Bebe Portraits

Tuesday was exciting because it was the very first ultrasound to see Bebe!  Lucy and Ricky flew to Tampa and our appointment was at 1:15.  It has been confirmed that there is only one bebe growing and its heart was beating at a beautiful 121 beats a minute.  Below is the video and I’ve tried to guide you to the general area by the way of the box.

 Bebe was six weeks and four days old during the ultrasound and this is a more accurate representation of what bebe actually looks like.

 The next ultrasound is scheduled for March 8th and once we reach ten weeks I will begin to wean off the medications and will be released from the fertility clinics. 

Last week I was able to make the switch from progesterone vaginal suppositories to progesterone vaginal capsules.  The suppositories are super nasty yuk and the minute you insert them they melt.  Once they melt you spend the rest of the day (until you get to insert your second dose and start all over again) with a snotty progesterone drip that in my case decided to chemically eat away at my sensitive skin down in Lady Town.  The capsules couldn’t arrive quickly enough and thankfully Lucy had gotten Freedom to make it so I didn’t have to sign for them.  Needless to say, anything would have been better than the vaginal suppositories.  I will even go as far to say I’d rather do a double dose of the progesterone injection before utilizing the suppositories ever again, but the capsules are my new best friend and we compliment each other well.  Once they melt they tend to stay put minus a few granules of powder here and there- so, in my humble opinion if you have the choice, you want capsules verses the suppositories; don’t suffer needlessly, your very own Lady Town will thank you.

Until next time when I come up with more handy dandy information to share with you about my private parts, I bid ye farewell.

© Pocketbebe, 2010

Dollars & Sense

Oh, Snap.  I’m really going there.

PART I: Surrogate’s Perspective

I think it is part of our nature to be curious about things, figure out how things work.  Some things can be easy to understand, the black and white of our lives while the more complicated gray areas require us to take pause and sometimes gather knowledge prior to declaring our stance on an issue.  I remember some of the times when I’ve failed to gather information, ponder, and understand the issue at hand prior to running my mouth; I often made judgmental, insensitive remarks and essentially made an ass of myself.  Unfortunately, surrogacy isn’t only about carrying a baby for someone else; it also encompasses addressing the critics.  So, why I feel this post teeters on the line of being tacky, I write it to those who are generally curious to understand the difference between what is called a altruistic surrogacy and a reimbursed/compensated surrogacy, not to those who stand with puffed up chests spouting off hurtful comments that surrogates are baby sellers and only carry babies for monetary gain. 

First, let me explain that surrogacy tends to have a few confusing use of words that are commonly used and that while surrogacy is a gift, it is also a job.  It is considered a job in that a surrogate is required and expected to do certain things that they themselves agree to, but not in the way that you receive a W2 or a 1099-MISC at the end the calendar year.  Surrogates, surrogate agencies, and lawyers actually do themselves a disservice sometimes by adding to culture’s misunderstandings of surrogacy by using the word “compensation” for what is really termed “reimbursement.”  The legal contracts of most surrogates will contain something along similar lines:

                “It is the intention of the parties herein that any reimbursements made to the surrogate is not considered payment of fees or compensation.  The parties understand that all monies paid to the surrogate hereunder is in the form of reimbursements for her expenses, time, inconvenience and pain and suffering; and , also as support for the yet unborn child and delivery of same and the surrogate’s expenses related to the same.  Surrogate is not an employee of the IP and because she is not being paid fees or compensation she does not qualify as an independent contractor requiring a 1099 tax form and reporting.”

