Category — Creme de la Creme
Creme de la Creme of 2009
For the fourth year running, the ALI community kicks off the new year by celebrating our best posts of the last year.
So what is the Creme de la Creme list if this is your first time here? It was started as a response to the many blogging awards that are given out each winter. I expanded the idea of presenting “the best” to include a post from every blog in the ALI (adoption/loss/infertility) world*. Every blogger has a personal best that deserves recognition. As editor of the list, I create the small blurbs after the title which serve as a doorway to the post. I hope they will help you find what you are seeking to read as well as show definitively the diversity of experience and emotion within the ALI community.
Listed below are the best posts of 2009. If you have a blog that chronicles your family building experience with infertility* and you’re not on this list, please read this post and follow the instructions to send in your submission. This post is open until March 1, 2010.
In the meantime, happy reading! And leaving a comment on these older posts is not a “may I?” but a “please do.” Comments are how an author knows their words are appreciated. Comments about the Creme de la Creme in general can be left on this post.
The Creme de la Creme of 2009
- The Question Has Been Asked and The Question Revisited (from Stirrup Queens): Two posts that go together about the day the author’s children finally asked her about death.
- Open Adoption Parenting, Part 73 (from Weebles Wobblog): A gorgeous post offering a concrete how-to lesson on being a good listener when your child speaks; a post about open adoption that applies to any parenting situation.
- Images (from In This Storm): Remembering her pregnancy with her daughter, Madelyn, who died shortly after birth, she writes so powerfully, “I realize I am not on the outside looking in. This is my life.”
- Grace and the Odds (from Four of a Kind): A beautiful post that will make you cry knowing that the author is currently holding the baby discussed in this post. A post about still having hope after being on the wrong side of the odds more than once.
- …and the curtain closes (from Life On The Other Side Of The Hill): A loss, written in the form of a play script, wondering whether the mourning is for the child or the dream, or–is the answer simply both?
- Ch-ch-ch-changes! (from The Idle Mind Of Beth): A sunny post about finding peace and happiness with life as it is.
- Dreams (from Baby Wanted: Apply Within): The author has been dreaming about being pregnant and attempts to hold onto the happiness found in the dreams even when she isn’t feeling optimistic in the waking world.
- Failure to Thrive (from Drama 2B Mama): Consumed with grief after a failed IVF cycle, the author talks about willing herself not to live. It’s a hard–but important–post to read, especially because situational depression is so pervasive in our community.
- You Can’t Take It Back (from MeAndBaby’s Blog): The author writes movingly about how you can’t unring a bell and her regrets about sharing her family building plans with a friend–especially one who offers no support after she learns about her loss.
- Perspective (from Here We Go Again): A beautiful post putting a finite moment in time into perspective for the author as she remembers others in the blogosphere.
- My Memory of ‘D-Day’ (from Caring for Carleigh): You will cry as the author walks you through the day she learned that her baby was missing most of her brain and skull, found during a routine ultrasound. As the author states, “it wasn’t supposed to be like this, and yet, it was”–coping with inevitable loss.
- The Awesome-ness of Being an Adoptive Mom (from Production, Not Reproduction): A gorgeous post celebrating motherhood via open adoption.
- A Letter to My Family (from Bean Stalk Ballads): A heartfelt open note to her family during her younger sister’s visit with her newborn child explaining how seeing this child and her family’s reactions affect her.
- Milestones (Part the Second) (from Hobbit-ish Thoughts & Ramblings): I cried with the final line: “This little wayside pause isn’t the end of the road.” An important post about the ways we mark our lives and remembering even fleeting happiness.
- Shadow Women (from Our Little Tongginator): A celebration of women who sit in the shadows on Mother’s Day, a world where the author has one foot as well as the power to shine light and bring understanding to the rest of the world.
- Infertility Revisited (again) (from Natsukashii): While the emotions of infertility can bring out ugly responses, the author explains why these characteristics should not be swept under the rug because they have a positive side as well.
- Show and Tell: Living in the land of IF (from Dragondreamer’s Lair): It is the tear on her face as she stares at the child she never thought she would have that makes the viewer cry as well.
- Walking to Remember (from sweet | salty): Memories and the speech from A Walk to Remember. The author begins with a fellow walker, a sixteen-year-old girl who is surviving after her loss and continues with an explanation of how the human heart goes on. You will not be able to read this with dry eyes.
- A Note To My Birth Mom (from Full Circle): A note to the “the bravest person [she has] never met.” An adoptee and hopeful adoptive mum writes a note to her first mother thanking her for life.
- Treatment and Rolling the Dice (from Life in the Cat Pad): An incredibly moving–albeit painful to read–post about feeling as if the harder she works, the less she has to show. The feeling that her prayers are not only going unanswered, but that infertility is damaging her relationship with G-d.
- Soldiering On (from Late for a Very Important Pregnancy): The author explains how and why she is hunkering down in the trenches and giving her all to this war against infertility. A great post about how it is sometimes better to sit still and keep chipping away at things rather than race into battle or run away.
- All the Colors of the Rainbow (from We Got Hitched. We bought the 4 bedroom house. Now What???): Prior to infertility, the colour that defined her world was the whiteness of a smile. And now, her life has become a mishmash of colours, from the deep sadness of blue to the hope-filled yellow, and all shades in between.
- So Close: Online Book Shower (from The Conceivable Future): Using Tertia’s book, So Close, as a jumping off point, the author discusses the span from when they first started trying, to their first loss, to the months after being diagnosed with recurrent loss.
- Gah!!!!!! (postscript) (from Lisa Carries On): A beautiful post about not wishing for parenthood, but instead focusing on the need for closure if a pregnancy is not forthcoming.
- Jeopardy! (from Manapan’s Space): A tongue-in-cheek beginning gives the punch to the gut when the author explains that she has experienced another pregnancy loss. A wistful, moving post.
- Claiming Our Own (from Life From Here: Musings from the Edge): How the adoption process creates a shift in thinking that moves the child to a central point rather than focusing on any adult’s view point. A very interesting post that will make you rethink terms of ownership.
- Asperger (from My Pathway to Motherhood): After reading a book about Asperger Syndrome, the author wonders whether she’s on the spectrum, whether labeling it matters, and how one determines who will be a “good” mother.
- Month Twelve (from Benjamin Penguin): Marking the first year of her child’s life, the author writes: “So the first year of your life was one big, long lesson in what happens when you finally get what you want.” A beautiful post about the birth story and first year after family building through infertility.
- Offerings (from Life and Love in the Petri Dish): A trip to Japan and rituals within Buddhism give the author the ability to mourn her losses, especially one that occurs right before she leaves for the trip. A beautiful post about finding peace.
- Cartwheels (from Still Life With Circles): A gorgeous post about losing and trying to find the child who bravely turned cartwheels, trusted her body, and knew of her own beauty.
- My Father (from Gemini-Girl): An amazingly honest post explaining her difficult relationship with her father that gives insight into what truly matters to a child.
- A New Lexicon (from Womb For Improvement): A fantastic post presenting the infertility lexicon. My two favourites might be “make love to the camera” and “unicycle.”
- Errand (from Project Progeny): A love note to “that grieving woman I was 2 years ago.” A beautiful post about memories sparked by returning to the OB’s office to drop off some books and how she wishes she were pregnant again.
- Status Updates (from My Words Fly Up, My Thoughts Remain Below): A fantastic rant about In Your Facebook and navigating the pregnancy status updates, belly pictures, and emails from well-meaning friends asking when you’re going to finally have a baby.
- Play It Again, Sam (from I’m a Smart One): A post that will make you cry and smile at the same time. On the 2nd anniversary of her first surro-baby’s birth, Kym–an infertile woman and now surrogate–wishes to help another person have a child again.
- All babies are miracles, even the ones who aren’t (from Tuesday’s Hope): A must-read post for all people to better understand stillbirth because, as the author points out: “There are almost as many stillborn babies as there are breast cancer victims each year. But why did I only learn about these tragic stats after the fact?” The story that doesn’t make it into the newspaper amid the articles on miracles.
- Obsessed? A post in response (from Al/right Already): A brilliant post popping the term “obsessed” in regards to family building like a needle into a balloon.
- Guilty (from Life After Infertility & Loss): Chills went down my arms when I first read this post. An internal monologue of life after a hysterectomy, when family building is finished, yet the heart still remembers both what it once wanted and who grew beneath it.
- The Yips (from GuestWomb): Using the phenomenon of the Yips–the sudden inability to perform a task you were always able to perform within a sport–the author explains how his wife (a surrogate) was suddenly unable to give herself the lupron shot one night.
- A True Love Story (from MoJo Working): An absolutely gorgeous post about marriage–especially a marriage strained by infertility–that contains this thought: “love is a choice. It’s not something that happens to you, something you accidentally fall into or out of. It’s a decision, a commitment.”
- Pinker Shade of Pale (from Parenthood for Me): After the sadness of the loss, observing the deep grief that comes from an ectopic following IVF, you will find a gorgeous closure to the post that will take your breath away with its brilliance, simplicity, and beauty.
- The Usual Refrain (from After Iris): The author asks, “How many ways can I write ‘My baby died, I never knew her, I wish I did.’” yet the answer is contained in the post in that it is a limitless amount of times to try to grasp that which is so ephemeral, so wanted, so missed and mourned.
- Love Happens (from Trying to Get Knocked up by Another Man): After seeing the movie, Love Happens, the author compares the main character’s coping mechanism to her own methods for getting through both her husband’s deployments and infertility. A post that brings such deep understanding to the experience that ends with a beautiful line.
- Men are from Mars and Women are from Venus, so how did we manage to come to Earth? (from Woman Anyone?): The author and her husband process infertility differently, from the way they view their future to the way they process their past. An aching post that explains how different it can be for the one carrying the embryos inside her body.
- Irrelevancy (from Infertility Rocks!): Finally understanding why her friends were obsessed with the small details of planning their dream house, the author astutely explains: “Sometimes, irrelevancy is a choice. It is a distraction amid a world of not-quite-rights and maybe-extremely-wrongs.”
- The Baggage we Bring to the Island (from Our Someday Family): Turning the idea of like-father-like-son in multiple directions, the author explains how they processed her husband’s MFI diagnosis and depression.
- The Monster in the Closet (from BagMomma): A chilling, heart-stopping post where the author recounts a scary dream and what it means to her in the waking hours.
- Question: When you look in the mirror… (from IF You Only Knew): A gorgeous post about looking in the mirror and truly seeing yourself, not just the scars of surgery or the way the body changes from fertility treatments, but the accomplishments, the emotional wins, the beautiful traits that make us unique.
- Lengths We Go (from Where the Wright Day Takes You): A quiet and contemplative post on how infertility has changed the author from her early, eager, trying-to-conceive days.
- Feeling Tense (from Baby, Interrupted): The author explains that though people along the infertility continuum have a lot in common, they are not the same, and comments that state otherwise upset her. How understanding fades with time, even for those who have been through the same experience.
- Hope (from One Who Understands): Five years into the journey, and the author expresses that while hope has faded from her life, there is good in knowing where things stand.
- Exercise, Weight, and IVF (from The School of Hard Knocked-Up): A very useful post about exercise and IVF-cycles as well as curbing weight gain.
- Open Adoption Roundtable (from Clio): A fantastic post about open adoption, explaining that it is more of a state of mind than a concrete set of truths.
- Where is the end? (from Making Me Mom): In the weeks prior to starting treatments, the author contemplates how far away she is from ending treatments and choosing a different path to parenthood, and not knowing where that line is in the sand is terrifying.
- Rage (from The Shifty Shadow): A difficult to read–but important to read–post about the rage that accompanies neonatal death and continued loss.
- My Skin (from Eye Heart Internet): Words are unnecessary to understand how deeply the author grieves after watching this short video set to music following an IVF cycle that resulted in a loss.
- Soul Evolvement (from Wheresmy2lines): After a brief background about reincarnation, the author explains that her soul chose infertility so the question, “why me” becomes meaningless. A very thought-provoking post.
- 16 weeks and 3 days – An Invitation (from Little Footprints): A brief post serving as an invitation to her future children for her FET that will make you smile; made all the more sweet that one of her future children accepted the invitation and she is currently pregnant.
- A Natural Progression (from When Golden Pigs Fly): A post about the change that has taken place in her group of IF friends, and how she needs to distance herself while still holding on to the deep roots of the sisterhood and all the support she has taken from that space.
- Orange You Glad To See Me? (from Mission Impossible? Infertile Multiple Parenting Sans Excessive Doolally): A very funny post about a hair-dyeing incident gone awry.
- Greener Grass. Greener Pastures (from Conceive This!): A clever explanation for why she doesn’t play the Pain Olympics–because there are no true greener grasses when it comes to examining other people’s predicaments.
- Come For a Walk With Me (from Burble): A beautiful story, told mostly in pictures, about life after loss and the final resting place of her son, George.
- Best Day of My Life (from The Adventures of Taderbaby): A very emotional post about losing the birth experience she always wanted to have due to infertility. The author states: “It took away my ability to call the day I met my children the best day of my life.”
- Outraged (from Sell Crazy Someplace Else): From movies that mock obesity to adoption agencies that refuse to work with people above a certain weight, the author points out society’s willingness to mistreat people based on weight. A rallying cry for examining overall health instead of making judgments about weight.
- Loss, Regret, Guilt and Hope (from I Can Haz Bebe?): Even though they went into the arrangement with the expectant mother knowing “he is her son, yet he was our dream” it does nothing to protect the heart during an adoption disruption. A post about letting herself trust and open her heart again as she builds her family.
- In The Present (from Viva La Vida): The thought that she should have her child with her right now kicks off a decision to live in the present; to not wait for another time to do things, but to enjoy the here and now.
- One Week (from I Never Thought it Made Sense Anyway): After a loss, the author asks: “How do you get the courage and hope needed to try this again?” A beautiful post about grieving and trying to move forward.
- The Desire of Motherhood (from Finding Joy in Every Journey): At first questioning why she needs to navigate such a strong desire to be a parent, the author learns to embrace and see the positive side of such deep longing.
- Birth Story (from Elana’s Musings): A very scary birth story that will make you hold your breath even though you know the author and babies are fine before you begin reading.
- 4 Days (from Alana-isms): Reflecting on four days when the author knew she was pregnant, she processes her early loss by examining all aspects from the support that came from surprising places to thoughts about the future and trying again.
- So You’re Infertile, Why Not Just Adopt? (from Creating a Family): An open response to the standard comment suggesting that a person “just adopt” that commonly accompanies online articles about fertility treatments.
- Preparing or Denial (from Sticky Feet): In a state between preparation and complete denial, the author, pregnant with twins, wonders how much her life is going to change once the babies arrive.
- The Hardest Letter to Write (from Hannah Wept, Sarah Laughed): An absolutely gorgeous and moving post, a letter to the child she’ll never have, that slowly morphs into the child she one day will have, and how all those cells and stardust swirl together to create new possibilities.
- Rainy Sundays… (from IVF40+): A post about setting personal limits, about being at peace with the idea of living child-free when infertility changes your dreams.
- Show and Tell: Our Stories in Our Bodies, Ourselves (from Mrs Spock): The story of how Our Bodies, Ourselves came to add information about infertility and pregnancy after infertility to their website. A beautiful post about how the author’s life experience expanded her vision of pregnancy and birth.
- A Pregnancy Scare of a Different Kind (from Wait, What?): Spinning the idea of a pregnancy scare during the younger years on its head, the author explains her own pregnancy scares ranging from the idea of never experiencing pregnancy to becoming a different person due to infertility.
- I Dreamed That Angelina Jolie Was My Egg Donor (from Romancing The Stone): Perhaps one of the most amusing retelling of a dream ever–Angelina Jolie offers to be her egg donor and she has to make a hard decision before the insurance money runs out.
- In Search of the Lone Ranger…part 2 (from Hopelessly TTC): A very funny post about a semen analysis…I mean, Test One.
- Adoption and Loss (from Life According to Leah): The author contemplates an idea she read as she prepared for adoption; that every adoption contains a loss for all members of the triad. A post about how this loss is informing and tempering her gain.
- Broken (from Fishsticks and Fireflies): A gorgeous post arching over the idea of brokenness; turning the idea of detachment and loss into a beautiful look at humanity as well.
- Shyla’s Birth Story (from Creative Joy): A moving post about the author’s daughter, Shyla, who was born still.
- A Lesson from Susan Boyle (from This Cross I Embrace): I’ll admit it–I bawled reading this post. The author discusses how over the years, she has related to different characters in Les Miserables, finally settling into the lost dreams of Fantine. She ties in the story of Susan Boyle and the need for that affirmation from others that our dreams–as far-fetched as they might seem in the moment–are possibly attainable and where she draws that hope.
- Judgment and Hope (from A Journey of Hope – Cesta Naděje): A rallying cry for hope and the need to be surrounded by friends who can listen without judgment, support without restrictions, and simply hope with them.
- Deep Thoughts on a Wednesday (from Slaying, Blogging, Whatever…): A post about wanting to be anywhere in time but now, but mourning the idea of time passing as well. An emotional post about wanting to hold on to every moment tightly while also knowing that all is ephemeral, fleeting.
- Dear Baby (from Baby Wanted): A beautiful open note to her future child from an adoptive-mother-to-be.
- If Only Wishes Came True (from Crazy Lady Ramblings): The aftermath of a particularly painful cycle, looking back on fertility treatments up until that point and trying to figure out what the future holds.
- Riding to Auckland (from Sprogblogger): An absolutely brilliant analogy comparing a long (and fucked up) bicycle journey to infertility and pregnancy loss.
- Any Old Sunday (from Romancing the Stork): A twist on the traditional Father’s Day post, the author thanks the donor who made their child possible, and thanks him further still for donating without strings or visions of parenthood, allowing the couple to define their own family rather than have it defined for them via circumstances.
- My Baby Had a Baby! (from Reproductive Jeans): The excitement and joy that comes from finally holding someone you have waited to be with for a long time.
- On Anonymity (from a + b, waiting for c): An excellent post asking whether we can hold the general public accountable for their lack of understanding about infertility when those struggling with infertility keep their journey private?
- If You Just Relax (from Baby Blakely): The author’s words are painted with frustration and hurt after a phone call with her mother yields the unhelpful advice of “just relax.” A post about finding a lack of understanding coming from the person who is usually your support in difficult as well as happy times.
- Couple’s Lov.emaking Session Sets House Ablaze (from Which Way to Baby?): A fantastic story of a lovemaking session that simply got too damn hot.
- You Can’t Always Get What You Want (from Misconceptions About Conception): Recognizing her own limitations as a life planner who is facing the uncertainty of infertility, the author wonders how she can let go and accept that there are things outside her control.
- Defining Me… (from The Infertile Sushi-loving Princess): A list that everyone should recreate in regards to their own life; the author reflects on who she is and who she isn’t.
- Rambling (from Remember All the Way ): The author reminds the reader as she prays to be pregnant this cycle that “We are talking life-changing prayer here, people!” A post about the enormity of praying for parenthood.
- Plenty of Time (from Praying for a Little One): A very good answer to the popular saying, “of course you have time” when someone young is diagnosed with infertility. How infertility in your twenties is still infertility.
- The One Where I Try to Remember it All (from Creating Motherhood): A beautiful post about trying to absorb early motherhood, and while there is no room in her brain at the moment to remember the pain of infertility, she has space to remember the love she received from others experiencing infertility.
- My Two Sons (from Life in the Phisch Bowl): How the insensitivity of a former co-worker still strikes the author years later as she looks at her own family formed via both pregnancy and adoption.
- Nothing to Declare (from Irishdad’s Blog): An absolutely gorgeous thought contained in this post about pregnancy after a loss: “This pregnancy is like a smooth long-haul flight…we know that flying is generally safe, but we’re the jumpy passengers that freak everyone else out. Every rumble of turbulence makes us thing we’re going down.”
- Railing Against the Human (from The Tragic Optimist): The frustration that biology and time seem to often be at odds with one another in regard to being responsible and waiting until you are ready to raise a child.
