain of our own unique situations, and open our hearts to the truth that we are not alone in our suffering, it is redundant to really wallow in it.

Although I don’t always let that stop me.

As Elizabeth Gilbert is writing her letter to G-d about divorce, she begins saying names of individuals who ’signed it’. She says, “I became filled with a grand sense of protection surrounded by the collective goodwill of so many mighty souls.” As you blog about IF, parenting, life, and love; in what ways do you feel protected? How in your journey has ‘the collective goodwill of so many mighty souls’ guided you? Who are those mighty souls?

Beautiful question with an easy answer. If you’re reading this, you’re probably one of those mighty souls. And if you’re not reading this, you might be one of those mighty souls, too. When I first found the blogosphere, I felt like I’d found a place I could belong, and I dove in, with much enthusiasm and relief. Just being heard was tremendous, and having access to stories in which I could recognize myself was like a balm on my desparately lonely soul. The first time I got comments, I actually cried – it was so beautiful. There really is something magical about putting my experience out there and knowing that someone has read and listened to what I’ve wrote. But I don’t think I’d experienced something like these mighty souls until recently. I recounted a while back that I was having a rough time waiting for a morning appointment in my clinic, and was feeling very much alone. And for the first time, being nowhere near my computer or my blog or my daily tally of comments, I suddenly knew I was not alone. I knew that there were at least a dozen women I could list off the top of my head, and likely more than that, who wish me well, who want me to be happy, who understand me, who pray for me – and that they do that now outside of the blogs, maybe when they’re on their way to work, or they’re on hold with their clinic, or maybe when they’re feeling their baby kick for the first time. I deeply understood that I’ve managed, somehow, to worm my way off the screen into their hearts, as they have managed to worm their way into mine. And that there is a bond there that has nothing to do with how I write, or whether I tell a funny story, or what kind of crisis I find myself in. It’s bigger than that, it’s stronger than that, and it reaches far beyond that.

So you mighty souls, pat yourselves on the back and give yourselves a smooch and sing yourselves a song. You’re a bunch of fucking geniuses, the way you shape-shift like that.

***********

I could go on and on, and try to answer a lot more of these awesome questions, but it’s getting on time for me to pick my Grandma to go see Mamma Mia! and chow down on some popcorn in lieu of supper. Hurrah!





cheering for the home team

11 08 2008

As my dear friend Moonbeam points out, “If I don’t root for the home team, who else is gonna do it?” This weekend was a really good opportunity for me to practice this, with regard to myself and my own emotional needs. It was the annual folk festival, and we always spend pretty much the whole weekend there, listening to amazing music and visiting with everyone we’ve ever known. It’s often a rough weekend for me, even though it’s fun and I enjoy it. Now that I’m no longer in denial about my infertility, I understand that part of the reason it’s been a rough weekend for me is that it’s the time of year I see old friends and acquaintances who I never otherwise see, and every year, there are new babies and new bellies. And of course the whole place is just crawling with kids, and crunchy granola mamas with big bellies and nursing babies in slings and double chariots and little girls with pipe cleaner and twig wreaths in their hair and wands made out of glitter and twigs. So it’s really not the kindest place to spend a weekend if you’re feeling, as I was on Friday, like someone ripped a giant band-aid off my soul.

But you know what I figured out, as I was settling in for the first evening of bands on Friday night, staring longingly and enviously at every tow-headed child in the park, and everyone I ever knew from high school and university carrying their newest family member, and every stranger’s 8 month pregnant belly? I figured out that I can look at something else. I do not have to look at them. And when I find myself looking at them, I can deliberately look away and find something else to look at. (By Saturday, I had refined this to actually looking at hot men, although that can kind of backfire cause then I get into thinking about their sperm, but it works for a while.)

I don’t know why it took me so long to figure this out. But it feels good. It feels like progress. Even though I felt completely spiritually and emotionally raw on Friday and Saturday morning, by the afternoon, I was actually having fun. And once I realized that I was having fun, I understood that I was able to do it because I had let my feelings come without pushing them away at all, and then I had taken action to protect myself and not wallow in my sadness. I pretty much refused to go near the children’s stage, and the one time I found myself in that corner of the park, talking to a very dear friend, I quickly excused myself from the situation on the grounds that it was just not a good place for me to be at that time. I cheered for the home team, no apologies, no guilt.