Truly, there really is no such thing as an altruistic surrogacy so for the most part when someone speaks of doing an altruistic surrogacy they mean the intended parents (IP’s) are only paying for costs associated with medical care and legal work.  A “reimbursed” surrogacy is where the surrogate is reimbursed for medical expenses, legal expenses, other expenses, time, inconvenience, and pain & suffering.  Every surrogacy contract is as unique as a snowflake and differs in many ways, all depending on the IP’s and the surrogate’s beliefs and boundaries.  Most commonly there are two sections that cover the reimbursements in a contract; the first one is Special Procedure/Events.  This category represents (with individual dollar amounts) what a surrogate will be “reimbursed” should certain procedures need to occur.  Some examples of things that may appear in this area would be: amniocentesis, selective reduction, miscarriage, abortion, multiple pregnancies, cesarean birth, maternity clothing, life insurance policy costs, lost wages, and loss of reproductive organs.  The second category, Living Expenses, means those expenses incurred by the surrogate during the term of the agreement that are necessary to provide for or assist in meeting her regular living expenses.  This financial number is the larger number that partially covers the surrogate’s existence from the time of a positive pregnancy test to the delivery.  It also covers the time (physicians visits, pharmacy visits, driving time – I am a three hour round trip to our fertility clinic and delivery destination), inconvenience ( vaginal progesterone suppositories), pain & suffering (delivery –vaginal or c-section, injections, side effects of fertility medication, swollen feet, heartburn, sitting on the toilet for over 30 minutes when constipation hits, etc.), and expenses like paying for childcare to attend appointments.

I imagine the “Living Expenses” category and the number associated with it is where people outside of the surrogate community decide to pass their judgment.  Let me clarify that unless you are a surrogate for Sarah Jessica Parker or some other financially wealthy intended parent who decides to gift you gobs of money outside your legal contract for carrying their baby, you are not going to walk away from doing a surrogacy having received in cash more than what you gave emotionally and physically to the entire process.  Anyone watch when the Little Couple from TLC went to the surrogacy center in California and the cost it was going to be to them to use that agency?  Outrageous!  The agency is the one benefiting financially from that arrangement.  Another misconception is that surrogates receive a big lump sum of money like when someone hits the jackpot in the state lottery, it simply isn’t so.  A good lawyer working for the IP’s will make sure that reimbursements are dispersed in increments as the pregnancy progresses and as the surrogate upholds her responsibilities.

There is usually a range that can be requested by surrogates depending on whether they are experienced or not.  The range is also different between traditional surrogates and gestational surrogates.  A first time gestational surrogate can usually have a base “Living Expense” reimbursement up to $25,000 to $30,000, though it is usually much lower around 15,000 to 22,000.  An experienced surrogate can ask for more should she desire as she has shown success with fertility treatments and her body’s abilities.   

I am doing a reimbursed surrogacy and the question I’ve gotten is, “Do I feel it is morally wrong to ask for reimbursement?” The answer now and from the beginning is no.  A surrogacy is something I wanted to do to help someone have a child but is also something I am not able to do without help.  I don’t have the extra resources necessary for the wear and tear to my vehicle to drive to Tampa for appointments (sometimes weekly), the fuel for vehicle, childcare for my kids for appointments, the trips to Miami. My time is valuable to my family and while I balance it as well as I can between work for our own business, my children and their activities, and volunteering my time, taking on the magnitude of responsibility required to do a surrogacy isn’t something I can justify doing without reimbursement.   

Would we ever dare ask an athlete who has been blessed with certain physical abilities to play a potentially dangerous sport without receiving something to benefit his time spent in preparation for his sport or time away from his family?  While a teacher doesn’t teach because they receive a large salary, do we ask them to endure all they have to endure in a day because they are supposed to love children and if you love children shouldn’t you want to help them without reimbursement?  The preacher works right in the house of God, for God, do we make him feel like he should care for all the needs of the congregation as a volunteer?

At any rate, I can only speak for my motivations as a surrogate and why my contract looks the way it does.  I hope this post has helped demystify some of the things that transpire in the surrogate community along with satisfying the curiosity that tends to manifest within all of us.  I’ll never forget the day so many years ago when Kate Gosselin showed her midsection (pre tummy tuck), much to my curious satisfaction, on their show; I was so happy Kate had the cojones to “go there” and address what it was that everyone really wanted to know anyway.