- I Know but Do You? (from Getting There): A must-read post for anyone wondering how they could support a friend who is experiencing infertility.
- Compassion (from In the Present Moment…): A beautiful post about having compassion for all members of the triad as the author waits to be chosen by an expectant mother. A post about forgoing the Pain Olympics in favour of unconditional support.
- Forever Grateful (from A Journey to Conception): At the start of their IVF cycle, the author thanks all the people who helped them get to this place.
- Chuck Norris Does Not Sleep. He Waits. (from Busted Plumbing): A hysterical post about how an RE’s suggestion that she exercise an hour a day coupled with a television watching habit resulted in a Chuck Norris approved Total Gym showing up in her home.
- Pick and Choose (from Banking On It): How one couple went through the process–both emotionally and logistically–in choosing a sperm donor. A great post explaining the journey.
- The World Beyond My Front Door (from The Road Less Travelled): Just as no one truly understands what goes on behind the author’s door, she also admits that there is a world out there that she has cocooned herself from and barely knows exists. An emotional post about observing the other roads that one could have possibly traveled.
- Three (from Epic Fail): Musing on the power found in the number three, the author recounts the death and birth of her son, Joel.
- Still Moving Forward (from Infertility And Me): A beautiful post about coming to terms in his own time with male factor infertility.
- Ours, and Adopted (from Write, Baby, Repeat ): A blunt question from a great-aunt kicks off a post explaining how open adoption has changed the way families come together and connects many hearts with threads of love towards this single child.
- I Thought of a Song and Here it Is: How it Feels to Love the Duo (from Half of a Duo, Raising a Duo): A beautiful post about why she needed and loves to be there for her sons’ toddlerhood; about reliving her own childhood via her twins.
- Big Day (from Fertility Challenged in Florida): A moving post about preregistering at the hospital where she will deliver her son.
- On Pins and Needles (from Dreaming of Quiet Places): As the stress of her impending divorce becomes a physical pain in her body, she turns back to acupuncture to find release. A beautiful post about the importance of loving yourself.
- It’s All Relative (from Yes, We’re One of Those Couples): The author provides an approximation of the letter she has sent to those grieving in her life and wonders why the same support doesn’t apply for those experiencing the pain of azoospermia.
- Because (from No, I’m Not Pregnant, Just Fat): A grief-filled post about the many ways infertility has changed the author’s life.
- Oh the Irony: Episode 2 (from Three is a Magic Number): Part of the author’s job as a social worker is to help women who have just given birth create or follow through with an adoption plan for their child. A moving post about helping one woman through this transition and how the author’s own infertility deepened her response.
- Show and Tell – Beating the Odds (from On the Road to Baby): Using the analogy of a particular tree she found growing out of a river bank, the author weaves a reminder of our hidden reserves of strength.
- Throwing Out the Calendar (from My Scarlet Baby): The practice of figuring out the possible due date each cycle wanes in the face of infertility until it stops altogether. The author resurrects the practice as a sign of hope.
- On and On… (from A Garden for Butterflies): Trying to replace the author’s internal chant about her son’s death with a new internal chant about her enormous love.
- Progress Report (from Faith, Hope & Poop?): An incredibly moving post about a disrupted adoption in which the author states: “And many times I am left wondering…if he will ever even know anything about us & how we loved him.”
- Life after Death (from Wanna Bee): A fantastic post explaining how “recovering emotionally from a miscarriage is very much like being in love and getting dumped.”
- Half Full (from Adoptive Families Circle): How an episode of The Biggest Loser causes the author to take stock in her life and view the glass as half-full rather than half-empty.
- Trix are for Kids (from Wonderful Thing): A post about finding the balance between hope and reality, about being excited to have a plan in place again and taking those first steps to make it happen.
- Let’s talk about sex, baby….. (from Barefoot and (Finally) Pregnant): After having sex turn into a chore during the early days of infertility, the author finds herself in the inverse position of craving sex during the early days of an IVF pregnancy and unable to have any.
- Snowfall and Other Surprises (from Saucy Ova): Coming into the appointment with her chest tight from her previous medical experiences, the author explains the release she felt when she met with the right doctor; the one who treated her as a whole being and cared for both her physical and emotional sides.
- The Uncertainty of it All (from Nothing Noteworthy): An explanation of why the diagnosis of unexplained infertility is so hard; the frustration of feeling as if you are blindly spinning a very expensive roulette wheel.
- 11dpiui (I Can’t Wait to Go Home) (from Last American Girl Standing): A very emotional post that asks Jesus, who weeps with you, if he’s “tired of crying yet.” The author leaves church during her grandparent’s 50th wedding anniversary, deep in grief after seeing a negative test that morning.
- The heart is a strange organ (from Long Distance Infertility): The author comes home with a bag full of newborn baby clothes because–come hell or high water–she is going to have another child to fill them. And that lack of wavering in her convictions is what gives her strength in the face of treatments.
- The day I struck my mother blind with My Lady Business (from Maybe If You Just Relax): A hysterical post about having her lady bits finally return to her own domain only to be viewed by her mother during the terrible bathing incident of 2009.
- Why? (from The Secret Life of Sass and Lex): A moving post asking about the fairness in a world where children are born into homes where people abuse them and where those who want to responsibly parent cannot. A post about the author’s decision to become a foster parent.
- Why don’t you just kick me in the teeth while you’re at it? (from Birds and Squirrels): What just might be one of the most painful phone calls in the world. The author calls her friend to talk about her miscarriage only to find out while they’re on the line that her friend is pregnant with a child who will be born around the author’s unfulfilled due date.
- He Didn’t Take Any of it With Him (from Return to Innocence): A post about the idea that “If I could teach my daughter just one thing in this life, it would be to find the joy in life, not in possessions.” How the things we worry about are fleeting and the true focus should be on the relationships we cultivate.
- I Earned It (from Once an Infertile): An emotional post about finally receiving flowers for Mother’s Day and what she came through to get those flowers.
- Just because… (from Back into the Fire): Taking a poem used to empower foster children, the author changes the words to fit infertile men and women and takes back some of the control lost to infertility.
- A Wish My Heart Made (from There’s a Baby at the End of This, Right?): Testing out the power of positive thinking, the author talks about what she hopes will happen on her third IVF cycle, still keeping in check the terrible reality of her second cycle.
- They Just Don’t Get It, They’ll Never Get It (from Infertility is the New Black): A post about two categories of the author’s friends–those who say they understand when they don’t and those who say they want to understand yet won’t do the leg-work to learn more about what treatments entail.
- Things to be Thankful for (IF Version) (from Trying to Conceive): A post finding things to be thankful for through the lens of infertility.
- One of those Days… (from Skytimes): People believe that because she has survived the death of her son, that the rest of life must never bother her having already experienced the worst. Except that as the author eloquently states, it doesn’t work that way.
- You are Not in a Bubble (from Such A Good Egg): A post about how her mother’s perfect words came in the right place at the right time, calming her during the storm before a cycle.
- Why I Am Open about My Infertility Journey (from To Baby and Beyond): The author talks about her infertility not just because her face reveals all regardless, but because she never knows the connection that might be made due to her honesty.
- Why Do I Want to be a Mother? (from Donor Eggs Journey): Attempting to summarize what the heart and brain know, but is so difficult to verbalize nonetheless–why the author wants to be a mother.
- Coming Out of the Infertility Closet (from I’ve Got News For You): Walking the thin line between making the journey harder by keeping silent and losing privacy by making it open; the author muses on why we feel comfortable talking to others online about our infertility and keep this news from our friends and family.
- Daydreams (from Not a Fertile Myrtle): Listening to a child daydream about her future makes the author reflect on what she wanted in her youth and the parts that haven’t come true yet.
- A New Chapter (from Everyone else but me): A post written in the breathing space that comes as grief lifts; an exercise in appreciating the good things in life despite having been through a loss.
- Faith And IF (from IF In Big Sky Country): An absolutely brilliant, thought-provoking post about faith, with an analogy to how she sees G-d’s knowledge of her infertility.
- A Realization (from Maybe Momma Some Day): A request for prayers as the author realizes that she needs to let go and stop trying to control an uncontrollable situation.
- The Best of Intentions (from the state that i am in): The seven things the author wishes people wouldn’t say and the seven things she is hoping to hear.
- “Mildly Retarded” is Not a Punch Line (from A Fifth Season): I bawled from the courage the author displayed in this story by putting her feelings on the line to gently educate someone in how to speak sensitively. A beautiful post that teaches as well as honours her daughter, Caitlin.
- Dear Uterus (from Waiting Lisa): How can you not laugh at an open letter to a uterus that begins: “Message received. I hear you loud and clear. Trust me, the feeling is mutual. I hate you too.” And yet, it is a sobering, angry note as well, a goodbye to a uterus due to endometrial cancer.
- Choosing My Battles (from The Other Shoe): Brilliant advice about how “raising kids is like the rest of trying to live a good life: we have to pick our battles wisely and in limited number.” A post about when ideals and reality collide.
- Bleeding Heart (from Serenity Now!): A beautiful, imploring post asking the reader what to do with all of the emotion the author still feels for those in the trenches, knowing that she is unable to lift them out with her words and wishing she had the ability to change their world.
- Moving On (from our own creation): A post about moving on after a negative beta on a FET cycle; about how she helps her heart to heal when it has been scraped and bruised so many times.
- State of the Union (from Road Blocks and Roller Coasters): An important post to read about how children can change a marriage and how a marriage can flex and bend around the stress of life.
- Trying to Find a Balance (from One Small Wish): The author’s wonder and fear over the quickly fading memories of infertility now that she is pregnant as well as the smart reminder that living in the moment trumps all.
- Because it’s on my mind (from Journeywoman): A post that sent chills down my arms the first time I read it that has that power still–all the things that she wants those left behind to know in the event of the author’s death.
- Inexplicable Good Mood (from Perchance to Dream ): The author captures a feeling of peace that comes with her final cycle, and while she admits that she doesn’t know how to give up the dream of a biological child, there is also the strength that comes from knowing the next leg of the journey.
- Show and Tell: Views (from Baby Smiling In Back Seat): A beautiful post that serves not only as a reminder to others, but a reminder to the author as well when she writes: “I hear you, Universe. I will weather the storm, and we will all be okay. Together.” Life after the birth of her twins.
- Doubt, Disappointment, Despair (from Bee In The Bonnet): A brilliant, philosophical post about how the long-time optimistic author approaches life including this thought: “Infertility does not simply hold our reproductive lives hostage. It holds our expectations hostage. We have no reason to believe that things will eventually turn out okay.”
- How Did I Get Here (from A Woman My Age): A stark, emotional post that asks the question: “how did I get here.” The author recounts her emotional landscape after treatments and before adoption.
- Left Behind (from The Therapist is In): An incredibly honest account about pregnancy and how one can want the child and not want the pregnant state at the same time. She writes so eloquently: “And I knew, once pregnant, my life would change. What I never took into consideration was how other people’s lives wouldn’t change.”
- On the Dangers of Bright Lighting (from Semi-fertile): The convergence of a mirror and bright lighting send the author gasping as she contemplates how she has aged without knowing it. A post about an upcoming trip, the desire to be on the open road with her husband, and the sadness at seeing what could be the outward signs of her declining fertility.
- How Infertility Has Changed Me (For the Worse) (from An Infertility Journal): An incredibly honest post about all the terrible ways infertility has changed the author.
- Did You Always Know? (from Conception Deception): Somehow, the author always knew that she would end up needing IVF, though the route to their ultimate diagnosis was full of twists and turns.
- Is it Always Going to Suck? (from The Unfair Struggle): The story of a celebratory happy hour that was ruined by coworkers stating that she should have a baby. A good friend talks her down when she asks if “it is always going to suck” and a good husband dries the tears when she gets home.
- What Christmas is All About (from Crable Family Adventures): Choosing a different path to parenthood is what brought the author together with her children. A beautiful story about how life can change in a year.
- Infertility (from An IVF Pregnancy): A frustrating night with her husband after she tells him that she is only willing to put herself through IVF once whereas he wants to keep going until they are parents. The quiet that descends when infertility barges into an evening out.
- IUI#4 Tomorrow, Etc Etc (from Hoping For a Baby): An amazing post that explains how “just because I don’t know what it feels like to have a pregnancy, that I don’t know love for my child.” Because she does and her analogy of waiting for her future child is perfect.
- What’s in a Word?(from LTF525: The Trials and Tribulations of TTC): A post wrestling with the term infertile and wondering how the word can apply to her when she feels so fertile and ready to have a child.
- I Cry (from 1tsp_grace): An amazing post about her foster parenting experience and the root of all the tears she has cried since the child arrived in her home.
- Two Revelations (from The Desire of My Heart): A post about letting go of the processes she can’t control, and taking back the good feelings she has about her body when she exercises and feels close to G-d.
- My IVF Story (from edenland): Now parenting after IVF, the author goes backwards to document their IVF journey–from first child to vasectomy to the yearnings for another child that brought her to the clinic to build her family. Beginning with the happy ending swinging between them on the beach and bringing the reader back to the start, the author tell her story with great honesty.
- Not Okay with the Status Quo (from All Grown Up): An explanation for why the author’s posts have been about all the distractions in her life; because if she opened the door to what is really in her heart, she fears she would drown in the words.
- Dear Bean (from From IF to When): A very emotional letter to read, from hopeful mother to her future child, one week into the wait after her first IUI.
- Ruffled Feathers (from Things get IF’fy): A response to an anonymous commenter’s assertion that those who have children already shouldn’t do ART because it is stressful for the existing child and they should “shut up and just be grateful.” The author, with grace and rationality, explains that gratitude and working with the cards you’re dealt are not mutually exclusive.
- The Kindness of Strangers (from Taking the Statistical Bullet): When the author encounters a woman at the grocery store, clearly wearing her own mask after the loss of her grown son, she thinks back to the Christmas after she had her miscarriage and how she hid her grief from everyone at the table.
- A Birthday Remembered and One that Never Was (from Destined to be an old woman with no regrets): While she states that her tears are from happy memories, not sadness, it is with a heavy heart that the reader gets to know the brother she lost to cancer 15 years earlier. A beautiful post asking her brother if he has met up with the children the author has lost, and how she often feels the three of them surrounding her in spirit.
- Isaac (from Got Love, Been Married, Now Where the Hell’s the Baby Carriage): They had already settled on the name Isaac William when the author heard the story of Sarah again and realized the significance the story has with her own family building journey and possible future son.
- I’ve Got The Blues (from In Due Time ): A post about the frustration she feels as life keeps moving and her goals of being a young mother are going unfulfilled as another birthday rolls around.
- Regaining Faith (from Wistfulgirl’s World): When things got tough, the author let her faith in G-d slip from her being. An epiphany changes her mindset and she ends the post in a place of peace.
- Love Letter to my Belated Baby (from The Great Big If): A beautiful note from mother to child in his first month of life; about how it’s an intense love that drives a person to put themselves through IVF.
- 29 Days and Counting (from Justamere IVF): Written 29 days from her due date, a post about the cycle that almost wasn’t, which turned into the baby that is; how her daughter, Alexis, came to be.
- Being Broken (from A Cop, A nurse, 3 dogs & Maybe Baby): The frustration of seeing what others can do so easily that you need medical intervention to achieve. A post about wanting another child and that valley of time before trying again.
- Infertility and Dessert (from We Are All Mothers): I cried reading this post too–an analogy for infertility and loss, all contained in a night out at a restaurant where you are left waiting for your chocolate cake and get so much more instead.
- Strength (from The Privileged Infertile): A post about the amazing friendships she has forged with 4 other women from a bulletin board who all support each other through infertility. A love song to the sisterhood.
- Empty Spaces (from Two Hot Mamas): The author explains why she’s terrible at answering the phone or making calls. After her brother’s death she feels “as though I’m in one of those movies where there are two realities, and I’ve been wading through the wrong one.” A post about missing her brother and wondering if it is right to bring a child into this world when the reality is that all of us will die one day.
- The end of the fertility journey (from Thalia’s fertility journey): A goodbye that is not really a goodbye, but perhaps more an acknowledgment that while there is a technical end to her family building plans, there is perhaps not a complete emotional end to that time period and the community that grew out of life in the trenches.
- The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll, Mr. Hyde, Capt. Kirk, & Sonja (from Don’t Scare Easy): A great “what if” musing: would she drink the potion if one was made that eliminated her drive to parent. If it could rid her of all of her feelings surrounding her lack of uterus. Her answer may be surprising to you.
- Is That Why The Tears (from Mommy In Waiting): After her husband asks if her tears the night before were due to her period, the author unleashes the reason on her blog; sleeplessness, her SIL’s baby, and fears about the future create a perfect storm for a downpour.
- Still Hanging On (from CD1 Again): A beautiful post about finding strength in knowing that many do cross out of the trenches and one day the author’s turn will come too.
- A Quieter Reunion (from Everyday Stranger): A chance meeting with Santa Claus, only seen by the author, is a touchpoint at the end of a hard year, a chance to take stock, and remind herself (and Santa as well) that she came through the storm.
- Getting the Nursery Ready (from Adventures of a Dam Engineer): A great post about that limbo time between being on the books and having a child in your home, when the author doesn’t know what is stopping her from getting the room ready so they will be prepared when a child comes.
- Nothing Wrong With Hallmark Holidays (from Our Family Beginnings): A beautiful new way to look at Mother’s Day; especially for those parenting after infertility who may have shunned the holiday in the past. As the author states, there is no single, perfect way to celebrate the holiday. It is up to each individual, each family, to make it their own and why it’s important for some to do so.
- Tired of Being in Limbo (from Fertility Foibles): A post that will be very familiar to anyone who has spent time in the trenches–a bemoaning of the eternal wait. The author ticks off all the waiting points and admits that she is tired of the limbo.
- For Unto Us (from The Other Shoe (Joy)): A wonderful post about how the baby himself isn’t bringing the happiness or creating the family, but how these things flow through him–and in actuality, as the author finally realizes, through all of them and it took a baby for her to see that she creates the change too. With the perfect line: “A son is given. He is a gift to us, not deserved, not earned, just: given.”
- The US of A (from The Lucky Life): The fleeting hope the author feels as she reads about an alternative treatment overseas in America and her dream of conquering infertility and healing her adhesions.
- Bills, Bills, Bills (from Coastal Confessions): A post about the bills rolling in from IVF, what she thinks was lost by the experience, and the work arounds they’ve discovered to keep the intimacy of the conception.
- Dear Santa…are you infertile too? (from The Infertile Mind): The author notices elements of Santa’s life that only an infertile man or woman would pick up on. A sweet Christmas note.
- Time to Make the Babies (from A Greater Yes): A beautiful post both embracing her donor embryos and also mourning what is lost by needing assistance to conceive.
- Introduction! (from Creating HackSpawn): Reflecting on a very fertile family history, the author explains how she thought life would go when she was ready to become a parent. An introductory post to her new blog.
- DE Musings (from It’s Either Sadness or Euphoria): A gorgeous post on what donor eggs can and cannot cure that contains this insightful thought: “But if you’re on the Titanic, you don’t say, if I can’t bring my suitcase I’m going down with the ship. You get in the damn lifeboat if you have the chance.”
- An Introduction (from Trying to accept infertility. It’s not going well.): The author mourns the hopeful version of herself back from when they began trying to build their family and tries to reconcile herself with the fact that she may be at the end of the road of building her family in the way she hoped. A post about trying to come to terms with living child-free when all she ever wanted was to be a parent.
- Do I Win the Pain Olympics? (from MLOKnitting): The author asks, tongue-in-cheek, if she has won the Pain Olympics, all the while explaining how we can all recognize each other’s pain without using comparisons or trying to convince others that we have it worse.
- Aiden’s Story (from Teddy Bear Tins): An incredibly moving post written by the older sister about the day her younger brother lost his son.
- Fertility Across Cultures (from Hubby, Baby and Me… Would Make 3): An eye-opening post where the author wonders about how fertility (or lack thereof) comes into play in other cultures, especially ones that engage in arranged marriages.
