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Infertility: How to Cope During The Holidays

Posted: 11/30/11 08:04 AM ET

Lots of us look forward to spending time with family around the holidays, but for those coping with infertility, the celebrating a child-centric holiday can be difficult and often painful. All of that comfort and joy can be quickly squashed with a careless comment such as, "Why haven't you had kids yet?" Seeing other couples celebrate their first holiday together as a family can be excruciating.

With one in six couples of child-bearing age experiencing infertility, according to the Assisted Conception Task Force (ACT), that adds up to a lot of silent suffering around this time of year.

But there are things those struggling with fertility issues can do to make the holiday season a time of joy, not despair. Just as you put time into planning into your holiday schedule, it is important to put time into planning how you will navigate the holidays emotionally. Take the time to think about which situations are most challenging and which provide you with hope and encouragement. Identify the events that seem too overwhelming and navigate around them. And if you know someone who is undergoing fertility treatment, take a moment to educate yourself about what you definitely shouldn't say to her around this time of year:

6 Tips for Couples Coping with Infertility During the Holidays:

1. Plan ahead. Have an answer prepared should someone inquire about your intentions to have children. Although many close friends and relatives will understand, you shouldn't feel obligated to disclose personal details about your infertility experiences.

2. Be selective with your invitations to holiday celebrations, particularly where you expect to find children or pregnant women. If it will be too difficult to attend, you don't need to go.

3. Anticipate when you might see children at family events. If it's too painful to be around young nieces, nephews and cousins, consider arriving just in time for a holiday dinner and not the night before.

4. Bond with other couples who don't have children. Plan to spend time with couples or friends who don't have children if family festivities are too much to bear.

5. Decide whether or not to hold any babies before you arrive. For some, holding a baby can bring hope while for others it can be incredibly painful. Well-meaning relatives may want to share the joy of a new family member with you, but it's important to put your needs first.

6. Start new family traditions with your partner, like getting out of town. Consider a ski trip or a romantic getaway. Approaching the holiday in a new way on your own terms can make it a lot more enjoyable.

6 "Infertility Etiquette" Tips for Friends & Family:

1. Don't minimize the problem by mentioning the hassles of parenting or say there are worse things that could happen. Coping with infertility is so, so hard, and only those experiencing it understand how difficult it can be.

2. Don't offer advice or tips on how the couple can fix the situation, whether it's exercise, food or lifestyle. If the couple has seen a fertility specialist, the physician has already covered these issues. People coping with infertility often blame themselves; asking whether they've taken certain measures can reinforce their sense that the situation is their fault.

3. Don't tell the couple to relax. While stress often appears to be a contributor to infertility, the human reproductive system is complex and affected by a number of biological and physical factors. And don't ever utter the words, "If it is meant to be, it will happen."

4. Don't complain about your own past or present pregnancy. Couples dealing with infertility hope for the day they can worry about morning sickness and swollen feet.

5. Do be supportive. Hugs and encouragement go a long way. Spend time with the couple to show how much you love them with or without a baby, and plan activities that don't focus on children.

6. Don't push adoption. Each couple has their own approach to family building and are well aware of their options. The decision to adopt or not is a deeply personal one that they may have considered or struggled with already; it's not appropriate to discuss at a holiday event.

 
Lots of us look forward to spending time with family around the holidays, but for those coping with infertility, the celebrating a child-centric holiday can be difficult and often painful. All of that...
Lots of us look forward to spending time with family around the holidays, but for those coping with infertility, the celebrating a child-centric holiday can be difficult and often painful. All of that...
 
 
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01:49 PM on 12/05/2011
Great article! It is certainly a hard time of year for a lot of people. We are going to be hosting a twitter chat in much the same vain next Monday night at 8pm, December 12th talking about surviving the holidays with a baby. More info at: facebook.com/parentmatch .
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bynddrvn5
My Micro-bio is unwritten...
07:55 PM on 12/01/2011
I personally think any comments about when people are going to get married or have kids, should be not allowed.

Next to talking about politics, these two topics are the best way to start a fight that could easily ruin the holiday season fun.

The area of infertility is one where doctors have made some, but not too much progress. I know of two couples who tried all kinds of treatments from fertility doctors and for years had absolutely no success. Both couples gave up and decided to adopt, shortly after making this decision both couples successfully conceived.
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12:06 AM on 12/04/2011
I completely agree with your first sentence. It's not just infertile couples that tire of hearing about when they're going to conceive, but those that choose not to as well. It can get wearisome to constantly be asked when you're going to get married, or when you're going to have kids. Some people choose not to do either, of their own volition.
04:11 PM on 12/01/2011
While many people find themselves in this category, many never adopt either. I'm tired of hearing people saying they never had the chance to be parents. They need to say "I chose not to be a parent, even after not being able to conceive." Children are out there, it's up to you whether you want to adopt when not being able to naturally conceive.
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09:33 PM on 12/01/2011
I totally agree with you!
12:59 PM on 12/02/2011
That is such a simple and generic response to such a deeply nuanced issue. Not everyone that would like to adopt is able to either. It never fails to amaze me how harsh and judgemental people are towards others going through something so difficult. You have no right to so judgemental.
03:59 PM on 12/01/2011
I was once in this infertility boat however, there's no way would I want people to refrain from talking about children. This is nonsense. I have a friend who was told to "shut up" about her happy marriage while in the company of some of her other friends. I told her she needed to find some new friends.