PART II: Intended Mother’s Perspective

Jaymee Giddings is an intended mother who kindly is letting me republish an entire post from her blog titled, Our Surrogacy Adventure.  I began following Jaymee as I started on my own adventure in fall of 2008.  The surrogate, Bump Fairy, that wrote Jaymee asking the question below has since then ended up on her second surrogacy journey as Jaymee’s surrogate!   Thanks ladies for sharing and many blessings on your journey. 

Bump Fairy wrote:

Jaymee, you speak so highly of surrogates. How do you feel about the compensation aspect? I’d love it if you could post your thoughts, as an IM, on that issue. Being called a “back alley baby seller” never feels good, and from my seat it feels like people suck all of the good out of the journey just because of that one detail, as if it is not a good thing unless it is “free”. But the people speaking those words have never been in your shoes, I wonder how it is viewed from your side?

Wow, are you sure you would not just like to know the meaning of life?

It would be wonderful to live in a world where everything was free, time ran as fast or as slow as we needed, and every problem could be solved with a hug and a kiss. Unfortunately, we live in a world where everything, including the air at the gas station, costs money. We as a society have agreed that the paper with dead white guys on it is how we are going to trade goods and services, and yet somehow we have made it something dirty when it comes to particular goods and services. I guess I could give my surrogate a $25,000 piece of jewelry, like a friend of mine received from her husband after the birth of their first child. That would then really feel like buying a baby and what a more degrading way than with something bright and shiny like you use to distract small children.

For me the compensation came down to taking an honest look at what money was being paid out and what that money was for. Reality is that being pregnant costs money, you eat more, you need new clothes, you need more help with you own children, you have to travel to doctors’ offices and worse you have to sit in doctors’ offices. Then there is the physical toll that pregnancy takes on the body, weight gain, swelling, being uncomfortable, heartburn, hemorrhoids, morning sickness, not seeing your feet, loss of sleep, limited mobility, and a thousand other things. Of course, there is the big pink elephant on roller skates in the middle of the room, the baby/ies have to get out, and that is something that is not pretty, I saw the film in health class and that is some serious pain and suffering. Of course, this would be assuming that she was getting pregnant the “old fashioned way”, which is not how this works. So add to all that the injections (done by her significant other or herself), hormone overloads, and all the other lovely things that come along with regular infertility treatments. Now tell me that you would be willing do that for free for a stranger.

In making, my decisions throughout this process I have tried to put myself in the shoes of our future surrogate. This is hard to do at times, because I have never been pregnant and cannot fully appreciate what pregnancy is like. I consider myself to be a very generous person, I give to charity, donate my time, and think nothing of going out of my way to help others, but short of doing this for my sister (and even then there would have to be some really nice Christmas presents) I would never put myself through all that for nothing. Sure, the knowing that I helped fulfill someone’s life dream would be an amazing feeling, but realistically I do not think that many people are that altruistic.

This is Joe-bob and mine’s child who is lucky enough to have another woman willing to get them through the gestation period. This is going to sound like I am insane but bear with me for a moment. As a teenager, I was clinically depressed and my parents, who loved me more than anything, sent me to a boarding school where people could help me in a way that my parents were unable to at the time. Those people were paid to care for me when my parents were unable to, and nobody would expect it to have been any other way. I am unable to care for our child through gestation so we are sending it to someone who can. I do not see any difference in me going to boarding school and using a surrogate. Maybe I am stretching it here but I really see these things as analogous.

What our surrogate will give to us is something that no amount of money could ever repay. How much is the appropriate amount for a dream? So realistically, the compensation that she is getting is simply for her pain and suffering, and I believe that she deserves every penny.  At least this way I do not feel the need to follow her around for the rest of her life laying rose petals at her feet or erect a temple in her honor.