- Day 2 – The Myth of Rainbows and Kittens (from Annabelle Arriving): Giving the reader every part of the international adoption experience, the author relays a time that her daughter was deeply grieving the loss of her foster family, and how this pain affects both the child and her mother.
- Primal Wound Book Tour (from Open Adoption Examiner): The opening post to the Primal Wound book tour, with participation from adoptive parents, adoptees, and birthmothers.
- A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Wherever I’m Going (from Infertile Ground): The author sees a woman that she remembers from the clinic and gets to learn the ending to that woman’s story.
- Embracing Darkness (from The Egg Drop Post): An incredible post about darkness–both literal and figurative–and using the lightning bolts life throws at us to find our way back to safe ground.
- My Seriously-don’t-read-this-if-you’re-still-in-the-trenches Ungrateful Mother’s Day Tantrum Rant (from unwellness): A fantastically honest post about how much her heart is wrapped up in having the perfect Mother’s Day. She writes: “I hadn’t known how deeply I wanted a stupid ass piece of jewelry that said MOM on it and that I was counting on that piece of jewelry to mend my broken heart.”
- Are you sure he’s not autistic (from @ Home in the World): A beautiful post about what it means to fully give your heart to your child; to trust that you will be able to not only get your child through the road of life, but yourself down that road too.
- What We’ve Been Given (from The Journey to 40 And Beyond): A beautiful post about being an advocate for children within the court system and musing on the turns our lives take–how we come to some roads and not to others.
- KuKd Folk Music Series: Track 1 (from Knocked Up, Knocked Down): A trip to Portland, Oregon yields a new guitar, a receptacle for the songs that have been pouring out of her since the death of her son. This post includes a link to her incredible voice singing her original song, “For Sure.”
- Not by the hair of my chinny chin chin (from Our Quest for Parenthood): A very funny post about that other side effect of PCOS–the stray hairs that pop up everywhere.
- Ah-ha Moment (from Can I get some sugar with these lemons?): How Malcolm Gladwell’s book, The Outliers, made her see her approach to family building in a new light–one that gives her hope.
- Feelings After 4th Miscarriage (from A Look Into My Life): On Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day, the author remembers her four losses and explains what she needs in terms of support.
- Tempering Hope and Reality (from Body Diaries by Lucy): The author tries to keep herself from running away with hope, able to see the realistic possibilities in the situation, but still needing the good thoughts to propel her forward.
- What Might Have Been (from Twists of Fate): A post about grieving on the unfulfilled due date of the baby she lost. She writes: “Being healed isn’t always permanent. I wake up every morning and decide to heal again for that day.”
- An Unwelcome Visitor (from The Pitter-Patter): The author laments the early arrival of her period, and tells a story that occurred during her day of mourning and release when she was confronted with the pregnant belly of the woman beside her at yoga and how the event itself is a mirror for the mixture of pains that accompany the start of a new cycle.
- Bonding: Adoption & Childbirth (from Friesen Funny Farm): A mother who has built her family through both adoption and childbirth explains how she felt as each person in her family stepped into the puzzle.
- Devestated (from Giving POF the PFO): A state of devastation after the author learns that she has premature ovarian failure and that none of the roads out of infertility fit exactly right.
- And Then the Lights Went Out (from IF Crossroads): Looking for signs before her IVF cycle, the author notices 5 lights that all burn out in quick succession and wonders what it means.
- Mel’s Show and Tell — A Cautionary Tale (from ISO the Golden Egg): An important post and cautionary tale on not getting sucked into the belief that biology will wait until you’re financially and emotionally ready. A post about the cold hard facts concerning aging and fertility.
- It has been a year (from Trying for a Baby): Reflecting on a year of blogging as well as the end of 2009, the author states: “What have I achieved in this year? Fuck all, other than 2 laparoscopies, 6 months of ovary suppression, and did I mention fuck all!”
- Today is August 15, 2009 (from Waiting In Sunshine): A beautiful post about how a mother gets the closure she needs after she loses her son in the fifth month of pregnancy.
- 2009 ~ What a Year! (from Finding Her Way): An entire year encapsulated into a single post, tucking into all the nooks and crannies that make up a life.
- What It Means to be Okay (from Two Plus One Equals Three ): A wistful post explaining that “okay is a place in the middle. I don’t feel like I can’t get out of bed and face the day…I don’t really want to, but I can face it.”
- Unexpected Connections (from in all things, good): A gorgeous post about bonding with a man she meets at the People’s Garden and how her infertility has brought her sensitivity. She writes: “My womb is still unproductive, but I am not barren. I still have much to give, even if I cannot be pregnant.”
- Our New Addition! #8! (from Home..Hands Full, Hearts Full, Quiver Full): A post expounding the author’s pregnancy via donor embryos.
- Home…. (from Womb for 1 More…): The author, waiting for the beta on her donor embryo cycle, talks about transferring the embryos.
- Oh, right! My barren womb! (from I, Digress: Tales from a Baby-Starved Wingnut): An absolutely brilliant post that begins as an update before a beta and ends up being so much more.
- Infertility and Radishes (from The Maybe Baby (Babies)): An incredibly moving post bringing together gardening with the choices that must be made with a cycle and the hope that the choices you’re making will lead to the best result, without the benefit of retrospective knowledge.
- The TPI Agency (from The Road to Happily Ever After): A tongue-in-cheek post about the toilet paper checking that goes on at the end of every cycle.
- Rainbows (from Frustrated Musings of a Seemingly Calm Gal): After asking G-d for a sign while she was meditating, the author looked up into the sky after class to see a rainbow.
- Maybe This is Enough (from Exploring Chaos): Dipping her toe into the pool of what ifs, the author comes to the conclusion that: “It’s amazing to think that two people, living 2000+kms away from each other could come together, meet, fall in love, survive a long distance relationship and complete each other so much that a life without children actually looks doable. It wouldn’t be my first choice but if it came down to it, I think, no, actually I know, that I would chose a childless life with him over any life without him.”
- A Binder of Broken Hearts (from In Its Time): A powerful post about still mourning her losses even after holding a child in her arms.
- Do You See It? (from Baby Steps to Baby Shoes): A fantastic post about that invisible mark of infertility that serves not only to separate this mother from others, but also to draw people to her as well.
- Babies R (from A New Wheeler): A breathtaking post about the need to dream in order to endure the day-to-day.
- Castles in the Air (from Stacey’s Thoughts on Infertility): A post about her innate need to daydream and plan, to be able to predict what will happen next, and also her understanding that sometimes castles in the air need to be rebuilt as new information is learned.
- Where I Don’t Fit In (from You Call Me a Bitch Like It’s a Bad Thing): The author explains with great honesty how she views her loss, and how she feels as if this view separates her from others who have experienced loss.
- Taming Fear (from Waiting For Sunflower): A beautiful post containing great advice (borrowed in part by Anne Lamott) on how to live life without fear.
- Seeking Closure and a Little Pity Party (from Journey to the Center of the Uterus): A heartbreaking post, the day before a D&C, declaring her end of the road to parenthood.
- Time Changes (from Okaasan Mommy and More): An incredibly astute post balancing all the wants and needs and coming out with an answer that while may not be perfect, connects to everything she wants out of life.
- Flawed (from Kmina’s Blog): An explanation of why people envy others, stating: “So, dear pregnant ladies, forgive the rest of us who are not pregnant, but compensate this with a lot of negative feelings, sometimes misdirected. We are just people. We may be terribly unfair to you, but only because we envy you very much.”
- Sans Regrets (from The Sweet Life): A beautiful post about how the support she received on the continuous pursuit of her dream allows the author to live regret-free, a thought which occurs after encountering a woman who changed her dream not by her own volition, but because she didn’t have the support to pursue it from her husband.
- Abierto? Cerrado? (from 150 Steps…an Adoption Journey): A great post questioning whether the couple would rather have an open or closed adoption. He states: “It’s a decision with lasting, profound ramifications in the same way that choosing a name carries such weight that it can influence a child’s entire life. How does one choose?”
- Lupron is a Dirty, Dirty Whore… (from Infertili- T & A): A very funny post about the unusual side effects that she has gotten from lupron.
- My Lightbulb Moment (from Holy Moly Toledo(s)!): A great post about a blog’s natural transition to a new topic as the author’s focus moves with life’s changes. A post about moving from writing about infertility to writing about life with her twins.
- If I could write a letter to Abigail on her first birthday (from Living in the Rainbow): A father writes a letter to his daughter on what should have been her first birthday, a year after she was born still. His year without her is a year of grief and learning.
- Unplanned Harvest (from The Best Seat in the House): A beautiful post using the garden as an analogy for the larger experience of life–the waiting, the inherent loss, the chance for greatness, and the hidden surprises.
- A Change Of Heart (from It Only Takes One Time…Not!): A beautiful post about changing her attitude. She writes: “It still hurts sometimes, but I believe adjusting my attitude could possibly change my karma.”
- I’m Afraid (from Mission: Motherhood): An outpouring of all of the author’s fears, laid bare on the screen. And the reader can only nod along because we’ve all felt similar fears.
- And then there was One (from Hope for a Baby Smith): A frustrated post wondering why so many factors transpire against making her dream a reality and why the universe would allow her to want this dream so badly if it is planning to put these obstacles in her place.
- C&P From My IRL Blog (from Unquestionable Love): A joyous pregnancy announcement post that the author waited three years to write.
- Day-dreaming in Donorville (from Think Outside The Baby Box): An expired carton of eggs in the refrigerator triggers the author’s musings on donor eggs.
- Cutting The Strings (from Apron Strings For Emily): An aching, beautiful, honest post about the author’s decision to live child-free after infertility and her recognition of how her decision affects the people around her too. It is about closure and making room for new doors to open.
- What I Think About When I’m Not Thinking About Peeing (from Bionic Mamas): From the woman whose pee looks like fancy beer, a funny post about an infertile woman’s urination obsession.
- From the very beginning (from Lola Constance Evelyn): From pregnancy to death to funeral, an incredibly moving post as the author conveys the last days with her daughter.
- Jeremiah’s Story (from Cradles and Graves): In response to the people who try to move her through her grieving or dismiss her losses, the author relays the details of her second trimester loss.
- Realizing (from You Just Never Know Where Hope Might Take Ya): A gorgeous post about accepting the fact that she feels emotional pain for the rest of what she receives due to that passion. She writes: “I would rather have wracking sobs for my child whom I love and hate the idea of being away from, then not feel anything at all. I would rather feel this every day than not miss her when she’s not with me.”
- Update Regarding Medication (from Journeymark): A post about taking oneself off medications and trusting that a higher power will help you with family building in a different way.
- To Have Faith or Not to Have Faith (from Waiting for a Baby Bump): The author’s faith shaken to the core by her experience, explains that sometimes G-d does give a person more than they can handle and explores the concept of one person receiving a blessing and what this means for the other person whose prayers go unanswered.
- HOPE (from Thoughts From a Blonde…): The author lays out all of her hopes for her journey to parenthood beginning with the path being easy and clear, and her marriage becoming stronger during the struggle.
- Our Christmas Letter in Two Minutes or Less (from An Unexpected Life): The Christmas card the author wishes she could send as she receives the celebratory letters of others.
- Barren Doesn’t Mean Empty (from Coming2Terms): The author takes the anger and frustration she feels towards fellow infertile women who get pregnant and turns it into strength and creativity.
- A History of our First Expecting (from Expecting, Minus the Baby Bump and the Stretchmarks): A woman provides a picture of her new son via adoption.
- Survival (from My Yellow Brick Road Has Potholes): A gorgeous post that contains this thought, “I believe it is not what happens to us that defines who we are. Rather, it is what we choose to do about what happens to us that defines our character. We are survivors”
- Let the Baby Out of the Closet (from You Ask a Lot of Questions): A beautiful post that explains why we should talk about pregnancy in the first trimester and how those who miscarry deserve all the support we give to other losses.
- With Devastation Comes Hope (from Waiting For Baby Witko): Horrible news which meant that her sister couldn’t be her egg donor opened the door to a different path to parenthood–donor embryos–and how the author opened her heart to that experience.
- Rational thinking, what’s that? (from The Bushey Life): Research into her symptoms and conditions brings her possible answers, but also a lot of anger at the fact that a doctor didn’t connect these dots himself.
- Left over embryos: What to do? (from Hard Boiled: A Donor Egg Blog): An important post about the author’s struggle with what to do with her remaining frozen embryos and what she ultimately decides. It is a post that everyone should read before and/or after IVF if they have frozen embryos remaining.
- why is the sky blue? (from Fionn): During a time when she realizes that her son has been dead longer than he had been alive, the author reflects on the grief of losing her child and finding a way to actively parent when her child is no longer here.
- Santa Baby (from A Bumpy Ride): With the heart positive that parenthood is just around the corner, this post is about all the thoughts that go through the author’s mind in the days before her period’s arrival.
- Adoption Carnival: What No One Told Me About Adoption (from Grown in My Heart): 65 writers recount all the truths about adoption that no one told them before they became part of the triad.
- Faith CAN move mountains (from Because I Can’t Have Babies): The author explains her enormous faith in adoption and that it will build her family over time. That while the wait is difficult, she goes through the wait with her convictions intact.
- A Letter to Our Families (from The Subfertile Frugalista): The post she has always wanted to write and has composed in her head numerous times–the author gets to announce her pregnancy and thanks the people who supported her along the way.
- A New Day (from Find Joy Now): On the eve of a new year, the author writes, “I have decided to do a social experiment, if you will, to see if I can find joy in life each and every day” and she explains just how she will go about finding that happiness.
- Holy Two Lines, Batman!! (from Sparkly Things Distract Me): A friend’s absolute happiness in her friend’s joy over a positive pregnancy test; the glee of seeing a good friend leave the trenches.
- Preparation (from Hope Worth Waiting For – Our Adoption Journey): On the threshold of their home study, the author explains how she is filled with hope again–and that hope both thrills and terrifies.
- HSG Test Day… (from Beckies Infertility Journey): The author recounts her HSG test and how it didn’t live up to her worst fears.
- Baby B: Our Miracle Baby is Gone (from Mary Katherine Kennedy): An incredibly moving post about learning that one of her twins has died while at an ultrasound with her four-year-old child. A post about processing grief.
- How Do You Sum Up 10 Years of Pain? (and…Welcome!) (from No Oven For the Bun): A post about the day she learned she was born with MRKH–“You were born with ovaries, but you don’t have fallopian tubes, a uterus, a cervix…and most of your vagina is missing. It’s a blind pouch is all. You’ll never have children.”
- Looking Back On 2009 (from Baby Dreams): The author reflects on her terrible year and says good riddance, looking towards the next year with hope.
- Genesis 30: 22 – And God remembered Alesha, and God hearkened to her, and opened her womb (from On The Outside Looking In: My Struggle With Infertility): A post thanking G-d for her pregnancy as she recounts the day she found out that she was finally pregnant.
- Humbled and Amazed (from Thoughts by Kim): A post about how the author decided that she was finished with treatments and ready to start the adoption process, and how her strong faith moved her to action.
- My Ordinary Life (from I Can’t Whistle): A breathtaking post about how anything can become ordinary–even the injections and scans. She ends with a beautiful thought, “Good old ordinary hope… without it, where would we be?”
- What, there’s more? (from The Barreness’s Blog): A breathtaking post about trying to create life amid the death of the brushfires. A post about the lead-up to retrieval and wondering what will come next.
- Happy New Year (from Park Slope Purgatory): On the eve of the new year, the author does a visualization technique and releases her mental embryos with the hope that they will return for a hello in the next year.
- Belonging (from One Good Egg): A beautiful post about finding her place in the world of adoption, of connecting with those around her and being at peace with the process.
- Sharing a Song (from All Aboard the Pity Boat): A stunning post about a song that speaks to the author. She writes, “It was a sad, lonely moment, lost in my infertility, but it was also not so lonely. Even if the song isn’t specifically about infertility, it is proof that others feel as I do.” And she shares it with the community, a group of people all struggling with the same emotions she is experiencing with infertility.
- …more coming soon. This list updates daily until March 1st and I change the date under “today” on the right sidebar each time I update so you know if there are new links. If you are not on this list and wish to be added, please read this post and follow the directions to add your favourite post from 2009. Please help spread the word by telling others about the list and adding the icon to your blog. You can grab the code for the icon by clicking here (this is a new icon–if you have the old one on your blog, please replace it as this icon links to the posted list).
Blogs that Closed in 2009**
We’re so sorry to see these blogs missing from the blogosphere. Every piece of writing changes a person’s perspective of their own journey. The world was changed by their words.
One Must Continue to Believe
Angry Canadian Nurse
From Here To Maternity…And Beyond
Cheese and Whine
A Sibling for Celia
Antigone Lost
Girl [Un]scripted
Past Creme de la Creme Lists:
*I aim for inclusivity, therefore, if you think you belong on this list, you probably do. From the newly-diagnosed to the treatment vets, from those still filling out paperwork to those with completed adoptions, from those who are trying to choose a donor and those parenting DI or DE kids; those who are completely confused on what to do and those who are peacefully–or not peacefully–living child-free. Biological infertility or situational infertility, being a single parent by choice, straight or gay, young or old–this list is about difficulties while family building, pure and simple.
January 1, 2010 41 Comments
Time to Start Cranking Out the Creme de la Creme
Updated: The Creme de la Creme is now up. I will still take posts and update it until March 1st.
For the fourth year running, it is November and time to kick off the Creme de la Creme list for 2009. If you’re unfamiliar with the project, read on to understand. If you’ve participated in years past, you know how much fun the list is when its revealed on January 1st. So, I hereby declare the Creme de la Creme list open.
I know this is loooooong, but please read this whole post before submitting your entry. Things have changed this year and if you don’t follow the directions, this won’t run smoothly and I promise, this post probably answers any question you might have.
If you didn’t read or participate in this list in 2006 or in 2007 or in 2008, the impulse behind this list are the ubiquitous award ceremonies that crawl out of their hiding spaces usually around December or January. Awards are nice–it’s good to honour someone and mark big accomplishments. But we all have a best post tucked into our archives. We all have words that have moved another person or ideas that have kicked off a series of musings. Bloggers are writers and all of us deserve to be celebrated.
And we’re doing just that.
This is the way it works. If you want to participate, read through your archives and choose a favourite post. You can leave all sorts of comments below telling me how fantastic I am, but fill out the form to send in your submission (do not leave it in the comments section–the point of this list is also the surprise of seeing the choices revealed on a single day). If you post your link below, I will delete it. Again, feel free to leave love comments below–in fact, please do leave love comments below–but not your submission for the list. Let’s keep it a surprise until the list is ready to go up.
You can only choose one entry. You cannot be modest. Everyone has a best post. There is no such thing as a boring blog. Even if you don’t think you have any readers because you’ve never received a comment, you have a best post. The one that you felt really good about when you hit publish. The one that would be the post you’d put forward if an editor called you tomorrow and said, “I have this great writing job for you that will pay a million dollars an hour. You just need to submit one blog entry to get this job so we can check your writing style.”
Even if you just found my blog because you read about the Creme de la Creme on another person’s blog, you are not only welcome to submit; you are encouraged. It is the best posts of 2009 for the ALI community and that community includes anyone who writes about infertility, adoption, pregnancy loss, stillbirth, neonatal death, assisted reproduction, pregnancy after infertility or loss, and every related topic–from living child-free after infertility to parenting after infertility. Everyone on the blogroll (or could be on the blogroll) is welcome to participate. Really, you don’t need to be a regular reader of my blog to join in. It’s open to everyone in the ALI blogosphere. I can’t say this in more ways than that. Which means you don’t need to write me a note asking if it’s okay to participate. The answer is yes. Okay?
Actually, it’s not only “yes;” it’s “please do.”
The list will be posted January 1st and I promise that you will use up a good portion of the beginning of the year reading through the most stunning posts you’ve ever seen. We had over 220 posts last year and I’d really like to top that this year. My goal is all 2000+ blogs currently on the blogroll, but barring that, let’s aim for over 300. Which means that not only do you have to participate if you’re reading this, but you need to spread the word and get other bloggers to participate (more on that below). Link to this post, send out a note to other bloggers you like, and suggest favourite posts to bloggers from this past year.