It’s good that I learned to do this, and I hope I remember to continue to do this, cause Thursday night and Friday morning were just shitty days. During flamenco on Thursday, one of the women’s husbands showed up near the end of class with their 2 girls. The little one, who is about 3, walked through the door, and I felt like someone had kicked me in the heart. She just looks exactly like her mother, who dances with me, and who I really like, even though I don’t know her at all. And just seeing a little girl who looks so much like her mom – it just overwhelmed me, how much I want that. It actually physically hurt to see her, and made me almost burst into tears right there. (Instead, I threw back my shoulders, and danced for myself, defying everything that’s making it hard for me to have my own little girl who looks just like me.) But it was hard, a really hard moment.

Friday morning was no better. I had a scan at 8, the first scan of the day, but of course I still had to wait for half an hour in the fucking shithole of a waiting room. The place was weirdly full of middle aged women with terrible haircuts and ugly handbags. I don’t know why they were there, and they probably didn’t know why I was crying on and off. Well, I suppose I was only weepy until the entertainment arrived in the form of a couple who I’m still not sure, after several days’ reflection, whether they were a couple or not. He was a classic nerd, with a very dated goatee, hideous sneakers and black sport socks paired with a button down shirt and cargo shorts. He kept going on and on about his karaoke collection, saying at one point that his collection “eclipsed” some other guy’s. He laughed like Beavis, or maybe Butthead, I forget which one. He talked too loud for a waiting room. She, on the other hand, seemed nervous and distant from him, like they were on a first date and she didn’t like him very much. She kept picking her lip and bobbing her crossed leg, and glancing at him out of the corner of her eye like she was kind of embarassed to be there with him. She didn’t talk much and just basically said “uh-hunh” to everything he was saying. At one point he mentioned that he was going to perform Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’” and Mr. Big’s “To Be With You” that night at karaoke. She just said, “uh-hunh” and kept picking her lip.

I, on the other hand, was furiously jotting details in my daytimer, and thinking to myself, having long since stopped weeping, “Sometimes the idiots really do make things better in this life.” As annoying as they were, they made the last 5 minutes of my wait a whole lot easier to bear.

I had a scan this morning and have another one on Wednesday, likely followed up by a trigger and then our fourth IUI on Thursday. I have my first accupuncture appointment tomorrow night, too, which I’m very excited about. And then I guess we’ll just have to endure the wait and see how it goes. We’re on the last vial of this donor and I’m waiting to see what happens this cycle to see whether we will order more or switch donors or what. If it’s another negative, it will be a hard decision – I really liked this donor. But I will find it hard to justify spending another few thousand dollars on his spunk if i’m not pregnant in a couple weeks.

I am really sorry for not posting more lately, but the support group thing is taking up a lot of mental space and time, and there’s only so much IF stuff I can do in a day. I’m always thinking about how to balance it all out better, but until I figure it all out, you’ll have to survive on my rare mega posts as seems to be my habit lately. And I promise to update on the support group stuff soon, too – I’m having so many good ideas, and things are coming together quite well, but time is also flying by and I want to have a meeting in September, so I need to stay on top of my list of things to accomplish before then.

Thank you all, lovely internets, for your sweet comments and your support and kindness. As I was crying and feeling sorry for myself in the waiting room last week, I did remember at one point that although I felt really alone right then, I am not alone. And I felt your presence with me, your sweet words and your thoughts and your prayers, your encouragement and your hope. It was the first time I’d ever really felt that way at a time when I really needed it and I wasn’t anywhere near my computer. So your powers are legendary, dear ones – they extend far beyond this machine and into my heart, so you’re with me wherever I go. Thank you ever so much for that – for cheering for my home team. I hope you all know that I cheer for each of yours fervently and regularly, too.





supper & support

30 07 2008

So Manny and I went out for supper tonight to the site of our best meal ever and had a pretty deadly supper. For starters, I got garlic toast made out of amazingly good Italian bread that probably had half a pound of butter on the two slices of bread that came with the order, and Manny got “chicken lollipops” which were basically wings with one of the two little bones removed that were smoky and sweet and tender and so yummy. Then Manny had fish and chips, which has been endorsed by one of his colleagues who is a Maritimer, and I had a pizza with blue cheese and beer-braised mushrooms. I sort of fell in love with the pizza at first bite – the mushrooms were incredibly tasty, and I am just a sucker for blue cheese on anything, but it was particularly well employed on that pie. Oh, and lest I forget, I had the cheesecake and fruit beer combo I waxed so eloquently about in that post I just linked to. It was delish but, as I said to Manny, there are some things that just never taste as good after the first time. Still very fabulous and a total indulgence, especially with the beer. So I’m feeling quite stuffed and satisfied, and I hope it will be a long time before I have to do this again!