In reality, she is not just giving us the chance to be parents. Going through this process is giving us the chance to heal from years of disappointment, intense pain, and so many moments of agony. Infertility takes away so much of your dignity, self-respect, confidence, trust and faith in humanity; it makes you bitter and makes the world a horrible place to live.

Before we started this process, I did a lot of work on myself. Bringing all the pain and hurt of infertility into a surrogacy takes away from the beauty of the process. If you are going to be jealous of your surrogate and think that you are less of a woman, because another woman is carrying your child then you and your surrogate are in for a very long journey. From what I have seen of others’ experiences it is these feelings that lead to misery for everyone involved. This is not a process for the weak; you have to know who you are and where your limits are to get through this, which goes for both parties. People are going to question what you are doing and say some of the most horrible things you have ever heard straight to your face. That is why being in this for just the money will never work; there is not enough money in the world to make anyone go through what surrogacy asks of you. It is a beautiful and amazing way to begin a family. It is also difficult and emotionally draining.

Bump Fairy, I hope this answered your question. Thank you for all the love and support you have given me through this process, you truly are an amazing woman.

© Pocketbebe, 2010

Grow Bebe, Grow!

The beta from Friday was 1085!  Grow bebe, grow.  We are so thankful!

The Valentine’s Party was fun last night and I think everyone had a nice time despite the game playing and love poem writing I forced everyone to participate in.  Every couple had two words that they had to use to create a poem for their beloved.  One word embraced the Valentine’s Day spirit and the other word was a random object.  The Husband and I had the words flowers and rake.  The Husband’s poem turned out better than mine (I hadn’t counted on that) and I ended up on the losers bench for the “not so Newly Wed” game.  The red dress I had mentioned previously fit and I was so happy to get to wear it, with the shoes.  I mentioned the shoes right?  Too bad I didn’t get a picture taken of the shoes for you, blame it on the pregnancy brain.  There was a very small, miniscule, itsy, bitsy napkin fire that I may or may not have been responsible for that resulted in an itsy, bitsy hole being formed in a borrowed tablecloth.  But, (big but) I know my loving, forgiving friend, AK, will love the replacement I will soon be buying her as much as she loved the old one.  Ay-Yi-Yi!

© Pocketbebe, 2010

Growing Beta

The beta number for Wednesday, 2/10, was 468.  That is good news!  Tomorrow will be our last beta and also the day I will become five weeks pregnant.  Many people have been asking about the chance of twins; so far, our beta numbers have been consistent with a singleton pregnancy.  We will find out for sure at the ultrasound on Feb. 23rd.

This past week, week four, Baby Center told us that the pocket bebe is the size of a poppy seed.  The primitive placenta is made of two layers right now and the amniotic sac (which houses the baby), the amniotic fluid, and the yolk sac (which produces the baby’s red blood cells) are present.  Picture representation below:

When I was down in Miami on bed rest Lucy sent me some research that she had found on what exactly happens after a five day transfer.  This is what we found out.

This is what happens in a 5dt:   (the link also provides info. for a 3 day transfer)

-1dpt ..embryo is growing and developing
0dpt… Embryo is now a blastocyst
1dpt….Blastocyst hatches out of shell on this day
2dpt.. Blastocyst attaches to a site on the uterine lining
3dpt.. Implantation begins,as the blastocyst begins to bury in the lining
4dpt.. Implantation process continues and morula buries deeper in the lining
5dpt.. Morula is completely implanted in the lining and has placenta cells & fetal cells
6dpt…Placenta cells begin to secrete HCG in the blood
7dpt…More HCG is produced as fetus develops
8dpt…More HCG is produced as fetus develops
9dpt…HCG levels are now high enough to be immediately detected on HPT

I can’t find the site now, but something we read about 2dpt was about how the blastocyst and the uterine lining send signals back and forth prior to the blast attaching.  We decided this communication looked similar to the blinking arrows on the tops of our BlackBerry phones; you know BB owners, the two thick, little, yellow arrows going in opposite directions of each other in the top right corner of the phone. 