Um…other FAQ-like things:
How many posts can I submit?
You can only submit one. Please don’t submit two and ask me to choose. Submit one.
How will I know that you received my entry?
I will send out a mass email once a day to all of the people who submitted their entry. I use the “bcc” line on the email so that people don’t see each other’s email address. The only drawback is that these emails sometimes go into spam filters. Therefore, once you submit, check your email and spam filter for a day or two. If you don’t hear from me, send me an email if you’re concerned that it didn’t go through. I hate being impersonal like that, but the list took a long time to put together last year hence why I’m starting even earlier this year.
I sent in a post last week but I just wrote one that I love more! Can I switch my submission?
The short answer is no. The reason is that I write up the blurbs that appear next to each entry. This takes a lot of time. When you change your post, I have to write another blurb. Therefore, think carefully. But get your post in early so it’s high up on the list. But take your time picking it so you’re positive it’s the one you want on the list. But don’t give this too much thought…
If you just submitted it an hour earlier and realized you sent the wrong link, email me quickly so I can change it. Once I write the blurb, it’s set. I mean, you can pull your blog from the list, but you can’t submit a different link.
How do I know which one is my best?
Think of this list in sort of the same vein as those “Best American Short Story”-type collections except that it’s blog entries and everyone in the blogosphere should be represented with a link. The idea of the creme de la creme is not to put out there “the best” by someone else’s definition of “best.” It’s to put out the entry that means the most to you. Everyone has a best entry from 2009. It’s the one you would cry about if it was ever eaten by your computer. Even if it’s only meaningful to you.
I’m having a lot of trouble choosing my best one.
Why don’t you give a few choices to a friend and get their opinion? Don’t get hung up on the word “best.” It’s more about presenting a small taste of your blog. A lot of people read the list each January and it’s a chance for them to get to know your blog in one post. The goal, of course, is not only to honour every blog, but to also introduce everyone. Think of it like a cocktail party. You certainly think about what you wear, but everything doesn’t hinge on this one outfit.
I want to submit a post about my dog/favourite recipe/vacation in Hawaii. So…er…it’s not about adoption/infertility/loss. Can I? Or I want to submit a post but it has pictures of my baby in it. Do you think this is okay for an IF list?
Well, this list is sort of a pu-pu platter of the ALI community. Therefore, if your post is about your ski trip last winter, it doesn’t really show any emotion, thought, or event flitting through the community. Still, people have submitted off-topic posts in the past. If you have any part of the post that if ALI-related, all the better though.
The second question is a sensitivity one. Personally, I think that babies are part of the community and territory. The reality is that we’re all working towards parenthood or were once working towards parenthood. And children are included in that. I try to always mention in my blurb if it’s about a baby or if there are photos so people are given a heads up before they click over. So, yes, send posts that have photos in it and I will make sure that people know the gist of the post before they click over if they’re in a sensitive space.
I’m a man. Can I participate?
Are you part of the ALI community? Then didn’t you read above? EVERYONE is invited to participate. Male, female, young, old, married, single, gay, straight, everyone everyone everyone.
I’m a meerkat. Can I participate?
Er…a meerkat with a blog? An infertile meerkat with a blog? I guess…I mean…I did say everyone…
I just started my blog in October. Can I participate?
As long as you’ve had one post in 2009, you can participate. Even if you didn’t start your blog until October 2009. Just choose your best from the last two months.
My blog is password protected. Can I participate?
If your blog is password protected and you want to participate, choose your blog entry and create a free blog at Blogger or WordPress and post that single entry. Then send me the link so I can place it on the list. I can’t link to password protected blogs.
When is the deadline for getting in my submission (and this has changed since last year so pay attention)?
To ensure that you’re on the list on January 1st, please fill out the form by December 15th. If you submit after December 15, you will be on the list, but you will probably go up after people have started reading on January 1st.
The 2009 list doesn’t technically close until March 1, 2010. This is obviously a change from last year. Instead of being able to submit through the whole year, you can submit to this list for the first two months of the next year and then the list closes. The reality is that almost everyone had submitted by March in the last few years, and it’s difficult to keep going back and checking on the old sign-up list. So if you are reading this after March 1 and you’re really upset, I’m sorry, but I promise the list will be back next year for 2010 posts.
So, just to reiterate–(1) if you submit before December 15th, you will be on the list on January 1st. (2) If you submit between December 16th and 31st, you may be on the list January 1st, but more likely, you’ll be on some point after January 1st. (3) If you submit between January 1st and March 1st, you’ll go up on the list as soon as possible. And then the list is closed until next year when the new one opens.
Can you post another link to the form right now because I’ve decided to submit.
Sure, here’s another link to the form. Just fill it out and hit send and it will go into the Creme de la Creme spreadsheet.
If you don’t want to participate, do nothing. With the Creme de la Creme List, I never add a blog or highlight a post unless the author has sent it to me. Therefore, no hurt feelings. If your post isn’t on the list, it’s because you haven’t sent one. If you see someone missing from the list after it is posted, go bug them and tell them to submit a post. But don’t send me a note asking me to add them without their permission. I really would like this post to be what the author believes is their best post, but if you are feeling shy and can’t choose, enlist a friend to help you narrow it down and choose your best work.
Lastly, there is another section of the list that needs your help: blogs that closed in 2009. These are blogs that closed entirely–the person stopped blogging and said specifically that they were not going to post any longer–not blogs that went password protected or the person moved their blog to a new space. If you read a blog that closed during 2009, please send me the title of the blog. It doesn’t matter if it was read by one person or read by 5000 people, all blogs should be honoured and recognized. And all blogs stand on the same plateau here.
Spread the word with the following button on a post or your sidebar to encourage others to send a link:
The code for adding the link to your blog can be found here.
Everyone has a best post. It is your personal best. It is not best by any other standard. Stop comparing yourself. Stop feeling shy. Stop thinking it’s immodest to toot your own horn when I’ve told you to toot your own horn. Start reading through your archives. Reflect on the year. And then send me a link for the list.
Wheew. Sorry about that last part. But everyone in the blogosphere should be represented and honoured.
November 2, 2009 27 Comments
The Creme de la Creme of 2008
This is my third year putting together the Creme de la Creme list and it never ceases to amaze me how without knowing anyone else’s entry, the list naturally serves as a pu-pu platter to the adoption/loss/infertility (ALI) experience.
So what is the Creme de la Creme list if this is your first time here? It was started as a response to the many blogging awards that are given out each winter. I expanded the idea of presenting “the best” to include a post from every blog in the ALI world. This includes those who are the beginning of their journey to those who are in the middle of a hard-won pregnancy to those who are parenting after adoption. Every blogger has a personal best that deserves recognition. As editor of the list, I create the small blurbs after the title which serve as a doorway to the post. I hope they will help you find what you are seeking to read as well as show definitively the diversity of experience and emotion within the ALI community.
Listed below are the best posts of 2008. If you have a blog that chronicles your experience with infertility, pregnancy loss, adoption, or life afterwards and you’re not on this list, please read this post and follow the instructions to send in your submission. This post is open until December 2009*.
In the meantime, happy reading! And leaving a comment on these older posts is not a “may I?” but a “please do.” Comments are how an author knows their words are appreciated. Comments about the Creme de la Creme in general can be left on this post.
- Finally (from Stirrup Queens): The author writes the post that she has been waiting many years to write: a book is finally getting published. This book, which was created with the help of almost 1500 bloggers and blog readers, is closure on an emotional road of both infertility and writing.
- The Day We Said Goodbye (from Here We Go Again): A post on the anniversary of her loss about what she lost and gained through her miscarriage–a permanent hole in her heart, but also a circle of friends. A beautiful post about community and looking for sweetness amongst the bitter.
- In Which L Gets Negative (from An Equation of Hope): An angry post circling through all of the feelings of secondary infertility: the frustration that others are pregnant and don’t want to be when you are trying to hard to have a child coupled with the self-hatred from wishing so hard for another child when you already have one and others have none. A post that everyone–primary or secondary IF–will be able to relate to as the anger is almost tangible.
- Birthday Presence (from Weebles Wobblog): On her birthday, the author welcomes all of her selves, from various stages of life. A beautiful about change and constants.
- Everything I Wanted and Nothing Like I Thought (from Drama 2B Mama): After getting everything she ever wanted, the author finds herself in a terrible depression. Her toddler daughter is sucking all of her energy during the day and her newborn son is crying all night. It is an insightful look into the elusiveness of happiness once all dreams are realized as well as finding peace with a new life that is not quite what you thought it would be.
- The Hurt That Comes Out Of Nowhere (from I Think I Hear Your Mother Calling): Written on the eve of becoming foster parents, the author acknowledges that the space open for fostering comes from the loss of her own dreams to parent. That fostering is about stepping into the role of parent without the certainty that comes from other paths to parenthood and letting a child into your heart even knowing that you could possibly get hurt from loving someone so intensely. A must-read post to learn about the heart of a foster parent.
- The Bacheloregg-Reality Show Taking Place in My Uterus (from Portraits In Sepia): A hysterical post imaging the meeting of egg and sperm like an episode of the Bachelorette (the Bacheloregg!) where the author muses: “Surely in a room full of two girls and about 60 million guys, the girls will find somebody they’d like a second date with.”
- A Prayer (from Two Hot Mamas): An emotional post where a non-Jewish woman explains how she feels attending shul with her wife, especially in regards to the warmth and encouragement she receives from singing “Mishaberach,” a healing prayer.
- Show and Tell: Bridge (from Baby Smiling In Back Seat): I cried when I got to the end of this post and you will too when you consider your own personal bridge as well as the author’s story of where she sends away all of her negative thoughts.
- Why Now and Not Then? (from An Older Version): A moving explanation for why it took the author so long to seek treatment of her infertility and PCOS. A post about moving from a place of darkness to a place of light and why everyone needs to find their own path out of the negativity and mourning.
- Our Hand (from Our Slow Journey to Parenthood): The author, deeply depressed after a failed IVF cycle, compares her need to continue to a game of cards and explains why she can never fold. She manages to keep her sense of humour even when she loses a hand.
- Shattered Security (from Sunflower Seeds): A mother asks if our little ones every truly heal as she goes through a particularly trying evening with her son, a ten year old adopted from Russia, and connects it to a series of behaviours that stretch back to his experience at birth. This is a family where the loves runs deep and strong and you can see the care within his mother’s words.
- Rainy Friday – A Place of Belonging Edition (from Mrs Spock): A moving, important post about how we care for people in our society. Starting at the personal with her uncle, Bobby, and moving to the greater public–a world of forgotten people who are grappling with mental or physical illness and are removed from their homes in order to receive care–the author explains why we need to do something to change the system.
- The Face of Infertility (from To Baby and Beyond): A battle cry of a post that is a fantastic read for every single person who has ever thought of themselves as a statistic and realized with deeper consideration all they have to offer the world–the good and the bad.
- Rough and Tumble (from Finding Maddie): Promising not to sugar coat international adoption, a mother tells of a day when all she wanted to do was return home from the Ukraine with her daughter and all her daughter wanted to do was spend time with others. And how it broke her heart but also (I am willing to bet) was one of the moments that turned her into an incredible mother who feels so deeply for her daughter and herself.
- Is There More That I Can Do? (from Stop The Train I Wanna Get Off): A moving post about how one reader processes loss in the blogosphere and turns all of the emotion she feels when reading another person’s story into good in her own world.
- Still Here (from Indi’s Human): The author sees her life in fragmented moments from the time she learns her baby has no heartbeat until her returns to the doctor to “discuss her options.” You will cry along with the author as she stares at her baby on the ultrasound machine and memorizes the parts of his/her body.
- The Shallow End Sucks, Too (from I’m a Smart One): The author reminds that things are not always as they seem and goes through her infertility history despite the fact that she is now a mother of four and a successful gestational surrogate. In fact, it was her experience with infertility and finding a community online that made her decide to become a surrogate. The post ends with an important question about how we give support outside our personal experience.
- My Cross Pollination Post (from Sell Crazy Someplace Else): An honest, gut-wrenching post about depression from a beautiful woman [I get to say that as the editor of this list because I know her] who has spent time in the darkest of dark places and explains so the rest of us can understand.
- Star’s Story (from Our Crazy Life with Twins after IVF): The author recounts the loss of her first baby, Star, from how the baby got her name to the aftermath of losing her. A touching tribute to her first child.
- Opinions Are….. (from Mission:Impossible): Extremely sage advice on parenting newborn twins–what you need, what you don’t need, and all the things in between. A go-to list for anyone who sees two heartbeats on the sonogram.
- Thoughts on Father’s Day (from Life as Dad to Donor Insemination (DI) Kids): Refusing to minimize the role his sperm donor played in the creation of his children, the author thanks the man who provided the means for him to reach fatherhood. A gorgeous post on Father’s Day from a dad who has lived the idea that it takes a village to raise a child–sometimes from preconception to adulthood–with the fantastic final thought: “So on their behalf I wish him a Happy Father’s Day and I say to him thank you for allowing me to do the same.”
- Unconditionally Happy (from Elana’s Musings): A post that is about being unconditionally happy for another couple who conceives and how the author believes it is the reason she has become pregnant herself. It is about making room in your heart for possibilities.
- My Sweet Little Angel (from Empty Nesting): A note to the baby she lost promising that she will not remember the life she thought would happen but will instead consider the life that did happen. She tells her child that she will take her time to mourn and that her baby should take her time to leave her body behind, allow the miscarriage to happen, and gives her permission to let go. You will not be able to read this post without crying.
- Searching For A Way To Let Go Of The Familiar Path (from The Surprise of Unfolding): Just as the author delicately reframes her own words, this is a post about how dreams change. It is about letting go to sadness again and again and again as things change and how that sadness seems to always emerge once you are inside the car and facing the road ahead.
- A Piece of Me (from Tears Are For Babies): The author reflects on a poem she wrote years earlier about infertility in a private journal and explains why she lets hope in month after month. Like the story about the poem itself, the post twists in midstream and ends on a buoyant thought of the future.
- That’s Interesting (from Our Family Beginnings): After her blog is found by her father, the author states that she makes no apologies for how she fixes what is broken in her life. A rallying cry for why writing heals, she gives the disclaimer: “I don’t write this blog to tell you things or to make you feel more or less comfortable. I write this blog for me and for perhaps another woman who may one day walk in my shoes.”
- Musings on the Second Time Around (from Slaying, Blogging, Whatever…): The author fills the nine year space between her two children and explains the difference between being pregnant the first time and being pregnant after IVF. A beautiful post about secondary infertility and what we lose and gain through the long wait between children.
- Happy Birthday (from Our Wish Come Two): In a post barely longer than a haiku, the author conveys the elation she feels now that her twins are finally here.
- Reflections (from The Fertile Infertile): A fantastic post that finds the silver lining behind her losses; that speaks about the support she draws from community and her sisters-by-choice.
- Thankful for Infertility (from Sticky Feet): On the eve of returning to the RE for another round of let’s-make-a-baby, a list of all the reasons she is grateful for infertility including the ways it changed her as a mother, the way it strengthened her relationship with her husband, but most of all, for her son, Bo. Without infertility, it would have been a different child and a different life.
- The Big O (from Dear Gherkin): A celebration of her eight day festival of derangement, the author explains how she does the two week wait on the few times a year that she ovulates. A very funny post about a not so funny topic.
- The Ache (from Fertility Challenged in Florida): A story about how much she loves her sister reveals also the deep ache that comes from when life plans change. She thought she’d have children around the same time as her sister so the cousins could play together. The post ends like a good cry; with a release of emotions and a determination to return to the fight.
- WFW – Isaiah 40:31 (from Musings of a Teacher): Explaining how a passage from Isaiah fits into her life, the author tells a story about a time when she was certain she was pregnant but the blood test revealed no hCG and how she finds the strength to keep trying to reach parenthood.
- I Can Spot Them a Freakin’ Mile Away (from Facing My Giant: The Infertility Edition): The author explains the different ways women glance at those who are pregnant and how the same image can mean something very different to two different people.
- I Want to Be Normal (from The Problem With Hope): After not struggling with the concept of infertility when they were trying to build their family, the author cannot understand how infertility is bothering her now during parenthood. And yet, her perspective has been changed and she is learning how to navigate this new normal. A very interesting perspective on how infertility can change the way you view the world.
- Picking Myself Up Off the Floor (from Destined to Be An Old Woman with No Regrets): A beautiful post about discovering in the midst of chaos that everything will be okay.
- Rough Patch (from Life from Here: Musings from the Edge): A favourite holiday changes from nostalgia and thoughts of the future to simple sadness at being the only childless couple in the pumpkin patch. There are days when it doesn’t matter what the future holds but instead the focus is on the shape of the present. And this is a perfectly captured moment that shows the ache of her current state.
- This Medusa (from The Shifty Shadow): A fragment of thoughts on the topic of faith after the loss of a child. The post begins: “When holding your daughter as she is dying, and after she has died, you find out if you have faith. I found out I do. What exactly that faith is, or is in, is still quite unclear. But I believe.” And it just becomes even more profound from there.
- The Infertile Identity (from Faith In Fertility): This post contains a gorgeous thought: “Rather than drowning in a lake of infertility, I am sailing on it. It is going to take me to a place that otherwise I would never get to.” It is a post about how we define ourselves and how we don’t have to define ourselves.
- Looking Back (from The Not So Secret Life Of Us): A post about finally finding the one place in life where determination cannot make a dent. A post about experiencing multiple losses and coming to the realization that she is not a failure–if anything, she is a success story about the human spirit.
- God Gives All Chances to Fools!!! (from Woman Anyone?): A post questioning why those who don’t want to become pregnant do and those who do want to become parents experience infertility and where G-d stands in all of this.
- Moments (from Building Heavenly Bridges): The what ifs used to devour her, but now she is focused on the other moments that come–both good and bad–without any warning. A beautiful post about parenting after a loss.
- Great Expectations (from Stacey’s Thoughts on Infertility): Even though the expectations change over the course of the author’s life, the disappointment when expectations are unfulfilled are a constant. Still, she can see how the losses fit into the bigger picture and feels thankful even for expectations unrealized.
- Enough (from Life After Infertility & Loss): Musings on the word “enough” and how each person defines their limits, the reasons for what they do, or how they know the next step. A beautiful post about family building, loss, and the balance of the two.
- Seeing Clearly (from BagMomma): The author writes: “A failed cycle is so short in the grand scheme of things, but put all the failed cycles, testing, losses, and breaks together and many of us miss entire years of our existence” and this is the basis for a post which is not just a cry to live life, but also the amazing things you can see when you remember to look for them.
- If men are from Mars and women are from Venus, maybe babies are from Pluto? (from Life and Love in the Petri Dish): A fantastically written post summing up their journey to become parents.
- My Script Was Stepped On (from Missed Conceptions): Every person wakes up each morning with a script that they’ve written and wish to act out throughout the day. This is a post about what happens when someone steps on your script, doesn’t follow their lines, or rips up all of your hard work. A very interesting concept that will hopefully turn on the lightbulb for you as brightly as it did for the author.
- You And Me, Or, NST #5 (from The Liminal Universe): As you read through the birth of the Chieftain, you will feel as if you are there in the room, watching the monitors and feeling the contractions. A very moving post about a child who finally arrives.
- The Maiden and her Lupron (from Hope Springs Infertile): A hysterical post about a missing bottle of Lupron, a trip through the trash bags, and expired medication as well as discovering the Lupron’s hiding spot.
- Oh My Aching (from The Idle Mind Of Beth): A lovely post about the time she spends with an understanding friend’s children and how much she loves it as well as feels wistful once the night is over.
- I Know (from Walking the Journey): An apology; a post of forgiveness; words of understanding–a stunning post, simple in form, that reads like a sigh and hug at the same time.
- Infant Loss and Miscarriage Remembrance (from Two Kayaks): A reminder of how wrong people can be in their assumptions as well as a call for empathy on Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day.
