Surrogacy, the scary introduction.

I’ve recently joined a surrogacy forum that explores the various options of altruistic surrogacy in Australia, as well as commercial surrogacy overseas, in countries like Thailand and India (most common), Georgia and the US and Canada.  One of the things they do is encourage new members to share their own stories with the group, so people will know what brings them to joining the forum… and also gives some background for surrogates who use these forums to find IPs (intended parents) for whom they want to act as gestational surrogates.  Not an easy thing to sit down and write as I have such a long and drawn out history with infertility… but with ten little embryos burning a hole in the freezer, it is option we want to explore.  So here goes:

“It’s hard to find a starting point when writing about our journey to have a family. So I’ll try to attack it chronologically…

When I was 19, I was in a car accident – a taxi driver didn’t see me and t-boned right into my car. I suffered a bad whiplash to my cervical spine, but was lucky to not be more seriously injured. Four months later I was driving on a country road and was in a head on collision with someone who was driving on the wrong side of the road as I came over a hill. I suffered a really horrific whiplash (lipstick ended up on my chest) and my neck/back was never the same after that. The doctors, the pain, the drugs, the physio –yuk. Three years after that I was driving with a friend in Tasmania, and he lost control of the car and rolled us into a ditch. I came to, hanging upside down in the car in a panic with a massive boulder right in front of my head, and it was off to hospital in an ambulance yet again. These horrid accidents left me with a chronic back problem and daily pain. Over time, I got used to it, it was still bad but mostly manageable. In the middle of this, I had my first miscarriage when I was 20, but at the time I just thought it was not meant to be… so young, so naive.

Convinced I had been through the ‘bad things happen in threes’ thing, life was looking up. I met a wonderful man named Mr K, who three weeks after we met declared he was going to marry me! I didn’t believe him then – we were so young – but now I can’t believe my good fortune – he is the most wonderful, supportive, caring person I have ever known. We got married in 1999 and at the end of that year I found myself at the OB/GYN with a positive pregnancy test in my hand, thinking we were getting ready for the next chapter of our lives. Instead, I found out I had miscarried again, and was diagnosed with severe PCOS and also endometriosis. We started off down the IVF path, slowly at first – four IUI cycles, then a laparoscopy, then a proper IVF cycle. I was 28 and Keith was only 24. Our first couple of transfers, were unsuccessful, and then… what I have now come to think of as a miracle – a positive and a beautiful son for us. Angus was born in 2001 and he has quite simply, become my raison d’etre. My chronic back pain did not handle pregnancy well at all, and by the beginning of the second trimester, I was in so much pain I couldn’t sleep, couldn’t move well and was unable (and unwilling!) to take much medication, lest it harm my precious little cargo. When my son was born by c-section, my back pain settled back to it’s normal ‘dull roar’ almost overnight, and my OB was shocked when I described the c-section pain as a ‘mild abdominal discomfort’, compared to the pain and pressure bub had been placing on my spine.

When Angus was about 18 months old, we returned to the IVF clinic with our 8 embryos in the freezer, convinced that we knew what we were doing. Out of those 8 embryos I was confident we would have another child, (or even twins!), to complete our little family. I have never been so wrong about anything in my entire life – not before, or since. Those 8 embryos were implanted over the next four months with no success. Over the following five years, we had 8 or 9 more egg collections, and nearly 60 embryos transferred back to my traitorous body. We tried different hormone support protocols, all the ICSI, all the hatching and all the embryo glue etc. We tried everything. Each pick up we would get at least 14-15 good eggs, and had a 95% fertilization rate, and got told we had young, good looking embryos that always developed well to blastocyst., but they never ‘took’. My Fertility Specialist kept saying that, because I was young, it would work eventually… though I began to think it was the ‘eventually’ bit that would kill me. I did finally have a (+)ve in May of 2006, but that resulted a the most traumatic and soul destroying experience – after so much effort to get pregnant, the foetus failed to develop and I had a D&C on the saddest day ever. I still remember rattling off my name, DOB and FS’s name to everyone who came near me that day, as I lay in my outpatient bed, in a zombie-like state of emotional numbness. Our baby girl had a chromosomal abnormality – a trisomy 23 – she would never have survived.