More information can also be found at: www.advancedfertility.com

In our research we also came across a site titled Sensitivity Comparison of Pregnancy Tests, and that was informative.  We used e.p.t., First Response, and Target brand once we were already pulling good positives.

That friends, is all I have to report today.  The Husband and I are hosting a couples Valentine’s Day cocktail party and dinner tomorrow evening.  Most of the food is being brought in and we rented the community center so we don’t even have to put forth any effort to clean the house or hide the dog.  I have about five dresses lined up that are calling for me to try them on.  I’ve got a 1950’s bright red number straight from my friend SL’s magic closet that I am dying to try out, along with the most precious matching red shoes.  PRECIOUS I tell you.  It better fit as this may be the last few weeks (fourth pregnancy and all) that I can zip myself up into cocktail dress and manage to pull it off.

Oh, and oh my goodness, I found out that Captain Phil from TLC’s Deadliest Catch died from a massive heart attack this week!  Deadliest Catch is one of our favorite TV shows; my husband and I get hooked “on the crab” each and every season.  Phil Harris of the Cornelia Marie is and will always be my favorite.  I am truly sad blog world…

© Pocketbebe, 2010

Bebe Blessings!

Lucy and Ricky are going to have a baby!  I am pregnant with their baby!

Home pregnancy testing began on Tuesday, Feb. 2nd which was 6dp5dt (6 days post 5 day transfer, it was a 5 day transfer because the blastocyst had developed for five days after fertilization prior to being frozen).  Anyway, home test #1 was done at 7:20 am and I had to cover the results window so Lucy and I could see the results at the same time over Skype.  When we were able to meet up on the computer later that morning I was holding my breath as I began to look.  It took a special kind of eagle vision to read but I saw the line oh so barely there.  We were EXCITED!  We immediately went into the bathroom (Lucy via computer) and I did another test.  The line showed up darker the second time.  Two faint positives on day six, we were happy. I couldn’t concentrate on a single thing all day, I was so jacked up on adrenaline.  I’m sure both Lucy and I alternated between extreme excitement and worry that whatever blasts were attempting to make a home might at some point decide to change their minds. 

7dp5pt Positive home pregnancy test and the lines were darker than the previous day.  The levels of hCG in my blood were becoming more concentrated. Yay! The blasts hadn’t decided to get out of Dodge and for that we were glad.  We decided to do a “for fun” blood draw to get a count of the hCG present (also called a beta).  I went to the lab but of course I went to one who told me after they drew blood that they couldn’t do the results STAT (quick) and that the number wouldn’t be available until the next day.  That sucked!!  The next morning Lucy got the results and the beta number was 45 from that draw (Lucy’s had been 41 on that day with Little Ricky). Yippee!

8dp5dt Positive home pregnancy test.  Lines turning faster and getting darker.

9dp5dt Positive.  “For fun” beta draw and this time I went to the hospital lab so we could get STAT results.  The beta was 117.

10dp5dt Positive.

11dp5dt Positive.

12dp5dt TODAY!!  Beta levels 252.

I will have two more draws, one on Wednesday, Feb. 10th and Friday, Feb. 12th.

The beta levels have continued to rise over the days and we feel confident at this point to declare that the transfer was a success! 

I am considered 4 weeks and 3 days pregnant and we will have a due date of either October 15th or October 16th.

Our first vaginal ultrasound will be on Feb. 23rd where we will hopefully see bebe-to-be and hear the heartbeat.

We both feel so incredibly blessed as this was the one shot (without starting a whole new fresh cycle) Lucy and Ricky had for creating a sibling for Little Ricky. God willing we will see this through to the middle of October.  We are happy, happy, happy!!!! 