- Where is the Line? (from Hope & Despair Mingled Together): The author questions where the line is drawn between too much hope and not enough hope. On one hand, the dreaming is what keeps her going month after month and on the other, it is what makes the end of the cycle so incredibly bitter.
- I Don’t Hate You (from Apron Strings For Emily): An honest and raw note to the author’s SIL explaining why she keeps a blog and what she gets out of writing about her experience; on how their journeys differ and how her SIL will never quite understand where she is coming from.
- Staying Alive (from Get Pregnant): The author explains why giving up isn’t an option; how stopping will never get her to the place she needs to be and how she will keep trying until she reaches her goal.
- The Post on Praying (from Wheresmy2lines): Excellent questions on the power and purpose of prayer; a post about what message is being sent when prayers are going unanswered.
- Sarah Laughed (from A Beautiful Uterus!): Calling forth the story of Sarah from the Bible, the author explains why she also laughs when people give her advice on infertility and how she doesn’t quite believe that she will ever have a child as much as she works towards that goal and never wants to doubt.
- The Garden of Life? (from Loving Thee… and more): The author uses a story about her garden to wonder about how to deal with the weeds of life–those people and events that wish to bring us down.
- Girlfriends (from Maybe it’s Just Me…): A fantastic story about a reunion of five high school friends who grew apart and then came back together nine years later.
- The Little Yellow Pill that Wouldn’t (from The Maniacal (wanna-be) Mommy): A very funny story of the magical reappearing Prometrium capsule giving a whole new meaning to the 5 second rule.
- And The Urologist Says… (from Conceive This!): Whipping out her infertranslator, the author points out the cruelty in the doctor’s words as well as his judgment and ends with an excellent piece of advice: “relaxing does not cure genetic mutations.”
- Becoming Me (from Coming2Terms): 18 months after deciding to live child-free after infertility and nearing on her 45th birthday, the author reflects on her life, where she thought it would go, and where it is now.
- Hope Floats (from Bella And Her Fella): A sweet and brief post reminding the reader to give a new journey time to sort itself out and allow hope to float to the surface.
- One Year Ago… (from Eggs Benedict Arnold): A very powerful post about being in the delivery room for the birth and discovering several days later that the woman intends to parent. The author wonders how and if they remember her and the role she almost played in their lives.
- Don’t Tell Me What God Meant, I Already Know (from There are some days you can’t help but ask… I got out of bed for this?): The author reprints thoughts on infertility written from an anonymous source, though the true meat of this post is in the disclaimer which explains how a person can be exceedingly happy with their life and mourning at the same time.
- I Said I’d Never (from Lilyanasmom): A very funny story of a woman who has metamorphosed into the mother she claimed she’d never become complete with a pyjama-wearing-in-public, sticky mess of a delicious little girl.
- Love (from Burble): On a day when, in her own words, she is okay, she describes the incredible love she has for her fiance and partner in loss, Ray.
- He Loves Me . . . (from It’s Not the End of the World): A beautiful reminder to herself that her husband loves her and has never not loved her, an important thing to remember when you are traveling a hard road.
- Muppets From Space (from The Maybe Baby): An adoptee wonders if her future children, who will be created through egg donation, will have the same longing to know their origins. She writes so astutely: “If they do, I will need to remember that this particular kind of curiosity and longing does not go hand in hand with rejecting the life, or family, or love that you have. It really does coexist.”
- If I Had to Impart Any Words of Wisdom to Prospective Adoptive Parents Wishing to Adopt in Ukraine, It’d be This (from Privyet!): Required reading for anyone adopting from Ukraine; this post explains the process, what to expect, and prepares every adoptive parent for their journey.
- She’s Having a Baby, I Had a Miscarriage (from Barren Is the New Black): Two women become pregnant around the same time; one has a baby and one has a miscarriage. The author wistfully discusses the concept of her friend’s child as a measuring stick to the child she never knew.
- The Hulk in Me (from Reproductive Jeans): Though the author doesn’t often get angry, this post is about riding out a wave of the emotion after receiving a negative for her IVF cycle. The anger is almost tangible in her words and reading the post is as emotional as throwing plates against a brick wall.
- Investigation Update (from Womb For Improvement): A very informative post about her HSG, but also, a warning: I spat the coffee I was drinking at 9:31 am.
- Infertility Musings (from The Musings of a Princess): The other end of the age spectrum with infertility–the author writes about being 20 and infertile and the commentary she receives due to her age. An eye-opening post as well as wonderful musings on guilt.
- I Really Want a Baby (from Crazy Lady Ramblings): A wonderful post where the author points out that she sometimes forgets the big picture as a coping mechanism, her mind instead focusing on getting from one step to the next. But at the end of the road, what she wants is not to have a positive beta or a pregnancy or a birth–what she wants is a child to parent.
- Still Positive After All These Years (from You Just Never Know Where Hope Might Take Ya): A very moving post about how infertility has affected her life. While she is not thankful for infertility, she still gives a nod to all the ways it has influenced her outlook and life experience. And in turn, she gives weight and love to her loss.
- Controlled and Focused Anger (from The Angry Infertile): An open note to an anonymous commenter who didn’t understand the anger behind the words–a rallying cry for everyone fed up with infertility.
- To My Cyst (and the response) (from Fertility Alphabet Soup): If you think your Aunt Jane comes up with terrible advice, try taking it from the cyst in your left ovary–funny and sad at the very same time.
- Holding it Together, Falling Apart (from The Road Less Travelled): The post begins with a story: the author remains calm in the crisis only to breakdown once the crisis has been managed. And this is a small window into the world of stillbirth–of not only staring a what if in the face, but wading through it for ten years–and understanding why the emotions bubble back up time and time again.
- Two Years Ago (from Not The Path I Chose): A very moving account of the ectopic pregnancy she experienced two years earlier and the loss of her left tube.
- Balloons….Everywhere You Look (from Helping Make Sense): An absolutely perfect analogy for how the visual reminders of infertility–babies, for one–can affect the viewer. A window into the experience for anyone open-hearted enough to look through it and truly see.
- Starting Over (from Rebuilding Myself): A post that will send chills down your arms–the author compares trying to reach parenthood to a race, with some of the runners unencumbered by baggage and others trying to complete the race with heavy packs on their back.
- Dear Sperm: Find the Goddamned Egg (from Knocked Up, Knocked Down): An open note to sperm which begins: “We, the undersigned, hereby issue this notice of formal reprimand for the following violation: not finding the goddamned egg.” A very funny, tongue-in-cheek post reminding sperm that they were hired for one job only, and a job for which they had an impressive resume.
- Dear Santa (from Saucy Ova): A very fair letter to Santa, coming many years after her previous letters have been sent, asking not for things that are outside of Santa’s range of expertise, but instead of intangible courage to get through the emotions that tend to choke her during the season. A beautiful post and a reminder of how difficult holidays can be during infertility and loss.
- Mother’s Day for the Accidental Non-Mom (from LaurieWrites): After reading posts from those child-free by choice, an accidental non-mom explains that her feelings are far from ambivalent and she has always wanted to parent. The author redefines wikipedia’s entry on being child-free, explaining that circumstances sometimes place you in categories you never wished to be. A beautiful post for Mother’s Day.
- Getting There (from G-d Given Passions): A wonderful analogy to how it feels to have her husband moving slower emotionally through the adoption process and what she is missing herself when she is speeding along.
- 6 Months Today (from It’s Unusual): A reflection six months after the loss of her son, Rogan. Her family gives her a bench where she sits and thinks and the inscription reads: “When tomorrow starts without me try to understand / an angel came and called my name, then took me by the hand.” A wistful, quiet post.
- Labels (from Thinking Miracles): A very powerful post; the author reflects on all of the labels that have never bothered her over the years and the one that hurt her tremendously when she read it on her chart.
- 60 Seconds Of Pure Magic (from The Other Side): A woman gets to set down her emotional baggage for sixty seconds and rest. While she knows other women get to experience pregnancy burden-free, she is just grateful for the short period of time where she was simply a pregnant woman just like every other pregnant woman and fulfilling the swimming daydream she had been mentally keeping for six years.
- Make It Rain (from There’s a Baby at the End of This, Right?): The author returns to the worst day of her life–the last time she walked in the rain and the day she discovered that her IVF cycle didn’t work. A heartbreaking post of the emotional side of IVF.
- Dear Me (from Getting There): A letter written back to her seventeen-year-old self where she gives sage advice including don’t forget that your parents are getting older as you are getting older and a promise that there will be trials in the future that she can’t tell herself about now. She writes: “I won’t tell you know because it will seem irrelevant and you will not understand. But you will get through it; because you are a stronger person than you can ever imagine.” I bawled reading that line and I’m still crying now as I write this blurb.
- Can I Step Off This Roller Coaster, Please? (from More Than Dog Children): After the highs of putting on the baby’s first diaper and bonding with the family, the reality of adoption creeps in when the mother takes home the child for a week to think about the adoption plan. A moving post about being in a state of emotional limbo.
- Two Weeks! (from Clio): A sweet post about the changes that have taken place in the first two weeks of her daughter’s life.
- Dr ‘Speed’ (from We Say IVF They Say FIV): A story about “Dr. Speed,” the sonographer at the practice who moves women through the ultrasound line at lightning speed as well as a dream that somewhat comes to life inside the ultrasound room.
- I’m Sorry I Was Mean (from Waiting for the Ukulele): An apology to a woman who asked a question and received the weight of stored anger from the author–a story of how what might have felt right in the moment makes her feel remorseful upon reflection.
- Why do Old Habits Die So Hard? (from My Many Blessings): A moving post about mental health and pregnancy loss. After working so hard to control her anxiety attacks, the author has one while pregnant with her second son after many prior losses. She debates going back on medication and how the whole event makes her feel.
- My Heart is Breaking (from A New Wheeler for the World?): The cry that comes regardless of what you already know when you receive the phone call that you’re not pregnant. A post about how our heart is always drawn towards hope and how it feels when reality brings it back to the present.
- Enfolding (from Production, Not Reproduction): A beautiful post about open adoption that begins with a christening dress that has been passed down through four generations of women and a quilt that spent a commensurate amount of time being passed through her daughter’s first family and how these two pieces of fabric come together to create the whole picture.
- The Difference an IFer Feels about Her Children (from The New Life of Nancy): While she states that the love remains the same from mother to mother, the author points out the changes that she has undergone in regards to her children due to infertility. She has learned what she would be willing to endure to have a child and infertility has made her a better mother in her eyes.
- This is Too Much (from The Other Life of Nancy): Though the author loves being pregnant, moving deeper into the infertility world has made her conscious of the way she speaks and presents her current pregnancy. A post about circumspection and perspective.
- Sorry, Can’t Help You (from Sunny in Seattle): A very funny post where the author imagines herself attending an alumni function and speaking to prospective students about everything that has happened since college.
- Hard Horrible Days (from Mrs. Maynard-It’s Us Against the World): The author asks the eternal question: “how is a person supposed to have faith” when bad things happen to good people. A post written a week after her son’s birth who was born still, she describes the way her entire body cries.
- Sharing (from My Pathway to Motherhood): The author wonders why she holds people at arms length when it comes to letting them into her journey to conceive. A quiet, inquisitive post that will make the reader consider their own relationships.
- Maybe Some Day (from You’re Still Young!): The author muses on the return of her Shabbat ritual which fell to the wayside when the tears began encroaching upon the entire Friday night ceremony. The act of bringing back the ritual serves as a reminder of what she wants in her future.
- What I Said (from Communique): A fantastic analogy to the author’s experience with running. When she first began running, she wasn’t necessarily the best, but she could keep up with the group. After she took off a bit to recuperate from an injury, she found that she could no longer keep up with the group. She has no intention of quitting trying to reach parenthood as she did with running, and the analogy gives her insight into her determination.
- Creation (from Solo Trekking Through Recurrent Miscarriage): A very important post about following your passion, about noting what makes you happy and doing those things–not as a side note to life, but as life itself.
- Last Thoughts on that Bitterness Post (from Tragic Optimist): Musings on the idea of envy, especially as it relates to conception stories. Though she wouldn’t trade her daughter for the world and even loves the way she persevered through infertility, she admits that conception stories bring out her jealousy and she wishes she had one that she could tell with a wink.
- Rainbows (from Of Love and Loss): The author finds greater meaning in the rainbows of life, their ephemeral beauty, and how we need to note these moments of unpredictable loveliness.
- Taking Center Stage (from Ruminations): The author notes our human tendency to want others to acknowledge the things that are most important in our lives but also admits that it is impossible to reach the same level of passion if you haven’t personally experienced the situation. A great post giving nod to others while also requesting respect for her world view.
- F*ck Normal (from Falling or Flying): The author’s concept of normal has changed so drastically that she is having a difficult time navigating her new space. Every moment hurts and she is essentially searching for a moment of peace, where she can rest and not consider everything she has gone through up until this point.
- Making of a Parent (from Our Surrogacy Adventure): The author, from a blended family, writes: “My parents are my parents because they love me not because we share genetics.” An adoptee muses on the thought of using a surrogate and what makes a family become a family. An important post to read to gain a new perspective on when children push their parents away.
- You’ll Be Blessed… (from What To Expect When You’re NOT Expecting): During the two week wait from IVF #3, the author cannot help but hope that the three embryos inside her will stick around and become the baby she always dreamed she’d have with her husband’s red hair and her green eyes. She waits, consumed by the what ifs, and hoping that she will one day have a house that is never quiet.
- Praying for Grace (from Divine Secrets of the Infertility Sisterhood): A post about “answer envy”–that jealousy that comes when you hear that someone else who had the same wish as you had their needs met when you have not. The author speaks about the three pregnancy announcements she faced during the week and how hard it can be to be happy in the face of another person’s good news when you are sad.
- In Which A Miserable Lunch Comes To Represent My Struggle With Infertility (from Working On It): The author has food allergies and a painful lunch out becomes analogous to infertility with the same isolating effect as others eat what they wish around her while her own option is a cold salad. A great post about how much we lose with isolating experiences when it comes to time within community and with friends.
- Cheated (from Our Own Creation): The author deals with her enormous grief by listing all the ways she has been cheated by life when it comes to her path to parenthood from infertility to the loss of her son, Lennox. A very moving post written while her daughter, Zoe, was still alive, it is hard to read it without adding to the list and wanting to envelope the author in a hug. The anger is such a deep presence in this post and it becomes a cry for a modicum of fairness in life.
- Tick… tick… tick… tick…… (from Option Adoption): Unlike the traditional two week wait, the period of time before the author learns whether she has passed her homestudy is experienced without searching for signs. And it is the lack of physical symptoms–in other words, the quietness–that is the hardest part of the wait.
- Catching You Up…Childless (from On The Outside Looking In: My Struggle with Infertility): The word “childless” inside a poem serves as an anchor to the thought, a statement of the present as well as a fearful peek into a possible future. A spiritual post about finding peace inside a place of pain.
- Sadness, Love, Joy (from Nonlinear Girl): After describing sadness as a heavy coat, the author explains the reasons why she has been able to shed her jacket and remain at peace during this last failed cycle. It is about finding happiness in the small ways people connect in the face of a crisis.
- SOS from the Qantas Club (from Dr Barreness): The author, stuck on a vacation with family, learns that her brother’s wife is expecting again. Cramped in the back seat of a small car with her niece, she endures a long conversation about his happiness while silently considering her own sadness.
- Our Story and Other Random Thoughts… (from Almost There…): When her church asks her to write out her four year struggle to build her family, the author isn’t sure that she can put the experience into words. But once she sits down to write it, the whole story flows. A tale about a family forming through adoption.
- A Pep Talk of a Different Kind (from Musings of a Fat Chick): A very funny open note to the sperm that have just entered her body begging them to just swim towards the egg.
- To My Baby (from EmptyHug): A not-yet mother writes a beautiful note to her future child, pointing out the difference between a child who is merely conceived in the uterus and one that is also conceived long beforehand in the heart.
- A Nice Sort of Day (from Miss E’s Musings): The way the world looks when springs–both figuratively and literally–come around on the calendar. A sweet post about happiness after a long wait.
- The Next Frontier (from Indyness): One of the most interesting and eye-opening posts I read all year: the author explains why they’ve chosen adoption as well as their limits within adoption. She writes: “Pregnancy fucks with her identity too much. I get that. Not getting pregnant seriously fucks with my identity.” And I think it is a beautiful post about respecting others as well as understanding that our unique vision is what makes us human and wonderful and that should always be honoured.
- Love is Looking at Life in an Uncomplicated Way… (from The Unfair Struggle): For those outside the experience who ask “whose fault is it,” a post showing that infertility is a condition of the couple. A post about the strength of a marriage and a couple who stands together in the experience.
- Seasons (from Indisputable Topcat): A very moving post from a wife to her husband who is battling cancer, who has battled so much else before this, and how much her heart needs a figurative spring to come again.
- Dear Tammy (from Pixie’s Dust): A beautiful post about the Names in the Sand project. A woman tries to make sense of the losses she has experienced.
- The Dreams Continue (from Heeeeere Storkey, Storkey!): The author recounts a nightmare which is more than just a dream; it is a reliving of a terrible hospital stay with her son. This is a post about the ways stress manifests itself inside the heart, mind, and body.
- He Can Get it with a Scalpel to his Testicles (from Infertility Drama): After reaching the second trimester, the author discusses the concept of permanent birth control in the future after her mother-in-law suggests that they stop trying to have children after the birth.
- Pineapples (from Ophelia’s Revival): An incredibly moving post that will send chills down both arms as you learn why the author can never eat pineapple again.
- Grams and Pops (from All That She Wants): I don’t know why this post made me burst into tears, but the ending was so incredibly moving. A post about a family giving support in a quiet, concrete way.
- What If (from I Want To Be A Mommy): The author stares a “what if” in the eyes and blinks. She recognizes that dealing with the fear is all part of the mourning process and that hope will return with the next cycle, but in the moment, all she can do is become lost in the thought.
- Wearing Each Other’s Shoes — Sympathy vs. Empathy (from ISO the Golden Egg): Empathy, the author states, is trying on another person’s pain and the key to true empathy is being fearless. She muses on the origins of empathy and the examples of it that she has witnessed across the blogopshere.
- The Best Part Of Being Married To A German (from Bee In The Bonnet): The author recounts a visit to an Oktoberfest celebration and tells a story that comes on the heels of a few too many beers. Though she has recently lost weight, she plays down this fact when speaking with another woman, insisting that she is still fat. The story becomes an analogy of whether infertility becomes part of our identity in the same way any formative experience can linger long after the fact.
- Sad Day (from No Swimmers in the Tubes, no Bun in the Oven): The author takes home her twins from the funeral home and curls up in their room with the urn to mourn. A moving account of the aftermath of a loss.
- Hello G-d (from Living Without Brenna): The author explains how deeply she has always trusted G-d and how betrayed she felt when she awoke after the birth and discovered her daughter was gone. Her child dying was never a thought she considered and when it occurred, it felt like all of the trust she had put into G-d during the pregnancy had been mishandled. The author comes to a place of peace, stating that while she may not be able to see the big picture now, that she needs to trust that everything has happened for a reason.
- Raw Cookie Dough, Tortilla Chips & Queso Dip (from MeAndBaby’s Blog): The author, family building while single, wonders if she will ever have the child she wants and if she has made the best choice. A post written in the throes of frustration and sadness as part of the larger mourning process.
- Dear John (from Tales from My Dusty Ovaries): The post that kicked off the most amusing meme in a long time–a long list of the common posts that crop up on infertility blogs. Count how many you’ve written yourself.
- IF Is Like a Necklace (from In Search of Biscuit 2.0): The author comments on how infertility rears its head throughout her life–from the way she hears comments to the scheduling of work. A post about not being able to set infertility aside for a bit when it keeps returning to the space around her neck.
- Journeymen (from The Echo of Infertility): Dissatisfied with the terms victim or survivor since they don’t quite fit, the author chooses the term journeyman, a traveler guided by hope. A post explaining the path she has walked.