I have never put so much time or energy or resources or research or money, into anything only to discover that it didn’t matter what we did – it was all out of our control. Each cycle felt like gambling. Turn up, do what you’re told, hand over your money and cross your fingers. And I never was the gambling type…

Our FS was less upbeat as time went by, one day telling me that I was his one patient that kept him awake at night – a distinction I really didn’t want. There was no medical reason that these embryos weren’t taking. I would sit in the post-transfer recovery room and look at all the other women and watch the other husbands bringing in teddy bears for their wives… My husband of course was across town at work, long since having given up coming with me, as he couldn’t get the time off work and we had become quite complacent about all the appointments. Over time I became uncharacteristically cynical too, I didn’t want to talk to the other women, and a horrible uncharitable part of me that I never knew existed, fervently wished and hoped that statistically speaking it would be ME with the successful transfer that month, and not them. Being a frequent flyer at the IVF clinic is something you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemy – it changes you. We did a couple more cycles before we had to hit the “pause” button for a while. This was for a few reasons – primarily because my father had been diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease and we knew he only had a few months left to live, and I really wanted to spend his remaining months making sure he got to spend as much time with Angus as possible. That and I had been obsessing about IVF for so many years, that our finances were in ruin. So we put it aside, with ten little embryos still stored in the freezer. I was 34/35 by then.

My father passed away in January 2007 and I went back to work desperately attempting to get on top of the financial havoc I had allowed pile up in the wake of my relentlessly pursing IVF. The plan was to work for a year and then return to IVF and my ten little embryos. Unfortunately that never came to pass, thanks to yet another nasty car accident – this time on the way home from work. I was stopped in a line of traffic, and a lady in an RX8 on her mobile phone, rammed my car from behind at full speed, lifting my Rav4 up on two wheels and nearly rolling me into the oncoming cars, before I teetered for what felt like forever, eventually crashing down into the vehicle in front of us. And so began the rounds of orthopaedic surgeons and neurosurgeons and physiotherapists of my youth, all over again. This time, a neurosurgeon finally diagnosed a chronic neuropathic pain condition, and a plethora of medication was prescribed to attempt to manage it. But there ended my plans to go back to IVF too.

In 2008, I had a natural conception – miracle of miracles! But that too, ended in miscarriage. So, here we are six years later, I still have incredibly high levels of daily pain, and am still on way too much medication to contemplate, and we still have those ten little embryos in frozen storage. Ten little embryos that represent so much hope, and yet, so much loss and pain too. Mr K now works for the public service and I have been studying for the last few years to stop me from losing my mind, as I am physically unable to work since the last accident. I am now part way through my PhD – I am researching medieval political philosophy (Yeah I know… it’s not everyone’s cup of tea).

Through it all, we have never given up on our dream to have more children. Lord knows, I have tried to give up. I have many times wished that this desire to have more children would just go away, and take with it the unwanted bitterness and jealousy of watching so many friends and family have their children so easily. But after so many years, I know it won’t. It never goes away. At the moment, Mr K is going through the process of donating sperm, because, well… we would do anything humanly possibly to help others to have the families they want, because we of all people know exactly what it feels like when you can’t.

Oh dear… half a dozen tissues later. Sorry this has turned into a huge wall of text, and I totally forgive anyone who gave up on reading it. I have joined this forum because surrogacy may well be the last chance we have, to attempt to fill the enormous hole in our lives, that we have been carrying around now, for about a decade. I have seen some of the posts from the extraordinary women who offer to surrogate for couples like us, and want to say – the generosity of spirit demonstrated here is nothing short of miraculous. As overwhelmed as I am, to be contemplating embarking on a surrogacy journey, it is extraordinary to think there are amazing people out there who genuinely want to help. From the stories you have shared, and through your incredibly selfless deeds, all you truly generous and beautiful women on this forum and on the Facebook group, have fast become an inspiration to me. I am somewhat awestruck by the sincerity and generosity that I have seen in these pages.

Anyway, thanks for reading my saga.”

surrogacy gave me a chance at life

Joe Hockey’s Acme Inflatable Hostage

Joe Hockey’s Acme Inflatable Hostage
 by Jacinta Reid

So now the Abbott government is all about medical research? After getting rid of the Science Minister, after ensuring that an education in medicine (or any other discipline) will cost vastly more, after throwing hospital funding under a bus, after closing down a whole bunch of government departments and offices and stripping enough money from scientific organisations to fund … well, to fund moderate levels of scientific advancement in a nation of 22 million people, now they are keen for medical research to be well funded into the future?