I’m singing Celebration by Kool & The Gang in my head right now.  I’d be doing a little Irish jig if I weren’t warming my bum for my nightly injection.  Bring on the Progesterone; we’ve got a baby to grow!

© Pocketbebe, 2010

Transfer Details

D’Ann:

I really want to take a nap but I know I promised you details of the transfer.  I hope you enjoy!

The flight and everything to Miami was perfectly timed and we got to the hotel in time for Lucy to give me my progesterone injection.  Lucy told me I needed to eat 1 cup of pineapple for the next three days, starting that night per the instructions of the acupuncturist; something about the something in fresh pineapple being good for FETs (frozen embryo transfers).  After eating the pineapple my mom and I were both pretty tired so it was a quick transition to sleep time and before I knew it, transfer day was upon us.

The morning of the transfer I enjoyed a LONG, hot shower as I knew it would be 48 hours before I got another one.  We all dressed in matching transfer shirts that had a pink Pocket Bebe logo on it and I began drinking my first required bottle of water to help fill up the ole’ bladder.

 Lucy picked up my mom and I and we headed over to her house where Lucy’s parents, Nana and Ay-Yi-Yi, along with Little Ricky were waiting for us.  Nana had brought a Mexican King Cake that someone she knew created for the occasion and I was told to make the first cut, no pressure or anything, but to cut and find one of the four plastic babies that were hidden in it for good luck.  For further history on the King Cake within the Mexican/Spanish tradition click here.  Well, the very first cut, I landed on a baby.  We ended the cake cutting with two little Mexican babies; we felt optimistic and thanked God for bringing us this far in the journey while remembering that the outcome of the day was ultimately up to Him.

After arriving at the clinic, I had my first session of acupuncture with Noelle who was super awesome; I felt totally relaxed and almost giddy when she was done.  It was a little stressful wondering about the state of the embryos and if we were even going to have a transfer but Lucy said she’d be working on figuring that out while I relaxed. Most surrogates usually get prescribed Valium to take prior to a transfer but either our clinic doesn’t use it or they forgot to order it with my meds.  I wasn’t upset with not having it, I was actually very happy; I don’t like feeling out of control and loopy (unless I’m at a Rascal Flatts concert or my 30th birthday party and margaritas are the reason).  Plus, I have a tendency to say inappropriate things when in those kinds of states, usually consisting of much talk about the abundance or lack of abundance of someone’s bust size or liberally using choice four letter words to over emphasize my thoughts and feelings.  I think I was spared great embarrassment to myself (especially because we videotaped the whole event) with the absence of this little drug and I felt much more at ease without it then with it.

Prior to my own transfer, I was able to attend a transfer with Surro Friend, and I was surprised that the room mine was taking place in was just a normal exam room.  Hers had been in a sterile surgical room type of setting and mine just seemed anticlimactic in comparison. Nobody had to dress in blue gowns, paper booties, or paper hats -except the embryologist.  Though the room was just normal, I did notice that they kept the medical supplies in a rolling tool chest like the one my grandpa used to store his greasy wrenches and screwdrivers in when I was little.  I don’t know why I’m mentioning that, other than that was what I saw.  My neck was horribly uncomfortable and while we waited Nana suggested I use my folded up jeans as a pillow and that helped a ton.

A few minutes later I was totally prepped for a transfer even though nobody had come to talk to Lucy about the state of their blastocysts yet.  I figured something must be there to transfer or they wouldn’t have prepped me and had all of us ready and in the room.  The embryologist finally came through her little magical side door with pictures of two blastocysts in her hands.  I was relieved and then instantly about started to cry when I heard she’d needed to “defrost” ALL four of them to get those perfect two.  This was our ONE and ONLY shot.  I prayed that God wanted this for Lucy and Ricky as much as we all did. 

