Sinead Moriarty : Articles
Article For Image Magazine
When I was in school a rumour went around that
so-and-sos cousins sisters best friends
American pen-pal had fallen pregnant in a Jacuzzi. According to
this particular urban myth, the poor unfortunate girl had been
sitting there minding her own business when a mad, recently
escaped sperm, swam over and attacked her she was (a)
alone and (b) as pure as the driven snow. We were horrified.
Never would we set foot in one of those racy Jacuzzis not
that it was likely as none of us had even seen one, apart from in
Dallas where they seemed to spend most of their time neck high in
bubbles. Getting pregnant was that easy
or so we thought.
When I first went to see my gynaecologist to complain that
Mother Nature was not playing ball and no storks had been sighted
in my neighbourhood recently, he helpfully informed me that women
should be giving birth at sixteen years of age. Apparently
thats when our bodies are physically primed to have
children. I sat staring at him having just told him my age
(a multiple of sixteen) and wondered what exactly was supposed to
be helpful or uplifting about that particular gem of medical
information. Besides, at sixteen years of age I was far more
interested in getting John Taylor from Duran Duran to fall madly
in love with me and whisk me away to LA to a life of luxury, than
giving birth in tune with my teenage body.
My novel, The Baby Trail, is a comedy (albeit bitter-sweet)
about the frustrations of trying to conceive. Although is not
autobiographical, the idea for the book came to me when I began
to try to get pregnant and found it wasnt as
straightforward as Id hoped. I started to think about how
infertility affects so many people, especially today when women
are looking to have children later in life. Suddenly, every time
I opened the newspaper or turned on the TV there seemed to be
articles about all aspects of infertility and the options that
women face from IVF to adoption.
Infertility affects everyone. Even if you havent had
problems conceiving your own children, you will know someone very
close to you who is struggling to get pregnant or undergoing
fertility treatment or had miscarriages or is hoping to adopt...
I found writing the book immensely therapeutic. It took me
completely out of my own situation and into my characters,
which was a relief and at times great fun too. I also learnt a
huge amount about certain fertility treatments that I had no
personal experience of the horrors of IVF for instance.
Women need to be able to laugh about infertility. It
isnt funny when youre going through it, but laughter
is a great tonic when youre feeling blue and it also helps
to put things into perspective. I had a great time with my
protagonist Emma, letting my imagination run wild as she does
increasingly daft things in her attempts to conceive. Mind you
I know a lot of women who have indulged in post sex
handstands to make sure the sperm were swimming the right way!
There is also a small issue of equality. Men get taken to a
room filled with porn magazines and X-rated movies, to help them
while giving their sperm sample. Women get stirrups and
speculums. Im not suggesting that we need porn too - after
all, the doctor is in the room with us. But I think re-runs of Sex
and the City would make the procedures a much less gruesome
experience gynaecologists take note! We have burnt our
bras and chained ourselves to railings for equality
lets have some in hospital too.
When youre trying to get pregnant, it can seem as though
every time you step outside your front door you are surrounded by
pregnant women or women with prams its like a bad
Stephen King novel. Every magazine you browse through will
undoubtedly have a new mother beaming out from the middle pages
holding her tiny baby. The television airs nothing but ads for
nappies and baby food
.it is endless. You will also only
ever hear the happy stories - the honeymoon pregnancies:
"Oops Im pregnant and we werent even
trying". I never totally grasped that thought process
doesnt unprotected sex on honeymoon constitute trying?
As in all situations, people are always on hand to proffer
well meant advice. Relax; take up yoga; give up alcohol,
cigarettes and caffeine; drink Chinese herbs; exercise more;
sleep more
Have you tried Chinese herbs? They not only smell
foul but they taste even worse. You will be told that youre
not getting pregnant because youre underweight, overweight,
too pale, too active or too tense and that you should really try
to focus on other things
..the problem is you
cant! Wanting to get pregnant is with you twenty four hours
a day, seven days a week. Its akin to being on the
treadmill in a gym and not being able to press stop
although you desperately want to. Now theres a horrid
thought.
Its also a very frustrating time because there are so
many grey areas to infertility. "Unexplained
infertility" is the response that almost 20% of women today
receive from the fertility experts. This is after they have
undergone numerous painful and expensive tests and procedures.
Women have been giving birth since the world was created, so it
beggars belief that medical science remains so vague about
conception. In a generation so used to popping a pill for every
ill, to be told your problems are "unexplainable" by
someone who spent half their life studying fertility, is
discouraging to say the least. Im surprised there
arent more law suits where wannabe-mothers at the end of
their tether attack the doctors with their handbags, ovulation
test packs or bottles of Chinese herbs.
Infertility is one of lifes great levellers, with one in
six of all couples now seeking specialist help because of
difficulty conceiving. When you want a baby and you cant
have one, everyone is in the same boat. It is equally
heartbreaking for all women. Feelings of isolation and loneliness
are extremely common. Why cant you get pregnant?
Whats wrong with you? Why is your body letting you down?
How come everyone elses husbands only have to wink at them
and they fall pregnant straight away? Maybe its because you
were on the pill for all those years? Maybe Gods confused
because you spent years feverishly praying not to get pregnant
and now that the prayers have taken a dramatic U-turn, He
doesnt know what to think? Could it be punishment for the
time you had that mad party when you were eighteen and your
parents went to Spain and the house got so badly trashed that you
pretended that it had been robbed although your folks
thought it was odd that the robbers had taken the time to throw
drink all over the floor, smoke a hundred cigarettes and dance
around to scratched LPs, before smashing a few glasses and taking
off with no valuables whatsoever?
The probing baby questions kick off from the day of your
wedding. From the moment you utter those sacred words "I
do", your life will never be the same. You will be asked how
many children you want to have? What sex youd prefer? How
big an age gap youd like between each child? Where
youll send them to school? What type of a mother you think
youll be? How much TV will you let them watch? Breast or
bottle? Natural or caesarean? What maternity hospital youll
give birth in?
Just as you should never ask a single thirty something about
her love life it is advisable not ask a married thirty
something if she wants to have kids, how many and when. If she
hasnt expressed a strong desire not to have children
chances are shes trying to get pregnant and it just
isnt going well.
But life goes on and so do you. You get up, go to work and
hope that maybe this month will be the month
..
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