Nah. Sorry. Not buying it.

The “Medical Research Future Fund” is a prop. It’s a common plot device in so many crime movies; the bad guy holding a gun to a hostage’s head and saying “give me what I want or the blonde gets it”. A pretty, innocent hostage with sympathetic appeal and pleading eyes. The kind of hostage that the audience would think that any hero worth their salt would be heartless and unethical not to choose to protect at any cost.

The Medical Research Future Fund is that hostage. Straight from Central Casting. Nobody is going to say that medical research funding isn’t a good thing. And anyone arguing against the GP Co-payment will run up against the hostage situation, and find that members of the Coalition will jump up and down shouting “Why do you hate medical research funding!!?” Oh the irony. And more irony, in case you were irony deficient; much medical research shows that preventive medicine and picking up ailments for early treatment not only leads to better health outcomes, it costs the nation less. So the Coalition wants to kill off universal healthcare for idealogical reasons, and it says it’s doing it because the rising cost of healthcare is unsustainable. And it’s planning to achieve this sustainable healthcare by implementing a user-pays system that demostrably, where it is implemented around the world, costs taxpayers more than universal healthcare. (And results in lots of preventable deaths, to boot.)

But whenever anyone points out the absurdity of adopting a failed strategy, Hockey whips out a pack labelled “Medical Research Future Fund” pulls the auto-inflate rip-cord and presto! The perfect hostage! Then he says “Give me what I want or I’ll kill Bambi!” or, in other words “Let me end Universal Health Care or you will be responsible for the loss of the Medical Research Future Fund!”

It’s a cruel and transparent ruse, your Acme inflatable hostage. I’m pretty sure if I read the fine print on the box it would say “Not to be used as a lifesaving device, always use under adult supervision.” And every bit of new information that comes out about it inflicts another puncture. Science advisor wasn’t consulted? Pffft. Not planned until a few weeks before the budget? Fffffft! No idea how the funds willl be allocated? Pthbthbthtt!

Sorry, Mr Hockey, but as nice as it would be to have a twenty billion dollar fund to support medical research into the future, I would prefer to maintain medical and science funding more broadly, and keep the existing healthcare system that lets Australian people, whatever their income, put to use the fruits of the good, well established research we already have.

hockey over

Never pick a fight with the Grammar Nazis

  • I love the internet – You never know what you are going to find.  For example, I clicked through to a IFLScience link about some guy in a Mentos suit being dropped into a tank of diet soda to see what would happen.  There was a very short and disappointing .gif, but the internet trolls still provided plenty of entertainment.  Love it!
    haha true but still too short.