The lights were dimmed for the main event and all of “Lady Town” was on display to everyone as Dr. B came in and began doing her thing.  It went pretty quick and I realized how bad I needed to go potty when the speculum was in.  We watched as both the little bebe blasts were shot into my uterus arriving in their little fluid bubble to the designated spot.  Two vaginal progesterone suppositories later (these are INCREDIBLE fun by the way, NOT) my bottom was raised up above my torso to wait.  I had a second 30 minute session of acupuncture in this position which was probably best as it didn’t feel as if might wet myself at any moment.

After the acupuncture the nurse came in and dressed me, underwear and all, which I thought was weird but then figured most women at that point probably still have Valium in their systems and can’t do it for themselves without risk of falling off the exam table.  I got to use the restroom which was real interesting since I was trying not to push at all while doing it. 

I walked out of the bathroom and out of the clinic where we took a ton of pictures and then I got in the car with my mom, Nana, and Ay-Yi-Yi.  Lucy and Ricky went separately and stopped off at a church to pray.  Lucy called Nana several times on our trip to the hotel to make sure I was lying down and had my feet up on the window.  Once at the hotel, I got in my jammie pants and right into bed.  Nana and Ay-Yi-Yi went to get my mom and I Panera for lunch but were ordered by Lucy to leave immediately after delivering it so I could rest.

For the next 48 hours, we ate food that Lucy and Ricky would bring over, watched TV, and talked.  I didn’t watch a single movie or read a single book and the time seemed to go fast.  The next day after the transfer, Lucy brought me her laptop which was able to connect to the internet when mine wouldn’t but I didn’t have the energy to do more than read a few blogs here and there between my hefty napping.  I think I had a hormone headache from the extra 400 mg of progesterone I received after the transfer and that lasted for about 30 mind numbing hours.

On Friday at 4:30 pm I was sprung from bed rest and washing my hair NEVER felt soooo good.  We went out to celebrate the transfer by eating at a beautiful restaurant called the Rusty Pelican with Lucy, Ricky, and Little Ricky.  The food was excellent and we were right on the water, it was gorgeous.  Lucy and Ricky gave me an amazing necklace that has three separate crosses that overlay each other representing the Godhead and our own journey as surrogate mother, bebe, and mother.  It was perfect.  Lucy concluded our evening by giving me my Progesterone injection in the parking lot while I leaned over the hood of her Honda, looking at the vibrant moon as it shimmered over the bay. I was sure we might end up on an episode of COPS at that point.

The next morning Lucy dropped my mom and me off at the airport and before I knew it we were back at home and our amazing trip to Miami was over.  Now it was time to continue meds, wait, and pray.

Lucy:

It now seems like the transfer was a long time ago. The experience was a magical whirr of warm fuzzies and excitement. It constantly amazes me that D’Ann would willingly adhere, insert, inject and ingest medications just so we could have an opportunity to love and enjoy another child. Really incredible. I could not be happier with the results of our transfer. The blasts were absolutely beautiful and seeing them float into the depths of D’Ann’s endometirum reminded me of Horton Hears a Who somehow. It seemed like they were tiny specks of children floating along happily in their culture liquid, but once examined more closely under the microscope, a jumble of cells busy with potential. I can imagine them yelling “We’re Here, We’re Here!” Obviously I read too much Dr. Seuss.  Now, we wait and wait and wonder and wait. I have been here before and it’s not fun.  In the mean time we will be dissecting every possible sign and symptom until we reach testing time.

© Pocketbebe, 2010

P.S. Plan on checking back tomorrow Feb. 8th for more news!

Babies vs Baseball

Yes, I have been avoiding and no, I haven’t written the transfer post yet though Lucy has emailed me her contribution.  I promise this weekend…

What CAN I tell you?  Try to read between the lines and don’t quit praying.

One of the most common baseball superstitions is that it is bad luck to mention a no-hitter in progress, especially to the pitcher and in particular by the teammates (who sometimes even go so far as to not even be near the pitcher).

© Pocketbebe, 2010

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