- Infertility Awareness Week (from Turkey In My Oven): With an image of penguins falling off an iceberg, the author explains how she has been able to mentally put infertility to the side for a bit.
- Parenthetical Morning Musings Probably Best Left in My Head (from Lost in Taipei – Made in Taiwan): Though the author admits the musings were probably left best in her head, a period through prose poetry.
- Anger (from My Scar Smiles at Me, I Don’t Always Smile Back): Though the post begins with an admittance that the author is jealous of those who can write about their anger, she comes into her own by the end paragraph, explaining just how hard it is to start family building when you come from a place of doubt rather than happiness.
- A Sonnet (from Sluggish Butterfly): A gorgeous poem after a loss. The author states this was the only way to explain her grief and the reader must concur that she said it perfectly.
- 9dp3dt – or, How I Survived Another Thanksgiving Without A Child (from Sprogblogger’s Weblog): A very clever satire drawing a line between the creation of a proper Thanksgiving dinner and a baby, with equally sad results for the waiting family members if neither come to fruition. A wonderful post that should become a Thanksgiving classic.
- What It Was Like (from Twin Peas Blog and Podcast): Prematurity and infertility often go hand-in-hand and the author recounts the premature birth of her twin daughters for National Prematurity Awareness Month. A post that explains, as the title states, what it was like.
- In Stirrups Once Again (from On the Road to Baby): The author explains the process of an IUI to the reader to distract herself on the first day of the two week wait.
- Testing…Testing…1,2, 65 Million (from This is my Life…): A great post to read before your first trip to the RE. The author walks the reader through her first visit to the clinic where she was given the diagnosis of infertility.
- The Unanswerable Question (from The Story of Me): The author asks if the pain of infertility ever fades–if yes, then when and if no, then why. She explains that even though she is now a mother to twins, she does not see herself as healed. A moving post about life after losing her husband and longing.
- A Day in the Life of Male Infertility, aka Wakey Wakey Hands on Snakey (from The Great Big If): He had me with the subtitles. An informative AND funny post by The Great Big If’s husband describing the male side of fertility treatments.
- I Know I Am Young (from Aurelia Ann): The author explains why the phrase “you’re still young” doesn’t bring her any comfort after three losses. A post about statistics and reality and the hope that defies both.
- To Stress or Not To Stress (from The Therapist is In): A perfect way of explaining the stress of infertility to an outsider that asks the hidden question: how does one choose to not feel the stress of infertility?
- Deathstar (from A Woman My Age): The author explains how she came to her blogging name, Deathstar. It is a moving story about a daughter becoming a caregiver and how the last two years of caring for her mother have affected her emotionally.
- Why I’m Not Giving Up… Yet (from Rachel’s Scrambled Eggs): In a small series of thoughts, the author muses on what to do next in terms of family building. She describes seeing herself with a third child as “so clearly, it’s like I’m psychic, like I’m not seeing a fantasy, but the future.” A sweet post written on a day when she finally has a moment of quiet to think.
- Father’s Day (from Henry Street): A wife writes about the pain her husband feels from his own childhood as well as the fact that he wants to be a father, tying in a tribute to Tim Russert and Father’s Day. By becoming a father himself, perhaps he could give his child what his father could never give him and his wife wants so badly to help him achieve that dream.
- The Christmas Tree: A Story of Remembering and Looking Forward (from So these are the Days of my Life): The author describes her childhood Christmas tree as well as the one she created as an adult in her own home. Though her tree has a theme, she broke that theme to hang an ornament last year remembering the baby she lost. This year, she hung the ornament again along with one honouring the child born this year, Hailey. A post about remembering everyone through the tradition of the tree.
- A Long December (from Common Misconception): December is the hardest month because, as the author says, a year closes regardless of your permission. A post about the baby she lost and the pain she still feels as she waits to become a parent.
- What If You Knew You Would Never Be A Mom? (from In Due Time): The author’s mother asks her what she will do with her life if she never becomes a parent; why she isn’t planning for that possibility as strongly as she is planning on reaching parenthood one day. And the author’s answer is that it simply isn’t an option.
- Equal Parents in an Unequal World (from Unwellness): The author addresses her own plea: “We have to be so, so careful not to raise yet another generation of children who see ‘dad’ as a secondary, unnecessary role.” A very thought-provoking post on how to break through the mindset that the parent at home is the expert.
- Saved through the Fire (from Cherished): The author explains her belief that while she may pray for G-d to help her before the fire, she feels that G-d helps her inside the fire nonetheless.
- Adoption, In All Its Glory May Not Be the Answer (from Normal Is Just a Setting on My Dryer): A raw, honest post explaining why adoption isn’t a good fit for the author. It is an interesting exploration of the lens we use to see the world.
- Our First Ultrasound (from Praying for a Little One): A story about the best day of the author’s life when she heard her baby’s heartbeat for the first time. The post ends with thankfulness, not just for the child but for her greater appreciation of the miracle of life.
- My Feet Keep Me Running, My Wings Make Me Fly (from Joelle In Real Life): As she rounds on the fourth mile of the race, the author seeks the internal drive to keep running and finds it in the memory of her lost child who she always thinks about as she runs.
- First. Most. Everything. (from OrdinaryArt): The intensity of love between mother and child and back again will blow you away, make you sit with the post for a long time and consider the simple complexity of the emotion.
- Photo Down Memory Lane (from Fertilized): The author posts a picture of herself that made her sad when she first saw it; a reminder of a time in her life when she was deeply unhappy. She reclaims this moment by adding to it a picture of the child she finally had years after the original photo was taken.
- One More Reason to Talk about Vaginas (from Eye Heart Internet): The author explains how the trauma of treatments has kept her away from the stirrups as she deals with the emotional fallout from the experience and how it helped set them on the path to adoption which had always been part of the plan.
- Dear Self… (from Riding the Roller Coaster): On the eve of her beta, the author writes a letter to herself to read tomorrow in case she receives bad news. It is not only a wonderful post to herself, but a great idea for others to try as well.
- Neon (from One Small Wish): After a woman confides that her husband doesn’t want children yet, she returns three months later with news of the 17th week of her pregnancy. A post where you will cringe for the author as she hears the news at work and needs to hide in the bathroom to have a cry.
- Moon after Moon (from Dancing with Gaia): A beautiful and sad image of the egg and sperm floating beside each other in her body, simply side by side, month after month after month.
- The Long Appointment (from Creating Motherhood): A post from an early OB appointment also detailing the insurance program she used to cover her medical bills. A sweet post because it comes after a long wait to get to that OB appointment and also helpful for anyone else finding themselves without insurance.
- Memories to Last a Lifetime (from When Hello Means Goodbye): A gorgeous letter to her lost child that will move you to tears as you read it and see the joy captured on the expectant parent’s faces until the final picture of saying goodbye.
- Falling for Hope (from Good Egg Hunting): Observing the students returning to school and the smell of fall makes the author want to sharpen her #2 pencils. For fourteen years, fall represents a new beginning with the start of school and standing at the start of her first IVF cycle, it is impossible not to wish for the innocence she once felt worrying about her math teacher or if her friend was in her class.
- IVF is Not for Sissies (from Tales of the Phoenix): The author explains the other side to IVF, giving reasons why it isn’t the best choice for everyone wishing to reach parenthood. A reminder that just because a choice is there doesn’t mean a person needs to take it.
- All About Genes (from It’s Either Sadness or Euphoria): Rather than brush her feelings to the side, the author addresses the loss she feels in not passing along her gametes while at the same time making plans to ensure that her child feels connected to family. A post that will make you think for a long time.
- Anonymous Ignoramous (from My Journey to Mommyhood): An open note to the anonymous commenter who passed judgment after her miscarriage. The author explains her choices and reminds the reader that her blog is her space. And those who live in glass houses should never throw stones.
- The Wise Ones (from Hot Mama Bear’s Premature Delivery- When the Water Breaks): In a beautiful post, the author reflects on two losses–the loss of her mother and the loss of her baby–and how both experiences are questions that hold no answers as well as events that make it impossible to return to who you were before the loss.
- What a Day (from Our Journey to Adopt Grace): You will not be able to get through this post without crying: a family finally comes together after a three year wait. As the mother states, the last five minutes before you hold your baby are the hardest. A celebration of love.
- Don’t Worry… You’ve Got PLENTY of Time! (from And This is Our Life…): Rather than asking for a child, the author asks G-d to remove her desire to have children; to feel pain over seeing a child and finding herself childless. She explains the need for their break and seeks comfort in taking back control of her life.
- It’s Mine, It Is All Mine (from Wonderful Thing): Though the post starts out in an Anneish, happy place, it comes back to the heart of the matter which is a woman who wants a child and fears another loss. A sweet, sad, silly post where the author shines through her words.
- Peace, Baby (from Infertile Ground): The author writes of her loss: “our bean’s heart had just recently stopped. Amazingly, my heart is still beating. Even broken it finds a way to keep me going.” A moving post about the peace she found even as the world fell apart.
- If My Infertility Can’t Kill Me Emotionally, It Will Kill Me Physically (from This Cross I Embrace): A cringe-worthy post detailing a botched insertion of a mid-line catheter–the physical side to infertility.
- I Survived….. (from Are We There Yet): After a long stretch of not holding babies for fear of breaking down emotionally, the author holds a baby and discovers wells of internal strength she didn’t even know that she had.
- Saying No to Stress (from Birds and Squirrels): The conversations that can go horrible awry when good-intentioned in-laws collide with fertility treatment information. The author gets out of cooking a spontaneous Thanksgiving dinner and instead tells a story of a conversation with her in-laws when they tried to understand follicle scans.
- I Think I’m Pregnant….But I Know I’m Not (from Little Pieces of My Life): The author explains why she thinks she’s pregnant but how she knows she’s not–essentially an ode to the body that makes us believe one thing while the heart believes another.
- The Refining Fire (from A Fifth Season): In a gorgeous poem comparing her daughter’s death to a refining fire, the author explains how the event has burned away the debris and left a clearing with space for knowledge to grow.
- I Wish I Were Alone (from Child of G-d): A beautiful list of how she wishes she were the only one dealing with the emotional affects of infertility, but it is precisely the fact that she is not the only one that also brings her comfort.
- The Road Not Taken (from Firefly Dreams): The author writes of her trust in her faith and how she ultimately believes that one day she will conceive without assistance.
- Becoming a Single Mother by Choice (from SMC Down Under): After seeing the world with two choices, the author’s view opens up as she realizes there are more ways to create a family. She takes the first brave steps to becoming a single mother by choice.
- One Year Ago… (from Faith, Hope & Poop): A moving post written on the one year anniversary of the day the author received the call that would change their lives forever. They matched with an expectant mother and adopted a son soon after. A reflection on where she was one year earlier.
- Dear Me… (from Find Joy in Every Journey): Inspired by a song she heard on the radio, the author writes a note to herself on her wedding day, giving herself insight into the years ahead.
- Cheers to you! (Hic) (from IVF on the Down Low): Kicking 2008’s ass out the door and raising a glass to 2009 despite the fact that stormy weather is on the horizon.
- I Think Someone Needs to be Hit with the Sensitivity Stick (from …Into the Womb): An example of what not to say or do; the author recounts a conversation (with requisite baby holding) with friends who give her advice on relaxing during fertility treatments.
- To My Dear Friend on the Day After Her Wedding (from One Good Egg): I cried hard reading this post. It is an incredibly well-written letter-never-sent to a best friend the day after her wedding. It is all the things the author wishes for her, and, in turn, also all of the things she hopes she never has to experience.
- A Very Interesting Heart… (from Three of a Kind Working on a Full House…): A gorgeous post about reading her daughter’s autopsy report. Upon learning that the doctor wrote that Molly had a “very interesting heart,” the author explains this need to learn everything she possibly can about the daughter she will not get to watch grow up.
- Happy Tummy Moment (from There’s Hope): A sign at a restaurant reminds the author of the happiness she felt after seeing the double pink lines.
- 2008: The Year I Let Love Win (from An Accident of Hope): A beautiful post about reclaiming sanity and happiness, reflecting on the choices before her. After letting emotions run their course, the author explains how they need to make their choices out of love rather than a will to conquer infertility.
- What I Wish I Had Known (from Patiently Waiting): A fantastic post of advice the author wished she had received about infertility; written to a friend still back in the trenches while her heart was hurting.
- For Your Entertainment… (from I Am The Genetic Mule): A very funny post about people who have been struggling for so long with something other than infertility…
- Support (from Bio Girl): Gratitude not about infertile, but about the support they have to help them through the crisis. From family and friends to sites such as Cyclesistas–the author explains how knowing people have your back is just as important in knowing how to give yourself an injection.
- The Bond (from I Won’t Fear Love): A beautiful and moving post about a bond between brother and sister–one above ground and one buried below–and how a child processes loss in her own unique way.
- Ok (from Elm City Dad): On a blog written by a couple, the words of Elmcitymom, explaining that even if she looks fine, beneath the surface, she is anything but okay. And, as she explicitly states, that’s okay.
- Dear Judaism, I Am Here (from Journeywoman): A gorgeous post about the deeply honest letter the author is planning to send to shuls she is considering joining. Most importantly, it raises some very real issues that every clergyperson should read in order to create a more inclusive community that retains members.
- He Maketh Me to Lie Down in Green Pastures (from Restoreth My Soul): With the start of the blog, the author muses on the space she thought she would create and wonders about the space she will create.
- September 2008 (from The Real Bean): One of the most heartbreaking stories you’ll ever read; the author gives birth at 20 weeks to three perfect sons who live briefly and are deeply loved.
- One Year Later… (from A Sibling for Celia): On the one year anniversary of her transfer, the author muses on the path taken and the son now asleep beside her. The most moving line of the post is a statement that many will understand: “How something so awful can bring such joy in the end, I’ll never fully comprehend.”
- Apology (from Infertile. Who, Me?): A beautiful letter to her body which serves as a reminder to herself that she is so much more than her infertility.
- Bellies (from Beatitude of the Mundane): The author, an adoptee, describes how she views family building and observing her friend’s first moments as a parent.
- But Even If He Does Not (from Becoming A Different Person): A post about finding faith; about praying not for the positive but the ability to handle the negative.
- Cycle 3, How I Love Thee… (from Making Me Mom): An ode to the author’s self back at the 3rd cycle of TTC, when she felt hopeful and excited. It is a post about the ways we change and the coping techniques we pick up along the journey.
- I Have a Secret (from A Maybe Story): A heartbreaking post that begins with a secret–the author’s hatred for another person–and then works backwards through the story. It is a post about self-forgiveness and our secret fears.
- Universal Ache (from Elm City Dad): On a blog written by a couple, the words of Elmcitydad, explaining how he is not angry at G-d in the face of his son’s death. You will cry with the final thought about how sad he is that his son is not here and how he believes G-d is too.
- Our Real Life (from A Real Life): An ode to real life, with all of its messiness and disappointment and grief. As the author flips through Christmas cards with her husband, they come to the same conclusion that they would much rather have the life they live than to present their life as anything other than the full truth.
- Giving Thanks (from Fertile Fantasy): A list of thankgiving–for her health and husband and the twins that have finally begun to kick.
- Trying….. (from Our Journey of Love, Patience, & Perseverance): On a cycle which may be her last for a bit, the author reflects on how life has changed–from a fear of needles to waiting anxiously for injectables to begin. Written at the beginning of the cycle, she talks about the emotions that start her off down this path.
- Message to My Baby (from Lifeslurper): A beautiful post written to her not-yet baby explaining how much they already wish he or she were here.
- Emotional Download (from The Olsons): The author tries to process the deep emotional pain that comes after a loss. A wonderful post about taking everything out of your heart and laying it out on the screen.
- This is What I Want Lil M to Know (from To China and Back…and Beyond): A fantastic post telling her daughter all of the wishes she has for her including “I celebrate who you are. I want you to celebrate who you are.”
- Anguish & Grief (from Child Free after Infertility): A post that reminds that having great grief over infertility does not mean that you do not also have great faith. Drawing from the story of Hannah, the author explains how her brokenness makes her feel closer to G-d.
- Two Months Down (from What Wuz I Saying?): An adoptive mother-to-be wonders about what the expectant mum is feeling over on the other side of the world as she is halfway through her pregnancy.
- Insights From the Mat (from Inside the Parsonage): The author discusses a passage from the Bible that has informed the way she views faith and the gratitude she feels helping others as well as being helped herself.
- The Last One (from Adventures of Jen & Tiff): A doctor admits that the author is the last one in a group of women who he has been treating that has not been able to become pregnant, and she sits with those words, wondering why things have turned out this way for her.
Blogs that Closed in 2008**
We’re so sorry to see these blogs missing from the Blogosphere. Every piece of writing changes a person’s perspective of their own journey. The world was changed by their words.
The Infertility Times
Round is Funny
Thai Us Together
Russian Adoption DVA (now blogging at The Long and Winding Road to Home)
Baby Proof
I Don’t Want Sextuplets
Super Ovum
The Anguished Corn
The Fertile Phase
The RE’s Muse
And a place of honour: Lemmondrops (we’ll miss you, Emilie)
The Creme de la Creme of 2007
The Creme de la Creme of 2006
January 1, 2009 Comments Off on The Creme de la Creme of 2008
Time Again for the Creme
Updated: the List was posted on January 1st and can be read by clicking here. Please continue reading below to see how you can have your blog post added to the list.
I seriously can’t believe it is already mid-November and time to kick off the Creme de la Creme list for 2008. Last year, I waited until the first week in December, but this project honestly needs about six weeks to get it off the ground. So, I hereby declare the Creme de la Creme list open. I know this is loooooong, but please read this whole post before submitting your entry.
If you’ve been reading my blog for more than a year, you’re probably already familiar with the Creme de la Creme list. Even so, read below because I’ve instituted a few rules this year to make it run smoothly (at least on my end!). If you’re not familiar with the Creme de la Creme, read below as well so you can see how to get your blog on the list.
If you didn’t read or participate in this list in 2006 or in 2007, the impulse behind this list are the ubiquitous award ceremonies that crawl out of their hiding spaces usually around December or January. Awards are nice–it’s good to honour someone and mark big accomplishments. But we all have a best post tucked into our archives. We all have words that have moved another person or ideas that have kicked off a series of musings. Bloggers are writers and all of us deserve to be celebrated.
And we’re doing just that.
This is the way it works. If you want to participate, read through your archives and choose a favourite post. You can leave all sorts of comments below telling me how fantastic I am, but fill out the form to send in your submission (do not leave it in the comments section–the point of this list is also the surprise of seeing the choices revealed on a single day). If you post your link below, I will probably delete it. Again, feel free to leave love comments below–in fact, please do leave love comments below–just not your submission for the list. Let’s keep it a surprise until the list is ready to go up.
You can only choose one entry. You cannot be modest. Everyone has a best post. There is no such thing as a boring blog. Even if you don’t think you have any readers because you’ve never received a comment, you have a best post. The one that you felt really good about when you hit publish. The one that would be the post you’d put forward if an editor called you tomorrow and said, “I have this great writing job for you that will pay a million dollars an hour. You just need to submit one blog entry to get this job so we can check your writing style.”
Even if you just found my blog because you read about the Creme de la Creme on another person’s blog, you are not only welcome to submit; you are encouraged. It is the best posts of 2008 for the infertility/loss/adoption community and that community includes anyone who writes about infertility, adoption, pregnancy loss, neonatal and infant death, assisted reproduction, and every related topic–from living child-free after infertility to parenting after infertility. Everyone on my enormous blogroll is welcome to participate and everyone I haven’t found yet too. Really, you don’t need to be a regular reader of my blog to join in. It’s open to everyone in the IF/loss/adoption blogosphere. I can’t say this in more ways than that. Which means you don’t need to write me a note asking if it’s okay to participate. The answer is yes. Okay?
Actually, it’s not only “yes” it’s “please do.”