    thats what she said
    Avatar “That’s what she said.”
    Avatar  Spell-check guy, thank heavens you’re here. Oh wait did I spell that right? Thank-you spell-check guy, the world is a better place with your trustee spelling skills.
    Avatar  “trusty”
    Avatar  another spell-check guy. I’m guessing you a little thick when it comes to irony. Oh wait lets address this with Irony-guy.
    Avatar  You’re* let’s*
    Avatar  wait while I’m here, please let me run my essay in with you guys, this is awesome! always admire a free service, now while your carefully scrutinizing my every letter of every word that I’m typing, I just wanted to say thanks and I feel privileged.
    Avatar  Ah, screw it. “Wait, while I’m here, please let me run my essay by you guys. This is awesome! I always admire a free service. Now while you’re carefully scrutinizing my every letter, of every word that I’m typing, I just want to say, “thanks and I feel privileged”.”
    Avatar  You just comma spliced…
    Avatar  Actually he didn’t. It’s just a complex sentence.
    Avatar  Congrats u corrected grammar in your native language…something I was told Westerners were taught in gr. 5, yet is not important in a casual commentary. You and everyone who “liked” this need may need an education? You can then contribute something to a thread/convo. Maybe something funny on an intellectual level instead of a fifth grade level. (ps. Eng is my fourth language please feel free to correct professor…or is it “Professor” as spelling and grammar are more important than ideas in your world). These people who correct spelling and grammar rather than speaking on ideas need to expand themselves……….that is all…until you or someone else comment on my spelling/grammar so I can show my English class how English speakers respond to online errors in commentary. lol (that’s laugh-out-loud right? Or is there an error?
    Avatar  Actually, I just thought the corrections by others was humorous and decided to continue. Hence, the “screw it” comment. However, since you brought it up, when I speak or write German or Russian, I actually appreciate those who correct me so I can be better at speaking or writing the languages I am trying to use. I would not take offense as much as use it as a learning tool. And I would also add that language is important even in commentary as you are still trying to be understood in any language you use. Maybe I am correcting because the act of correcting solidifies my ability to speak the language as English is a difficult one and one others who are native speakers still have problems with well into adulthood. Furthermore, I had no indication that he is not a native speaker and was not doing it to ridicule, so your comments and attempts at insults have no place in a reply to me. Having said all of that, bite me.
    Avatar  “Having said all of that, bite me” You sire, you winneth the internet.
    Avatar  Are you calling him a king, or are you calling him a man in a respectful manner?Avatar  I don’t care what these people are saying. Your comments were the delight of my day. Thank you sir.
    Avatar  English to me is the 3rd out of 5 languages and, indeed, i highly appreciate being corrected as it helps me learn and further develop my skills. Also, I do mind it when people cannot use their own language properly, even in an informal comment/ conversation. As for your last sentence, I am now officially a fan of yours <bows>.Avatar  “Actually, I just thought the corrections by others were* humorous..”
    Avatar  Here’s some additional help Patrick “and” or “but” are conjunctions, used to to connect clauses and not to start them (no problem starting with a conjunction properly). Let’s make all threads an English lessons :). Please correct me. I’m here to learn how to speak/write not read an article about mentos/coke explosions. Avatar  Sure, I’ll give it a go! “Here’s some additional help, Patrick.” Your sentence was ended. “And” should have been the start of a new sentence.
    Avatar  You don’t start a sentence with “and”…
    Avatar  Actually in that sentence, you most definitely do:  “Here’s some additional help Patrick. ‘And’ or ‘but’ are conjunctions, used to to connect clauses and not to start them.”  Think about it. The “and” in quotes is not functioning as a conjunction. Avatar  Actually, in this particular case you do start it with an “and. It should go: “And” and “But” are conjuntions, bla, bla, bla… You are providing information about the language. In this particular case, “and” is not being used as a conjuntion… It’s being merely used as an example, it must be between “” or in italic…. 🙂
    Avatar  I’d have gone with a colon, personally.
    Avatar  wow you’re english is so goode. Golde star! (You stfil didnt use “and” proparly no mater how hard you try to deflecte)
    Avatar  (A different Patrick) You can actually begin clauses with ‘and’ or ‘but’ however it’s advisable to practise it sparingly.
    Avatar  oooooohhhh, I see you, felt these English speakers needed “help”…….. it was a big misunderstanding. You wern’t trying to be smart. You had me until that last comment. smh
    Avatar  Don’t we all need help at times? The truth of the matter was in the first sentence. I thought it all very funny. The rest was just points for him to ponder. I don’t dismiss anyone’s point because of grammar but if you are going to write, why not try to be “better”.
    Avatar  ^ *were humorous” I hope the correction helps you “become better at speaking or writing” as you suggested.
    Avatar  See? You make my point. That’s a good catch on your part.
    Avatar  Since you’re so concerned about meaning, the meanings of the word “your” and contraction “you’re” are ENTIRELY DIFFERENT.
    Avatar  Yep, that’s true. It’s very important to know the difference between knowing YOUR sh*t and knowing YOU’RE sh*t. 😉

Australian Ballet School…

So, after much wailing and gnashing of teeth over the last few weeks regarding the LNP Australian Budget for 2014, where we have seen savage cuts to education, healthcare, pensions, unemployment benefits, deregulation of university fees, family payments, higher education loan schemes, indigenous programs… you name it – anything that might be deemed a necessary public service has been ravaged or in the case of Medicare, had a ‘co-payment’ ie: levy/fee/tax, applied to it.

