Reasons to be grateful while in a dark place
August 8, 2008
It’s official. I am depressed. I said it. Maybe admitting it is half the battle?
I know this because the other night I asked my husband. We were walking the dog on a beautiful summer night where the air feels like a warm, scented bath. I know this because often I feel like I am going through the motions. Like trying to be just happy on a beautiful warm summer night with M and pup.
My question to him opened the floodgates for him to tell me how he feels. That was a bit hard to hear but helpful. It’s only fair. He is frustrated and wants to help. He feels like I don’t enjoy the small things I used to and some of the other small everyday frustrations things seem to be magnified into big bad things. While I make it to work, I don’t spend as much time with my friends. I am more bitter and down, and he thinks it is getting worse not better. I make him feel bad in how I respond to him sometimes, especially about his work schedule. Too curt, too critical and too “whatever” (shoulder shrug)
Last night I did see two of my friends over dinner. Today, C and I emailed back and forth. She knows that I am struggling with the miscarriages, infertility and a stressful job that I need to keep the new roof over our heads. For different reasons, she has been untangling herself from her own vicious cycle. She said — that as cheesy as it sounds — it has helped her to keep a gratitude journal. So in honour of C and her kind, wise counsel and support. I am grateful:
- my dog always always greets me with a happy wag and jump no matter how unlovable I feel
- I live in Canada where at least some of the infertility expenses are paid (surprisingly none of the recurrent miscarriage testing is)
- hey, so I guess I need to add that my job pays well enough that I can afford the testing
- the young raccoons now apparently living part time on our shed have not discovered how delicious almost ripe tomatoes still -on- the- vine are
- That we CAN get pregnant with the help of clomid and other drugs because the more times we can get pregnant, the better our odds
- that the people who say “I know someone who had 4, 5, 10 miscarriages but still had a baby” mean well and are only trying to make us feel hopeful
- that my legs still look great in high heel sandals and skirt (thanks for the genetics, mom! )
- that my husband has a great sperm count. Hey, I need the medical help to ovulate. At least I know when it’s time, his boys have the right stuff.
Entry Filed under: bummed out, gratitude, infertilty, marriage, medical tests, miscarriage. Tags: gratitude; miscarriage; depression.
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1.
kittenezz | August 9, 2008 at 2:43 pm
I think this was probaly one of the hardest things for me. A few weeks ago, I had someone find my blog by searching for ‘bitter miscarriage”. To me, this was just an awful thing to read. I didn’t think of myself as bitter, but I guess I really was. I found for me, that I really had to focus on something else. As much as I wanted to focus on getting pregnant, it was making me miserable. Because all I saw was the pregnant women who surrounded me and how easy it was for them. Then I started thinking about how it may never happen for me. It’s a vicious cycle. In the long run focusing on loosing weight, and my household, seemed to help best. I realize that may not work for everyone, but sometimes it helps to step back and re-evaluate life.
2.
kaleihutch | August 10, 2008 at 9:50 pm
Congrats on your news, kittenezz. Where there is pregnancy there has got to be a ton of hope
.
After the news of miscarriage 2 I was determined to be ok and not let this define who I am. I have not been totally successful (obviously!) with us but I do hope to get there over time