The list will be posted January 1st and I promise that you will use up a good portion of the beginning of the year reading through the most stunning posts you’ve ever seen. We had about 160 posts last year and I’d really like to top that this year. My goal is all 1500+ blogs currently on the blogroll, but baring that, let’s aim for over 200. Which means that not only do you have to participate if you’re reading this, but you need to spread the word and get other bloggers to participate (more on that below). Link to this post, send out a note to other bloggers you like, and suggest favourite posts to bloggers from this past year.
Um…other FAQ-like things:
How many posts can I submit?
You can only submit one. Please don’t submit two and ask me to choose. Submit one.
How will I know that you received my entry?
I will send out a mass email once a day to all of the people who submitted their entry. I use the “bcc” line on the email so that people don’t see each other’s email address. The only drawback is that these emails sometimes go into spam filters. Therefore, once you submit, check your email and spam filter for a day or two. If you don’t hear from me, send me an email if you’re concerned that it didn’t go through. I hate being impersonal like that, but the list took a long time to put together last year hence why I’m starting even earlier this year.
I sent in a post last week but I just wrote one that I love more! Can I switch my submission?
The short answer is no. The reason is that I write up the blurbs that appear next to each entry. This takes a lot of time. When you change your post, I have to write another blurb. Therefore, think carefully. But get your post in early so it’s high up on the list. But take your time picking it so you’re positive it’s the one you want on the list. But don’t give this too much thought…
If you just submitted it an hour earlier and realized you sent the wrong link, email me quickly so I can change it. Once I write the blurb, it’s set. I mean, you can pull your blog from the list, but you can’t submit a different link.
How do I know which one is my best?
Think of this list in sort of the same vein as those “Best American Short Story”-type collections except that it’s blog entries and everyone in the blogosphere should be represented with a link. The idea of the creme de la creme is not to put out there “the best” by someone else’s definition of “best.” It’s to put out the entry that me
ans the most to you. Everyone has a best entry from 2008. It’s the one you would cry about if it was ever eaten by your computer. Even if it’s only meaningful to you.
I’m having a lot of trouble choosing my best one.
Why don’t you give a few choices to a friend and get their opinion? Don’t get hung up on the word “best.” It’s more about presenting a small taste of your blog. A lot of people read the list each January and it’s a chance for them to get to know your blog in one post. The goal, of course, is not only to honour every blog, but to also introduce everyone. Think of it like a cocktail party. You certainly think about what you wear, but everything doesn’t hinge on this one outfit.
I want to submit a post about my dog/favourite recipe/vacation in Hawaii. So…er…it’s not about adoption/infertility/loss. Can I? Or I want to submit a post but it has pictures of my baby in it. Do you think this is okay for an IF list?
Well, this list is sort of a pu-pu platter of the ALI community. Therefore, if your post is about your ski trip last winter, it doesn’t really show any emotion, thought, or event flitting through the community. Still, people have submitted off-topic posts in the past. If you have any part of the post that if ALI-related, all the better though.
The second question is a sensitivity one. Personally, I think that babies are part of the community and territory. The reality is that we’re all working towards parenthood or were once working towards parenthood. And children are included in that. I try to always mention in my blurb if it’s about a baby or if there are photos so people are given a heads up before they click over. So, yes, send posts that have photos in it and I will make sure that people know the gist of the post before they click over if they’re in a sensitive space.
I’m a man. Can I participate?
Are you part of the ALI community? Then didn’t you read above? EVERYONE is invited to participate. Male, female, young, old, gay, straight, everyone everyone everyone.
I’m a dog. Can I participate?
Er…a dog with a blog? An infertile dog with a blog? I guess…I mean…I did say everyone…
I just started my blog in October. Can I participate?
As long as you’ve had one post in 2008, you can participate. Even if you didn’t start your blog until October 2008. Just choose your best from the last two months.
My blog is password protected. Can I participate?
If your blog is password protected and you want to participate, choose your blog entry and create a free blog at Blogger or WordPress and post that single entry. Then send me the link so I can place it on the list. I can’t link to password protected blogs.
When is the deadline for getting in my submission?
To ensure that you’re on the list on January 1st, please fill out the form by December 19th. If you submit after December 19, you will be on the list, but you will probably go up after people have started reading on January 1st.
The 2008 list doesn’t technically close until December of 2009. Which means you can always submit to the list. There’s no such thing as “too late.” Of course, getting it in by the deadline would mean that it’s definitely in when I put it up on January 1st and therefore seen by the most people, but you can submit it whenever you wish.
So, just to reiterate–if you submit before December 19th, you will be on the list on January 1st. If you submit between December 20th and 31st, you may be on the list January 1st, but more likely, you’ll be on some point after January 1st.
Can you post another link to the form right now because I’ve decided to submit.
Sure, here’s another link to the form. Just fill it out and hit send and it will go into the Creme de la Creme spreadsheet.
If you don’t want to participate, do nothing. With the Creme de la Creme List, I never add a blog or highlight a post unless the author has sent it to me. Therefore, no hurt feelings. If your post isn’t on the list, it’s because you haven’t sent one. If you see someone missing from the list after it is posted, go bug them and tell them to submit a post. But don’t send me a note asking me to add them without their permission. I really would like this post to be what the author believes is their best post, but if you are feeling shy and can’t choose, enlist a friend to help you narrow it down and choose your best work.
Lastly, there is another section of the list that needs your help: blogs that closed in 2008. These are blogs that closed entirely–the person stopped blogging and said specifically that they were not going to post any longer–not blogs that went password protected. If you read a blog that closed during 2008, please send me the title of the blog. It doesn’t matter if it was read by one person or read by 5000 people, all blogs should be honoured and recognized. And all blogs stand on the same plateau here.
Spread the word with the following button on a post or your sidebar to encourage others to send a link:
The code for adding the link to your blog can be found here.
Everyone has a best post. It is your personal best. It is not best by any other standards. Stop comparing yourself. Stop feeling shy. Stop thinking it’s immodest to toot your own horn when I’ve told you to toot your own horn. Start reading through your archives. Reflect on the year. And then send me a link for the list.
Wheew. Sorry about that last part. But everyone in the blogosphere should be represented and honoured.
Ooops–and if you’re looking for more stuff to do, go read through the posts from the 2007 list and then visit each blog to see how much life can change in a year.
And credit where credit is due: the utensils that are featured in the icon this year come from this website. I love them even if they’re $250. My goal is to feature new cool flatware each year and of course I have to kick it off the Queen and the King.
November 17, 2008 Comments Off on Time Again for the Creme
The Creme de la Creme of 2007
The Creme de la Creme of 2007
good enough to drink
Other prizes honour only a small handful of blogs. Forget that! We’ve expanded the idea of presenting “the best” to include a post from every blog in the infertility/pregnancy loss/adoption world. This includes those who are the beginning of their journey to those who are in the middle of a hard-won pregnancy to those who are parenting after adoption. Listed below are the best posts of 2007. If you have a blog that chronicles your experience with infertility, pregnancy loss, adoption, or life afterwards and you’re not on this list, send a link of your best post from 2007 to and I’ll add your blog*. In the meantime, happy reading! And leaving a comment on these older posts is not a “may I?” but a “please do.” Comments are how an author knows their words are appreciated.
- Choose-Your-Own-Blog-Adventure ( from Stirrup Queens and Sperm Palace Jesters): Bringing back the 80’s, an infertility adventure where you get to choose Sharon Barren’s path.
- fertileHope (from The Maybe Baby): The Internet not only brings together people, but it led Maybe Baby to her clinic. An eye-opening account about the emotions that come after a life has been saved at the risk of losing ones fertility.
- For Emily (from Here We Go Again): A must read for anyone who has experienced a pregnancy loss; a moving list of advice from a fellow stirrup queen.
- The Others (from Baby Steps to Baby Shoes): Musings on the differences between the silent waiting room and the supportive blogosphere as the writer remembers a woman she saw at her clinic accepting a packet on egg donation. A quiet, curious post.
- Fastest Two Weeks Ever (from Life’s Lost and Found): During a medically-imposed break from treatments, the author meets a woman who has found perfect peace in her inability to get pregnant and discovers what she truly wants.
- For All The Men Out There (from Mission: Impossible): You will never be able to enter the shwanking rooms again with a straight face after reading this rendition of “Beat It:” a loving ode to all the jesters in the sperm palace.
- Faith (from Are We There Yet?!): A moving post explaining how her relationship with G-d has changed as she struggles with infertility, leaving her in a state of questioning and trying to sort out her beliefs.
- I *an infertile* Want to be an Egg Donor! (from No Swimmers in the Tubes, No Bun in the Oven): An explanation of why the author wants to become an egg donor, a desire that began during IVF and strengthened as they moved to IUI with donor sperm.
- 10 Weeks 6 Days (from The Duchess): In the tradition of mothers writing notes to their unborn children, the author composes a letter to her missing left fallopian tube telling it all the things that have been going on since it was removed. Simultaneously funny and sad.
- Time for a Change (from The Idle Mind of Beth): A post that will help you change your own attitude towards life. Without dismissing how deeply we feel our personal “have-nots,” the author turns up the volume on your own personal list of “haves,” making you reevaluate whether the glass is half empty or half full.
- A Little Girl (from They Grow in Your Heart): The night the author learned that she was about to become the mother of a little girl; her conversation with A, the expectant mother, and the feeling of having your life change with a single phone call.
- The Pits of Despair (from Sell Crazy Someplace Else): A breathtaking, angry post raging against a sense of feeling alone within a marriage. The perfect post to read when you are at your breaking point and wonder if anyone else has ever felt this level of anger.
- Two Conversations (from Churp Churp): A well-written and clear explanation of how, for the author, the raising of the child comes out of the relationships. It is not simply the desire to parent, but the desire to parent as a team. And therefore, the longing for the child is also the longing for the relationship. A very honest post.
- No, Not One (from (Un)Fertile Phase): A line from this post sums up life: “Sometimes it’s just getting through the hurt 15 minutes at a time.” A post about a particularly sad day when the memory of how life would be conflicts with what is.
- Pondering (from Ramblings of a 30 Something): The reality of how infertility even informs parenting decisions down the line and how it is still seeping into the author’s life long after the fact. A frank and interesting post.
- Decision, Made (from Or Life is a Bed of Roses): The opening will resonate with almost everyone: “I never, in a million years, thought I’d be at this place at this age.” But the ending, when the reader realizes the decision made will make that opening take on an entirely new meaning. Figure out the clues so you can read along and support this writer on her journey.
- Tea and Empathy (from Just
One Bean): That perfect post that you will want to print out and mail to people when they don’t understand what you’re going through with infertility. A rallying cry that begins: “Is there any kind of personal pain that is so little understood by those not experiencing it?” - Please Stay (from The Waiting Womb): A sweet note for her embryos asking them to please stay made sweeter when you read the rest of her blog and realize that a week later, one of them did.
- Lots of Thinking (from Henry Street): Lots of thinking brings all of the author’s anxieties to the surface–from choosing the next step to wrapping her mind around the ease with which others procreate. A moving and bittersweet post.
- The Meaning of Life, According to Me (from Weebles Wobblog): Bringing meaning to a confusing world. The point? “The play, then, is about finding our way back. To remember we are unlimited.” A post to make you think.
- Battle, Blizzard, Baby Boy? (from Drama2BMama): During the largest snow storm of the year, while the Iraq war rages on the other side of the world, a woman receives the phone call every waiting parent hopes to hear.
- Primary vs. Secondary Infertility (from The New Life of Nancy): The author, who has experienced both primary and secondary infertility, explains how she viewed secondary infertility her first time trying to conceive and how she views it now.
- Sisters Are Amazing Creatures (from A View On My Life): Not only an ode to her sister (whom she loves dearly) but also an ode to how talking to a sensitive and intuitive person can help you to see things you never saw before in your own words.
- Guess What Was on Oprah Today (from Infertility Just Sucks): Coming out to her mother about infertility, the author feels at peace after her mother gives her advice at the end of the conversation: “she told me that it would all work out. She said it with such firmness and finality – just like a mother – that I had no choice but to believe her.”
- Infertility and Fertile Friends (from The Shifty Shadow): You will bawl and nod your way through this post as you read about the chasms that inadvertantly open between mothers of dead children versus mothers of living children. The author explains: “I feel your life as the photo of my negative. What is a baby in your arms is a dark hole in the negative. What is a pregnant belly in your photo is deep blackness in my image.”
- In Her Shoes (from Miss E’s Musings): Read this. I cannot sum it up better than that: read this. Because you are a woman, because every person is creating history, because you will read these stories and see yourself in an entirely new way; which is a common experience when reading this author’s work.
- Weekend Update (from Indi’s Human): A gorgeous post discussing her recent pregnancy loss with her pastor and the words spoken that brought her great comfort: “so even though it was gone as fast as it came, barb’s words felt so validating and so true, right down to my core. That baby was very real, you know.”
- Rainy Friday–Measure of Worth Edition (from Mrs. Spock): I bawled reading this post not only because it was about life and death, but because it was about those moments where another person inadvertently crashes into your life and changes your entire outlook, or in the case of the author, her path as a nurse. A greater analogy for why those infertile fight the good fight.
- Motherhood: From the Other Side of the Glass (from From the Peanut Gallery): An explanation to mothers of how it feels to be on the other side of the glass, especially in a world where “our mothers told us ‘just wait until you have a child’ when we were misbehaving. I just took for granted that I would.”
- Obligatory Single Girl V-Day Post (from Creating Motherhood): A post to revisit every Valentine’s Day where the author explains how her earlier experiences with the holiday shaped how she views the day now. She writes: “You see a girl that didn’t have the flowers from Daddy or the 9th grade boyfriend is a bit damaged. There are tiny cracks on her heart.” It simply makes you want to send her a dozen roses next year, even if you also understand that they would not be the flowers to melt her heart and make the cracks less fragile.
- Lucky (from Our Own Creation): Infertility can wreck havoc on a marriage or it can boil down the relationship to its core essence and show the couple how well-suited they are to manage this life crises together. And this author has won the lottery.
- Remember When I Said I Was at Peace With My Losses? (from My Many Blessings): After so many losses, the author finds peace and sadness staring into the eyes of a baby girl, the first she has held since she learned that her last loss was a girl. This post is made even more moving knowing that in the same year, the author became pregnant again.
- Giving Up Gracefully? (from Beaten But Not Bowed): An explanation of how loss factors into the definition of infertility but also an entirely new way of looking at donor egg–not as a “giving up” but instead simply a different solution to a problem. A post about accepting infertility precisely so you can define what you’re fighting.
- I’ve Always Wanted Braces (from Reproductive Jeans): The post that kicked off the Braces Bunch, a network of infertility bloggers who support each other through negatives and positives. It is also a post about patching over those divisions within infertility–the female factor from the male factor and the unexplained from the diagnosed.
- A Small Lie (from Slaying, Blogging, Whatever… ): The small lies told during secondary IF when you need to explain the lack of a brother or sister to a child. A sweet and sad post made more poignant knowing that IVF #2 worked for them.
- There Once Was a Nurse Named Hilary (from Crazy Lady Ramblings): An everyday post about a trip to the clinic–awful blood draw and sonogram and all–written one day before the author began injections for the first time.
- In a Tizzy About Being Busy (from The Road Less Travelled): A post about how the time of people without children is valued against the time of people with children but also the people who can be simultaneously the most and least understanding. Just as pain is pain and loss is loss, the author concludes that “busy is busy, and tired is tired, no matter how you got there.”
- Hopefully (from Jenn-e-fur’s Oasis): The first time when hope didn’t flood back at the beginning of a cycle. Usually, at the end of a cycle, the author cries, vents, and then picks herself up and looks towards the next try. And then suddenly, hope didn’t reappear.
- Broken Record (from Love Will Tear Us Apart): A post about the fear that can become suffocating, as the author writes: “I feel like there is a broken record playing over and over again in my head, telling me that I might never have a child.” A raw and moving post.
- A Thought of Hope (from Living a New Life with Infertility): How infertility changes a person–sometimes even for the better–because, as the author writes: “Sometimes….thoughts of hope outside of TTC are what we need to continue on the road.”
- Finding My Way Out of the Darkness (from Serenity Now!): A moving post that is an important reminder that everything passes at some point; that when you’re in the middle of the worst, there will be a point in the future where you will be out of the darkness.
- Holiday Preparations of a Different Kind (from Jen & Jeremy: One DINK Couple’s Adventures): A list of what not to say to someone infertile…and why. A new favourite is “just keep it fun!”
- A Real Mom Opens Her Hands (from Production, Not Reproduction): A gorgeous post about what makes someone a mother–it isn’t biology and it isn’t daily care: it is the act of mindfully opening your hands one thousand different ways.
- The Unexplained (from A Little Sweetness): A post about the frustrations of unexplained infertility. The author says it perfectly when she explains: “Society doesn’t really put too much stock into things that are unexplained….As adults if we can’t see it, touch it, or smell it, we don’t seem to believe it’s true.” Where does that leave the 20% struggling in the category of unexplained infertility? A frank and thought-provoking post.
- Bandaging the Seams (from Road Blocks and Rollercoasters): A post that brings clarity to some people’s overwhelming need to fix situations where they perceive something is wrong; yet there is nothing to mend the broken woman who is not actually broken.
- Bow Chicka Bow Bow (from The Smarshy Files): The insider’s guide to the myriad of porn selections to help with the semen analysis…and why sometimes good guys hope for bad results.
- I Ovulated! And an Anger Rant (from A Sibling for Celia): The perfect post to read when you are sitting with your anger and you don’t want to be alone. This writer understands and says, “I wish it was OK for a grown woman to sit, cry, and pound her fists against a pillow and saying ‘but it’s not fair!’.”
- Unequivocal (from Project Progeny): A loss that is rarely discussed in our community–the loss of the story. The loss of turning a perfect night of lovemaking into a child. It may be a small loss in comparison to life, but as the author points out, life is made up of stories.
- So Many Thoughts Running Through My Mind (from The Sweet Life): This post is one of the reasons I love blogs–they bring you a completely unique point-of-view. The author speaks about her feelings on changing sperm donors.
- Thankfulness (from So These are the Days of My Life): A wonderful post reminding the reader of the small umbrellas to be thankful for within the storm.
- To My Co-worker…I am Sorry (from The Wizard of Ovulation): A post with a twist that shows how nothing should be taken for granted in this world. Sometimes the people who seem the farthest away from our situation end up standing beside us and the remorse we feel when a new person joins the ranks.
- On the Eve (from Things Get Iffy): A beautiful note on the eve of her daughter’s birth that shows the magnitude of motherhood–not just the excitement of reaching the prize, but the nervousness that comes from reaching out to hold it.
- Why Does it Hurt? (from Looking for 2 Lines): An incredibly moving post about witnessing the death of a baby squirrel that dips down into the well of motherhood that exists in this author’s heart. Her ability to love and sympathize is tremendous.
- The Numbers Game (from Birch and Maple): An eye-opening post breaking down an IVF cycle into a numbers game.
- Adoptive Parent Pet Peeves (from Latest News): A great post explaining directly and openly why certain terms are offensive or thoughtless when discussing their upcoming adoption from China.
- The O
pen Door (from The Open Door): Some things in life should only come with a Plan A–a rallying cry for when Plan B should never be considered and the reader needs company to find the internal strength to keep going. - The Cat is Out of the Bag and Such (from Fertilize Me): A post about the frustrations that stem from others defining you by something that is simply a small part of the whole.
- Comparative Pain (from Welcome to the Dollhouse): An excellent reminder that all personal pain is valid and should not be dismissed. The author uses the analogous situation of being single to being infertile and sheds lights on the similarities between these two situations.
- Diamonds in the Rough (from The Secret Garden): A friend mourns the old version of the author, but the author points out that a diamond increases in value after it has been cut and shaped. While she may wish that she hadn’t encountered a diamond cutter like infertility, to dismiss the changes that have taken place would be to deny the value she has found in her incredible strength.
- Sunday, Not a Day of Rest (from Life, Love, and the Pursuit of Normalcy): Finding the positive in the pain by remembering how rain is followed by sun and dormant hope can bloom again.