My other news is that I’m actually getting things together to start a support group here. Everyone I’ve spoken to is super supportive and agrees there is a huge need for it. My clinic has a social worker on staff, and I spoke to her yesterday. They are unable to take this project on because their mandate is to serve people who have been admitted to the hospital or those who are directly referred to them by hospital staff. But in a way that is really good, as it means I will have a lot more freedom in how I want the group to be. I’m thinking now that once the group is established and has been around a while, then I will start lobbying the health region and doing more advocacy work to educate the healthcare people and others about IF and the need for greater supports. One thing at a time, though. I’m in the process of making a few connections with people who have experience with support groups, and will be reaching out to them for mentorship and advice, but I have quite a few good ideas already from my own reading and experience with meditation groups I’ve been involved in for a few years. My main challenges at the moment will be finding space that we will be able to have on a regular basis – I’m thinking of monthly meetings at first and more frequent if people want that – and promotion – I’m wanting to promote the group to people at my clinic but also at other doctors’ offices and possibly a few other spots in the community. I have ideas but the execution is going to take some time, I think. I want to have a meeting in August, but Manny pointed out that September might be better when people are back from vacations and it also gives me a lot more time to promote it and get contacts with people who might be interested in attending.

I will have more to say on this as it progresses, but for now it just feels like I’m doing what I’m meant to be doing, like I’m fulfilling my purpose on the earth. I haven’t felt that way for a long time – I had a major career meltdown last year and have just been letting that part of me take a rest, not worrying about what I should do for a job. Now I have a job that’s just a job, and I’m very happy and blessed to have it, because it means I have the time and energy I need to do this, which is where my heart is right now. There is so little here in terms of treatment, in terms of support, in terms of awareness. It’s one of the things about living in western Canada  - things are so spread out that even if you live in a larger city with one or more fertility clinics (which I don’t), there aren’t alternatives close by the way there can be when you live somewhere that’s just more densely populated. So it just feels like a bit of a wasteland. And I can’t control whether a baby grows in me, but I can definitely do something about this, and it truly feels like the right thing to do.

Thanks one and all for all your kind comments earlier today – it means so much to know you’re all with me through everything! So a big smooch to everyone!





show and tell

6 07 2008

I finally thought of something interesting for show and tell. Well, I hope it’s interesting. I wouldn’t say I’m much of a collector of anything, although I have a fondness for Queen Elizabeth II and certain items bearing her image, which items may appear in future show and tell installments. But today, I’m sharing my other obsession: the logo for Canada’s centennial, which took place in 1967. I’m not entirely sure why I love this logo so much – in ‘67, I was 6 years away from being born, so I obviously don’t remember the centennial. But I love it a lot and when I find things at church rummage sales or thrift stores bearing this image, I snap them up. And Manny, being the kind and caring husband that he is, knows how to impress me, as he did a few years ago on my birthday, when he made a little treasure hunt for me to find my present. The ultimate present was an iPod, but the penultimate present was this: 

And I may be a weird Trudeau-loving westerner, a bilingual child of multicultural policy, someone who cries everytime I hear a Stan Rogers song, a softy whose heart swells with patriotic pride at weird moments, like when I catch a “Hinterland Who’s Who” spot on TV, or hear the theme song to As It Happens (how cool is it that the song is actually called “Curried Soul”? I just learned something!), but I defy anyone to tell me that this logo is not one of the awesomest logos of all time.

Go on over to the weekly Show and Tell thread chez Lollipop Goldstein. I just can’t stop saying her new name, folks.





a big old “woot!”

18 06 2008

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I won! I won! I guessed right! I rarely win things, so I’m excited about this one. If you’ve never played, go on over to Weebles Wobblog to see what all the fuss is about.

In other news, it’s finally getting hot here, I’m harvesting radishes, and this morning I ate two perfectly ripe and delicious strawberries from my strawberry patch.