Life throws you rocks and you have to deal with them people. Forbidding people to talk about something means you should stay home.
10:57 AM on 12/01/2011
Interestingly enough, it's only the men (my uncles) in my family that ask when we're going to have kids. I usually just stare at them, ignore what they said, and move on. However, the random acquaintances that ask if we're going to adopt or do treatments... for me I find that more invasive. It's none of their business what we plan. I see it as asking about someones sex life! "So, have you set the date for your husbands sperm to impregnate your egg? Got your turkey baster ready?"

I just try to take joy in what kids are in my life, my godsons, my cousins, my friends kids. And the older I get, the more comfortable I feel in giving them all sugar and toys that make loud noises since I know their parents won't be able to retaliate.
03:52 AM on 12/01/2011
I want to share a sad holiday story, well it happened multiple times, but more so around the holidays. When I was a child, my dad got a job on the East Coast and we moved out there. He worked at a university and his colleagues were really are only family friends, and we had no relatives in the area. Anyhow, that first year in a dark winter, it seemed like my parents were always going to holiday parties with the colleagues. I just turned 12 and my sister was 7, and I was terrified of being home alone, but I was the babysitter. My sister and I could not go to the parties because one of my dad's colleagues was a woman who couldn't conceive children. My parents told us that it would be too upsetting for her to see us so we never got to go. Now that I am grown up, she has two children and my parents go to the parties still and talk about the kids and how cute they are. Argg . . .
04:02 PM on 12/01/2011
That was horrible. As a parent I would've chosen to do something else with my kids. I can see an adult only party but off limits because of someone's emotions? SMH...
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abhorson
in favor of legalized bar fighting
03:43 AM on 12/01/2011
God, that redhead looks EXACTLY like a girlfriend I had ... father was a retired heart surgeon, she was Italian, loved me to death... wanted to get married, get our PPL licenses together and fly around Colorado... rich as hell too... and nice & sweet.

but, I had a great party ... and she had a hot girlfriend from up East who came home for Christmas... and, for the love of God, my girlfriend worked that weekend (though rich) and I had TOO much fun at the party...

and, here, to make it relevant to the article ... she wanted babies too !!
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michelleobamaok
Tampa Crookpalooza 2012!
12:15 AM on 12/01/2011
DAMN! After reading all of that how about my own sweet, but short list?

#ALPHA/OMEGA: Just don't show up because you are such a drag to be around.
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see-ellen2001
09:29 PM on 11/30/2011
I like the 'stop and stare' technique. In the midst of the conversation, when some nimrod asks" so when are you having kids?" stop, look at them, stare. Try notbto blink...it's hard but effective. Then just as quick as you stopped, start up the conversation, totally ignoring the question and acting like nothing happened. This technique can applied to a myriad of situations.
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09:35 PM on 12/01/2011
What's wrong with saying "that is none of your business"!
01:01 AM on 12/02/2011
You don't have to stop and stare. Just brush it off with an inoffensive little remark such as maybe you'll get around to it someday. That seems to work for most people.
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BabyParentingCoach
Certified Hypnotherapist
08:23 PM on 11/30/2011
Lots of misinformation and fear proffered by allopathic medicine about fertility. We have a dire absence in the US of facts about the effects of diet, lifestyle, pollution, and stress on fertility of both men & women. If you eat a Standard American Diet, indulge in lots of alcohol & recreational drugs, exercise a little or not at all, and live in a polluted environment, your body is not going to be fertile.
Do some research and choose health, healthy conception, healthy pregnancy, and a healthy baby!
08:34 AM on 12/01/2011
This post is uninformed. The women on my infertility board have already made significant dietary and lifestyle changes. Usually it's the first thing we try. Then, those of us who are lucky enough to afford it spend thousands of dollars on testing to figure out what's wrong -- sometimes our tubes are blocked, sometimes our ovaries don't function correctly, sometimes our partner's semen is the problem. Many times our fertility issues cannot be cured by diet and lifestyle alone, and it hurts when people tell us "just do this" or "just do that" and poof, you'll have a baby. I would never hire you as a fertility coach with this kind of tone.
MommyMD
MD, Professor, Mom
02:05 AM on 12/04/2011
Medical school? Do you have a 50% live-birth rate like a top reproductive endocrinologist? Do you treat prolactinomas or thyroid disease? Do you unblock fallopian tubes?
"Do some research and choose health, healthy conception­, healthy pregnancy, and a healthy baby!"
Infertile people are just so...."unresearched." They must simply just not chose health.
-From a happy mom of two.
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Otherday
Chief Imperial Sage, Earth, Milky Way Quadrant
06:14 PM on 11/30/2011
Been there. The infertility routine is expensive and emotionally brutal. We ended up with a boy and a girl - both excellent in every way. The cost was high. There's the shots, tests, disappointments, the embarrassment of ejaculating into a beaker in a lab (several times), the questions from friends and family, procedures over and over, the doubts. Many thousands of dollars hits you in young adulthood at a time when you are trying to save for a house and pay back student loans, and such. It's about as stern a test of your marriage as you will ever see. Ouch!