- Infertility Flip-Off Friday (from Super Ovum): An extremely amusing fuck you to infertility. Lather, rinse, repeat every Friday.
- Self Flagellation (from Busted Babymaker): A weepy trip to Pottery Barn Kids that brings a husband and wife closer in their mutual desire to have a child.
- Divided by Two (from Sticky Bean Preconception Journal): A moving post that begins with what miscarriage can do to any marriage and then bringing it in closer to discuss how miscarriage has been processed within the author’s marriage. This post is made sweeter knowing that the author is currently pregnant again, but it is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand how different people can process a shared loss.
- Waiting for the Right Time (from Thoughts of a Preacher’s Wife): The preacher’s wife gives her own moving sermon, reflecting on her grandmother’s infertility in the 1930s and her own diagnosis of secondary infertility and what she has learned about listening and waiting for G-d.
- “Why” Isn’t Even Half of It (from Hez in IVFland): An incredible post about how time has a way of healing wounds but also about the importance of dealing with events as they unfold and once again when you have the space to process them.
- Choosing Toppings (from Twisted Ovaries): A post pointing out the many lines drawn in the sand that divide the community and the need to step over those lines and break down the cliques that have been built.
- The Beginning of it All (from Everyday Stranger): A gorgeous post about the birth of her twins–the highs and lows of an early birth after a difficult pregnancy when your heart (or in this case, hearts) come to exist outside your body.
- Faith, Unhealed Wounds, and Empathy (from MLO Knitting): A post intertwining faith and empathy; how our unhealed wounds can be the impetus teaching us to treat others as we wish to be treated.
- It’s Amazing the Difference a Year Makes (from Sean and Mary’s Family): The author describes her own post best with this line midway through the post: “At the same time that I feel the pangs of sadness for Star, I also feel incredibly blessed to be carrying Livi and Drew right now. I know that if Star had not died, they would not be here, and I feel such intense love for them as well, it is a strange place to be.” It is entirely possible to feel intense sadness and excitement and gratefulness and frustration all at the same time.
- How Did We Know We Were Done (from Coming2Terms): How the author knew that it was time to walk away from fertility treatments–when the scales tipped and the idea of “facing the excruciating emotional pain associated with the loss of another set of embryos would actually be harder to manage than the idea that our family might only number two.”
- Mixed Feelings (from Inconceivable): A post exploring the myriad of feelings associated with infertility.
- Disgraceland (from Reproductively Speaking): A post that will stay with you for a long time, forcing you to think. As we focus on the cribs and strollers, the author takes us well beyond those years to crash into the future like the car her future child may total.
- TTC’s Stages of Grief (from The World According to Monica): How the five stages of grief factor into infertility and how we go through these five stages on a continuous loop.
- Living in the Gap (from Taking the Statistical Bullet): An important post to read about living in the moment rather than living in the gap.
- The Waiting Room (from BagMomma): The sorority of the waiting room and the unfamiliar faces that are expressing some very familiar feelings.
- Unanswered Prayers (from When Sarah Laughed): The author muses on an earlier unanswered prayer and gives the Western Wall a second try.
- Are You There G-d? It’s Me, Portia (from Desperate to Multiply): A letter to G-d trying to understand why infertility happens at all and closer to the heart, why infertility has happened to her.
- It’s Not Working (from Eye Heart Internet): The words that are still hanging in the air between two friends–both of whom have experienced a pregnancy loss but one of whom has learned that she will not be getting pregnant again on her own.
- Joys of Pregnancy? (from Fertility Challenged in Florida): Frustrations galore with Pregzilla who has no idea how her complaints about pregnancy affect those around her.
- Dear Babies (from The Dunn Family): A gorgeous letter to her twins when they were six months old, reminding them how far they’ve come and how much they are loved.
- Blurg! (from A Uterus Divided): What happens next when infertility throws every plan off-track? This post is about the far-reaching effects of infertility and trying to plan your life when the plans are out of your hands.
- Purple Rain (from As I See It): Her son died in the fall, therefore the seasons mirrored exactly how she was feeling inside. Now that spring has returned, it feels as if life has moved on without her and it is time to develop a project and take life back into her hands.
- Gaining by Losing (from What Wuz I Saying…?): A heartbreaking post about losing one twin midway through the pregnancy and the birth of her son as well as the gains that come from loss.
- In the Same Boat (from This is NOT What I Ordered!): The author brilliantly points out that we’re not necessarily in the same boat: “Although we try, and mostly succeed, to be there for each other and to keep pulling for the team, the truth is we’re not all in the same boat. At best, you can say we’re a little fleet, navigating the same treacherous passage, cheering each other on and warning each other of submerged rocks ahead, but still jealously assessing the speed and seaworthiness of each other’s vessels. And, even as much as we desperately want the whole fleet to make it through together, we’re still ultimately pulling for our own little crews in our own little boats—which are, to us, both better off and worse off than anyone else’s. And, for these reasons alone, deserve more than all the others to make it safely home.” And if you are nodding your head at this moment, bowled over by this thought, you should click over and read the post from the beginning.
- A Tiny Bit of Life (from Road to Adopt): A strange and wondrous pregnancy gained and lost in a small pocket of time between treatments and trying to discern the message this event contains.
- The Happiness Quotient (from (Un)complicate Me): A sweet post in finding joy in every day of life and never wishing a moment of it away.
- Throwing This Out There (from Life, Love, and Infertility): How perspective changes along the journey and the truths that are unraveled as time passes.
- Breakfast Burritos and SIF (from BabyQuest): A compliment from a waitress triggers an internal monologue of wonder at what the future holds.
- Let’s Talk About that Elephant, Shall We? (from In Search of Biscuit 2.0): Sound advice: “You have to be careful, this is your heart.” The author warns of riding a roller coaster without safety devices in place.
- In the Great Stories (from Journeywoman): A post about finding the strength to go on simply because you are holding onto something and how the perfect thought can come in an unexpected place.
- It’s Not All About Me (from Over Hard: Eggs and Infertility): An emotional exploration of remembering that her husband feels pain too and wishing to always have the mindfulness to support him.
- Fuck You, PCOS (from It Could Take 3 Months): Sure, it takes away the ability to ovulate, but can we all take a moment to say a big fuck you to PCOS for the zits and unwanted hairs too?
- My Common Thread Bracelet (from Southern Infertility): A post about that awful feeling where everything is so wrong that you can’t really find a place to start describing it to another person even though your heart feels as if it will explode from the emotions remaining internalized.
- But Seriously… (from Baby Wanted: Apply Within): An amazing post from a husband explaining how excited he is to be on the brink of a new start to treatments.
- The Joy of the WTF Pregnancy (from The Adventures of (In)fertile Frank): Opening up the wide world of the WTF pregnancy to include male sports figures. A post that is interesting and amusing–sort of like a really good copy of People magazine.
- Bye Bye Bio Baby (from Fortune Cookie Follies): A very important post to read if you have ever been wondering about the idea of stepping off the treatment roller coaster and moving towards a different path to parenthood.
- Pregnancy Guilt (from A Family, Created): Though the author always remembers that she is infertile, she feels as if she is constantly convincing others of her history now that she is a mother of two through domestic adoption and donor embryo.
- Infertility and Holidays (from Operation Baby): How October through December feels for Christian, infertile Americans year after year as the world revolves through holiday after child-centered holiday.
- To Last Year’s Me (from The Problem with Hope): A post about the w
ay life can change drastically over the course of a year and a once-dreaded holiday takes on new emotions with two children in the house. - Orientations Are Not Just For Orientals (from Bulgy the Blog): Observations by an extremely amusing blogger about adoption orientation.
- Thinking…Thinking… (from Life in the CatPad): A woman who locks her sick dog in the school closet is going to get to be a mum but the responsible teacher who checks her emails for grammatical errors before hitting send is infertile…it’s an infuriating world.
- Bed Wetter & Thumb Sucker (from Almamay’s Infertility Journey): The author’s memories of growing up on an army base while her father was in Vietnam and like the end scene where she is running and falling, you too will run and fall over the words and shed a few tears by the end.
- Um…Well…I Peeked (from Nearlydawn…Nearlypregnant…Nearlyoutofsteam): Succumbing to the siren song of the pee stick with a deeply happy ending.
- Losing It (from The Benedict Family): A sad post about a pregnancy loss and the roller coaster ride of elated celebration to crushed hope.
- Who Do I Sit With in the Lunchroom? (from Out, damned egg! Out I say!): In the virtual lunchroom of the IF community, where does a girl sit if she’s doing both donor embryo and adoption? An interesting point-of-view on the various paths to parenthood and the unique experience inherent within each path.
- What We Wish You Knew: Supporting Loved Ones in Infertility (from Blessed are the Barren): Excellent advice for the outsider who wishes to support someone going through infertility.
- Baby Picture (from Apron Strings for Emily): A moving post about finding a picture the author set aside with the hopes of one day finding it accidentally and remembering how far she has come. Though the journey is completely different from what she thought it would be the day she set aside the picture, I think in reading this post that you will agree that she truly has come a long way.
- Dear Donor (from My Eggy Journey): A gorgeous post for her egg donor about what she sees when she looks into her son’s face–his father’s features, her love reflected, and the altruism of a stranger who has given her the ultimate gift.
- The Fertility Continuum (from The Other Shoe): The author wonders where she fits in within the world of infertility and points out the similarities along the continuum despite the differences.
- Hope (from Two Kayaks): A beautiful post about the letting go that needed to take place on the road through adoption and how the prior losses can never be erased because they inform the present–and not solely in the negative sense.
- Patron Saints (from Optimism: The Big O): After a somewhat frustrating conversation with someone using religious ideology to convince her that IVF is wrong, the author turns lemons into lemonade by searching down a patron saint who speaks to her journey.
- It’s Like This (from Infertile Fantasies): The movement from quiet excitement to numb disbelief–the scope of a journey and the sadness after a loss.
- This Time Last Year (from Thalia’s Fertility Journey): A pregnancy after a loss is a bittersweet event–without the loss, the second child would never exist yet you could also never wish away the second child in order to have the first. A post that explains how one person can coexist at two ends of the emotional spectrum simultaneously.
- We Have Not Reached an Agreement Yet (from Baby Bound): In negotiations with G-d over motherhood, the author provides a list of all the things she has placed on the table as an offering.
- A Year in Review (from In Due Time): A summary of a year that brought with it huge changes and a step off the conception path.
- Test Day (from Sunny in Seattle): The glucose test from hell with what would have been its one saving grace–a pass–denied as well.
- 1000 More Words (from It’s Either Sadness or Euphoria): A breathtaking post chronicling the stream-of-conscious thoughts that pass through the mind during loss.
- Nothing Like a Family and AF (from My Journey to Mommyhood): An extremely frustrating conversation where relaxation is prescribed as the cure for infertility. The post ends with the perfect quote by Sidney Harris: “Never take the advice of someone who has not had your kind of trouble.”
- Two Weeks and Change (from A Cop, A Nurse, 3 Dogs, and Maybe Baby): Two weeks after the birth of her son, the author reflects on the emotions she went through having a pregnancy succeed after so much loss.
- Losing the Bitter Thoughts (from The Tragic Optimist): Her child did not cure infertility, but it did cure her bitter thoughts as she sits inside the calm of raising her daughter.
- In the Darkness (from Many a Mile to Go): A gorgeous post about the late night fears that can consume us and the light that comes when those dreams aren’t realized. Raising twins in the darkness and light.
- Of Love and Flowers (from I Won’t Fear
Love): A warning–you will cry as this story unfolds of a mother who loves her two children equally–one alive and one gone–and gives them each the same gifts from her heart from purple tulips to her enormous love. - Personal Purgatory (from Infertility SUCKS!): Finally letting out all of the emotions that have been building over the non-blogging weeks. The author looks back on her blogroll and realizes that she is the final one without children out of all of the women she started with on this journey. And the hurt that comes with that fact.
- In December (from Life in the Hundred-Acre Wood): Last December, she spent the month trying to end a prolonged pregnancy loss–a month of bleeding and subsequent surgery to take away the remains of a life. This December, she spent the month marveling at the life inside of her, folding her arms over her belly to cherish the life inside.
- An Open Letter (from Life From Here: Musings From the Edge): A beautifully written open letter to the women in her life who are currently pregnant, explaining how their lives differ. The letter ends with a profound question: “But tell me, if I can find joy in my heart for you in my time of crisis, why is it so hard for you have compassion in your heart for me in your time of joy?”
- Desperate (Biblical, Infertile) House (from Entrusted): Using her strong faith in G-d as a guide in making choices regarding fertility treatments all the while musing on the barren women of the Bible.
- The Retrieval Story (from Are We There Yet?): A gorgeous recount of retrieval on a donor egg cycle–from the relationship with the donor to visiting their embryos outside the clinic one night to let them feel–however far away–the warmth of their parents loving them.
- On Making the Choice to Go With a Donor (from Why Not Me): When you enter a story in medias res, People forget the hard decisions that come before a donor cycle is persued. Reading this post will help anyone still walking the path prior to decision.
- The Birth of Our Son (from The Unlucky 20 Percent): An amazing, moving post that will have you in tears as you read this remembrance of giving birth to her son who died in-utero and all the love she felt in that day and the days afterwards.
- Everything is NOT Fine (from Sticky Feet): The anger stems not just from everything she goes through with infertility and treatments, but moreso from having to pretend that everything is okay with those around her. As the title suggests, everything is NOT fine.
- Learning that I Have PCOS (from Little Pieces of My Life): A post warning about allowing doctors to brush aside concerns and the long path she took to finally get diagnosed and treated for PCOS.
- Update (from Just Keep Swimming): The joy in the moment where the right path becomes clear.
- The Perfect Man (from Aspiring Baker): The perfect man, it turns out, is a fluid construction built by the heart as well as the head–a donor insemination story.
- Sending Out Hope (from This Side of Pregnant): All of the hope the author has for a friend who is going through the terrible loss of her child as well as the way the author is processing the loss while 22 weeks pregnant.
- In Which Tony Soprano Gets Me Thinking (from Chasing a Child): An epiphany during the Sopranos makes the author realize that donor eggs is not just about loss–it is also the gain of not passing along unwanted genetically-based conditions.
- Good Night, Sweet Baby (from Life in the Soupbowl): For anyone who has ever believed that a genetic bond is necessary for love, an intense note from mother to daughter blows that out of the water. You will snuggle down into the words as you read through a true happily ever after.
- Surviving, and Musings on Life’s Irony (from Purgatory): An eye-opening post about a second turn through considering donor insemination and the twisting path that brought her back to DI’s door.
- My Dr’s Appointment (from Unexplain This): An important post to read if pregnant or if you suspect you are experiencing postpartum depression; a well-written account of the doctor’s appointment that brought her the diagnosis and why women conceiving after infertility are more susceptible.
- One of Those Women (from How to Get From 0 to Pregnant in 365 Easy Steps): After not knowing whether she ever wanted motherhood, the author was “kicked in the face by love.” She describes the awe she felt when she realized she loved her sister’s children, “not for anything they do, but because they just are.”
- Pondering the View Outside My Window (from My Little Drummer Boys): Two women bond, understanding what few other women can understand–the loss of a child. The older woman states, “A mother just never forgets these things for no matter how many children she has…she remembers the ‘others’ and she is always waiting for someone, for someone she can tell about them.” Thankfully, they found each other.
- Breathing (from Everything is a Grace): In the quiet of the night, a mother listens to her husband and child breathe together.
- 9 Years Ago Today (from Destination Baby): It took almost 24 years for the author to get a sister–an incredible journey of parenthood.
- Lonely (from Where is
My Happiness?): Achieving pregnancy is not the only thing that makes people feel as if they are losing the infertility community. The author points out that she is currently in a strange limbo that makes her feel alienated from the community and how the loss of that support saddens her. - On Bitterness and Bitchiness and Still Being Happy (from An Accident of Hope): A gorgeous post articulating how one can be simultaneously happy for one person and sad for oneself and an explanation of how the two remain separate entities.
- IVF #4: Countdown Begins…Again (from My Soul Quest): Hoping the fourth time is lucky, the author prepares for another round of IVF.
- The Power of Magic (from No Matter How Small): After years and years of magical thinking, the author gathers the courage to confront one of her fears only to discover that her husband’s fears have slid into the new space, proving once again that men mourn differently, but equally, as women.
- Infertility Revisited and What I Could Not Do (from You Just Never Know Where Hope Might Take Ya): The guilt that comes when the pain of infertility still lingers into parenthood and everyone else’s comments reinforce the thought that a person should move on. Until the author reads on a blog that children resolve childlessness but they don’t resolve infertility. And this epiphany is what she needs to come to terms with her own emotions.
- My Grand Adventure (from Babies or Not): The author records her story at NPR’s This I Believe and admits that she didn’t know that emotional pain can also be so physically painful.
- Remembering Jack (from Careful What You Wish For): As the author writes: “this post is as much a celebration of life as a marking of loss.” A moving account of the death of her son in-utero and his delivery.
- The Christmas Letter (from Just Crazy Enough to Try): Lamenting what is missing from Christmas letters, the author writes her own announcing pregnancy loss, depression, and a bicornuate uterus.
- The Infertile Dummies Guide to OHSS (from Diary of an Infertile Mad Woman): Running commentary on the physician’s OHSS fact sheet–amusing AND informative.
- Sweet, Sweet, Rage-ahol (from Bee in the Bonnet): A rant that will make you either inspired to write your own about the annoying people you pass in daily life or simply nod your head in angry agreement.
- RAD and Our Lives (from No Place Like Home): A very informative post on Reactive Attachment Disorder and how the author used therapy to bring her family together.
- Dear Couple (from Diary of a Miscarriage): An open letter to an anonymous couple the author saw at her OB’s office, from one mother who has experienced pregnancy loss to another.
- Why Today is a Special Day (from It Only Takes One Egg): Thoughts after IVF and a birth about how life looks different from the other side.
- Do I Know You? (from The Making of a Family): Comparing infertility to eating the same dish day in and day out, the author writes about how trying to conceive has overtaken every space in her mental capacity.
- These Trains Have No Schedules (from Worrier/Warrior): Standing on the hypothetical infertility train platform and realizing in a beautiful post that being left behind on the platform doesn’t mean that you won’t be on the next train that rolls through.
- Who’s Your Daddy (from Mindless Woman, Mindless Ramblings): A gorgeous post from a gestational surrogate soon before she delivered the baby; reflecting on the crazy journey from meeting the couple to carrying the child.
- Embodiment (from Living With the Cards I Was Dealt): The author talks about the transformation from someone engaged in life to someone with a constant reminder of death and how infertility changes a person.
- My First Trip to Rainbow Whole Foods (from Our Fertility Journey): Mishaps on the road to get healthier……more coming soon. Keep checking the Creme de la Creme box for updates in the top left corner of the blog. The list will continue to grow so send your favourite post from 2007 to have your blog represented on this list. Spread the word about the list and let others know that they should have their blog honoured too. Every writer deserves a prize for their hard work.
Blogs that Closed in 2007**
We’re so sorry to see these blogs missing from the Blogosphere. Every piece of writing changes a person’s perspective of their own journey. The world was changed by their words.
Why Not Us?
In a Holding Pattern (became Finally After)
Perpetually Waiting
Domesticated
Twisted Ovaries (still blogging at Everyday Stranger)
Wiscadoo
Knocked Up, Knocked Down
Perfectly Infertile Jill (became The Longest Wait)
The Cracked Pot
Journey to the Center of the Egg (still blogging at Rememberella)
And a place of honour: More Than My Share (we’ll miss you, Lisa)
onfused on what to do and those who are peacefully–or not peacefully–living child-free. Infertility can become a new lens with which one views the world, and viewing the world includes parenting. I love to read blogs after the children have come–from the newborns to four-year-olds. And all of this is a long-winded way to say that if you have ever experienced infertility or pregnancy loss, we would love to keep adding your posts to this list year after year. Please don’t disappear because you don’t think you’re part of the infertility community anymore. If your heart feels like it belongs here, you belong here.
January 1, 2008 32 Comments