Then we started seeing things in the news like the Prime Minister’s daughter getting a $60,000 scholarship to a prestigious design school that has never been published, never taken applicants and was supposedly awarded on merit.  Things like the Treasurer, Joe Hockey, protesting university fees back in 1989.  And now a crazy arsed $1M grant for the Australian Ballet School to purchase a $4.7M mansion to use for it’s boarders.

What the actual fuck, LNP Govt?  There’s supposed to be a BUDGET EMERGENCY going on, how can we be giving away even $1M measly to a ballet school?  So I did what I did with most of my political rage – to spare my actual friends on Facebook, I tend to spew most of it forth on Twitter to a bunch of like-minded strangers.

I didn’t really mean to pick a fight with the Board of the Australian Ballet this afternoon, but… oh well.

austballet

_________________________________________________________________________
Budget help for ballet Australian Ballet School’s new $4.7m mansion

The $4.7 million mansion in Parkville that has been purchased with the help of $1 million of taxpayer money.

The $4.7 million mansion in Parkville that has been purchased with the help of $1 million of taxpayer money.

It is one of Melbourne’s grand mansions – a sprawling century-old stately home that will be a new boarding school for Australia’s aspiring ballerinas – and it has just been purchased with $1 million of taxpayer money granted under Joe Hockey’s tough budget.

More than a few eyebrows were raised when young ballerinas emerged as rare winners on budget night, especially after the federal Treasurer declared, ”The age of entitlement is over.”  Tucked away in the budget papers was a $1 million grant for the Australian Ballet School, to help with its purchase of a new boarding residence. Armed with that taxpayer money, the school has spent more than $4.7 million on a mansion.

Set on a 2025-square-metre allotment, the Queen Anne mansion in Parkville boasts sweeping parkland views of the Royal Park Golf Course, a pool and gardens. According to Jellis Craig Kensington estate agents, the mansion is one of Melbourne’s ”last grand residences”.

”Exquisite period detail and soaring ceilings showcase gracious formal rooms and heritage splendour,” said the estate agent.  Whether ballerinas are lifters or leaners is a matter for debate, but the Ballet School seems to have been given a lift while many other arts institutions took a cut – more than $87 million of cuts over the next four years.

Screen Australia was cut by $25.1 million, while the Australia Council lost $28.2 million.

Just how the Ballet School came to be a beneficiary amid the cuts remains a mystery, but already many in Canberra – including some within the Liberal Party – are pointing out that it’s often not what you know, but who you know.  On the board of the Australian Ballet School is Daniele Kemp, the high-profile wife of former Liberal arts minister Rod Kemp, a predecessor of George Brandis as arts minister. Mr Kemp is now the chairman of the Institute of Public Affairs, a right-wing lobby group.

Mr Kemp and Mr Brandis are said to speak regularly, but Ms Kemp on Tuesday denied that she had any private discussions with the Arts Minister about the $1 million grant.  ”We [the ballet school] applied for the grant, and we met with Mr Brandis as a board,” Ms Kemp said.  ”He [Brandis] did come to Melbourne to visit and meet with us, but I was just one board member at that meeting.”

A senior Liberal told Fairfax Media the timing of the purchase ”does not good look” as cabinet tried to sell its tough budget. ”This school is pretty much a creche for some rich kids in [the seats of] Higgins, Melbourne Ports and Goldstein, and it had enough cash to come up with more than $3.5 million on its own. I admit, it doesn’t look good,” the source said.  It will take substantial renovations to turn the six-bedroom home into a boarding residence capable of housing 28 students.

Mr Brandis confirmed he visited the school in February and the decision ”is another clear indication of the Coalition’s support for the arts even when facing such challenges with the budget”.

Read more: 

Fuck chronic pain. With a rake.

One of the worst things about chronic pain (other than, you know… being in pain 24/7), is the predictability of my inability to sleep more than 5-6hrs a night.
I force myself to stay up until midnight most nights so I wake between 5-6am. Which of course is still an unseemly hour to be rising when you have no morning commitments. But when I’m stupid enough or so tired I can’t keep my eyes open and foolishly try to sleep early… I’m awake at 3am. Which. Really. Pisses. Me. Off.
Sigh. End result is that I haven’t had a single decent night’s sleep since 2007 so I’m chronically sleep deprived as well as I’m pain all day. Yay.
And people wonder why I come across like such a short tempered bitch sometimes.

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