My wife and I, while struggling with infertility disappointments, tried not to begrudge other couples' happy homes. I enjoyed the babies popping up on both sides of the family, and those cuddled by friends. It reminded me what all the grieve, pain and effort was for. Cute little boogers.
04:31 PM on 11/30/2011
Thank you, Dr. Hinckley! #3 under the "6 Infertility Etiquette Tips for Friends & Family" is SO true. If I had a nickel every time someone tells me to relax, I'd be a millionaire right now. I constantly tell my husband I should start carrying around the American Society for Reproductive Medicine's "Patient Fact Sheet: Stress and Infertility" and hand it out to people when they say it to me. It states: Stress is probably not causing your infertility. Even though infertility is very stressful, there isn't any proof that stress causes infertility.
imonlyhereforthelaughs
Politicians...they ruin everything.
04:22 PM on 11/30/2011
7. Accept you aren't getting pregnant and have some adult fun already.
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michelleobamaok
Tampa Crookpalooza 2012!
12:18 AM on 12/01/2011
8. Leave your soap opera mentality at home.
01:48 AM on 12/01/2011
That goes under the what not to say category right?
04:17 PM on 11/30/2011
I FEEL LIKE I AM LIVING IN THE 1500'S AFTER READING THIS..
HOW DARE YOU GENERALIZE LIKE THAT
YOU DONT HAVE TO BE INFERTILE TO NOT HAVE A KID!
SOME WOMEN ACTUALLY MAKE A DECISION NOT TO HAVE KIDS. NOT EVERYONE WANTS TO FLUSH THEIR LIVES DOWN THE TOILET- SHE WHO TRAVELS FASTEST TRAVELS ALONE YOU WILL NEVER AMOUNT TO ANYTHING WHEN YOU HAVE A KID, ITS THE ROAD TO NOWHERESVILLE.
SO - ALL WOMEN ARE OBLIGATED TO BREED LIKE ROACHES ?? IS THAT WHAT ITS ALL ABOUT??
I HAVE A CAREER AND I LIKE DATING AND DONT WANT TO BE TIED DOWN - HOW IS THAT FOR AN ANSWER.
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tomteboda
07:36 PM on 11/30/2011
While you choose to be child-free, please realize not everything is about you. In this case, the author is addressing the specific pain of those who would like to have children more than anything else, but life has not cooperated.

Your self-absorbed attitude towards children and their impact on life demonstrates that you have made the correct choice, both for you and any children that might have otherwise been born. I suggest you simply carry around a print-out of your little rant here if anyone "offends" you by asking when you're having children. I especially recommend making sure you call children roaches TO people's faces.

I am fairly confident that fairly soon you won't have to worry about people asking you if you want children or are going to have them. Most people will simply learn to avoid you and your excessively judgemental hatred not only of their choices, but their friendly intentions altogether. They will probably avoid you, and leave you alone.
12:43 AM on 12/01/2011
tomteboda- I know that you in your archaic sad world feels the need to over populate the globe with mentally defective offspring like yourself. Your guess about me could not be more wrong . I am really happy and single, childless and happy to be so!
out and about having a ball and I am not lonely and just dont want kids, but I also dont want a husband - its too confining , you are nothing but a glorified slave - so what does this make me a bad person? NO. I am smart and I know my mind and whats good for me. I love me and yes I am the most important person in MY life.
I know myself and I know what I want and I know I see no reason to have a kid tie me down . It would make me really unhappy to have a kid ( I find them so boring)
not self absorbed just FREE and lovin it. Many women think like me but are too phoney to admit it.
09:16 PM on 11/30/2011
You have a few issues.
03:55 PM on 11/30/2011
Thank you so much for this - the holidays are so incredibly difficult for us each year (and this year, after more failure, will likely be worse). I actually like the suggestion about getting away for a vacation of our own, too. Our families will probably fuss, but we just can't handle all of the babies, pregnant siblings/cousins, without terrible pangs. Eventually, this will pass. Until it does, perhaps we need to get away this Christmas!

Again, thank you. I suffer in silence each year. I'm going to try my best to make things a bit brighter this holiday.