Showing posts with label Menarche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Menarche. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 July 2017

Sunny Days

We've had a really busy summer so far this year, it's been lovely to immerse ourselves into doing things we enjoy doing, rather than thinking about the worries of the last few months and the inevitable stress that will come later in the year when we start our IVF journey.

It has been unseasonably warm for weeks, with no sign of the Great British Summer that we all know and (not) love. Even when I have bad pain days, when the sun shines, so does my mood - everyone knows I'm a sun-worshipper! I've had a few horror days over the last couple of months, but thankfully these have been far outweighed by the good ones and I believe this is down to good old vitamin D.

I've enjoyed cocktails at the top of The Shard, dinners with friends, a day at the golf, a BBQs at home, a hen weekend in Brighton, our annual caravan weekend in Dorset, my very first DRY Glastonbury Festival (weather, not alcohol), a weekend at Centre Parcs with the girls, a day at Wimbledon (not working for once), a couple of concerts (Mac DeMarco & Guns N' Roses) and we met our friend's brand new beautiful twin girls. That's quite a lot in two months but I wouldn't change anything, it's almost as if we've enjoyed ourselves to the absolute maximum before we start our travels on the unknown road ahead of us.


One of my best friends, Clare (who I've known nearly forever), also told me she was expecting her third child. Although I'm completely over the moon for her and her partner Simon, I can't help but feel a huge pang of sadness for ourselves. A few of my friend's pregnancy announcements have hit me hard over the last few years, especially those who are having their first as it means one less friend in my Non-Mum network, but this one was particularly tough. We often said that maybe we would be pregnant at the same time, she was thinking about her third child and she knew we were trying too. Now another bump buddy boat has sailed. So many of my friends have now completed their families and I feel if we ever did have our miracle baby, I'd have no-one to enjoy my pregnancy with.

Last weekend I enjoyed, for the most part, a tranquil break with the girls at Center Parcs. Most of my oldest friends live in Norfolk where I grew up, but Clare and I live in different parts of the UK, so it's rare that we all get together, especially with no husbands and children! Of course this was the weekend that my dearly beloved Mrs Menses decided to show up and pretty much destroy any hope of a relaxing weekend. Luckily, I managed to squeeze in an afternoon at the spa before she barged her way into my plans. The following day was one of the worst pain days I've had for a long time. I spent the majority of the day curled up in my PJs on the sofa, necking NSAIDs like they'd gone out of fashion. I managed to join the girls in the pool later in the afternoon, albeit with what felt like a watermelon under my swimwear, but at least I managed to leave the chalet for a couple of hours.


I've found myself at times, especially after a bad flare up, thinking about further surgery to completely free myself from the pain that comes with having severe endometriosis. I can't say I've noticed an improvement in my symptoms since my laparoscopy earlier this year, so apart from having the abnormality in my uterus removed, I'm wondering what good it has actually done. Mr Kalu has said this is definitely something I should consider after I've finished with my fertility journey, but because surgery can create adhesions which would potentially affect my fertility further, he has advised against anything drastic until then.

I've been reading a bit online about this and I've discovered because I have Stage 4 endometriosis, I am entitled to be referred for full excision surgery at an accredited BSGE centre. There is a list of centres on the website and I've already started looking at my options for the future.

In the meantime I'm stuck in limbo.

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

Back(side) Story

24 years ago at the age of 13, I started a challenging and complicated relationship with puberty. The enemy? My menarche, Aunt Flo.

I soon became well acquainted with my monthly cycles, and as much as I tried, they were certainly something I couldn't ignore. I was terribly anaemic, my periods became heavier and more painful and I was soon taking a day off school most months, paralysed with sickness, curled and cramped up in bed with a hot water bottle. The shooting pains down my legs were just another factor to add to my suffering. I found the thought of having to go through this torture every four weeks for the next 40 years quite harrowing. Mum discouraged me from taking time away from education, but some days were so unbearable, I just couldn't face the trauma of having to deal with dysmenorrhoea at school. Mum was even convinced I had appendicitis until the pain was apparently cyclical. This abhorrent monthly gift was making me extremely miserable and affecting my quality of life but I just assumed this was a completely normal. I was a girl and I was stuck with it.

I've had many traumatic menstrual experiences over the years but a couple in particular will be rooted in my memory forever. The first was on holiday, our first family trip abroad to France in the summer of 1994. I wasn't feeling well but my parents convinced me to join them and my brother on the beach. I spent an hour in a foetal position in the shade but the cramps and the sweltering heat combined made it unbearable. Dad helped me to the car but I remember passing out with the pain on the beach before we got there. Back at the tent, I spent the rest of the day on a flimsy, foam mattress bed and distracted myself from the discomfort by tuning in to TMS on Radio 4 (we won the third test at The Oval to draw the series against South Africa). The avuncular voice of Aggers undoubtedly helped me through that day! There was a further incident on holiday a couple of years later where again my Dad (my hero) got up and escorted me to the toilet block in the early hours of the morning when I was doubled over with stomach cramps. After the pain had eased, we sat up watching the sunrise over the fields, both convinced we saw a black panther in the distance. I think he was probably humouring me though.


Another occasion, while I was in the first year at sixth form, I was due to sit a French Oral exam and Aunt Flo had decided to make an early appearance. Horrified, I had no choice but to put up with the pain and go through with the exam. I made sure I was prepared just before I went in but half way through (it was only half an hour), I realised The Great Flood Had Cometh. Never again would I wear light coloured jeans.

Shortly after that, Mum took me to the doctors and I was prescribed Microgynon® - a brand of contraceptive combined pill. It meant my periods were more regular, less heavy and most importantly, less painful. It was such a relief to finally find a way of managing my monthly nemesis.

The years went by, I graduated from university, worked a ski season in Les Deux Alpes, France (where I met my husband Jon) and moved to London. During this time, I had several abnormal smear tests and I was referred for a colposcopy and cone biopsy. This referral just happened to come half way through my stint as a seasonaire en France and my doctor advised it was best to have the procedure sooner rather than later. I'd survived most things thrown my way throughout those four months - even the gastroenteritis pandemic which swept through the whole resort and beyond - but I found myself in a hospital in Grenoble with a gynecologist who didn't speak a word of English. It was a pretty petrifying experience. Fortunately for me, my hotel manager who speaks fluent French, accompanied me to the hospital. Unfortunately for her, she had to listen to the whole thing from the other side of the curtain, squeals and all (thank you Caroline).

After the ski season, we moved to London and it was around this time I started to notice I was suffering more and more with bloating, pelvic and rectal cramps, constipation and other gruesomeness (I won't elaborate at this point). These symptoms were a great deal worse just before and during my period. To cut a long story short (the long version will be in the next post), I tried various different diets and finally got diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome - the collective condition doctors seem to bestow when they don't really know how else to diagnose it. I wasn't convinced but I lived with it.

At the age of 33, in September 2013, I chose to come off the pill after 17 years of continuous use. Jon and I decided that we would now just wait and see what nature would throw at us. Neither of us were desperate to have children right at that moment (we'd already been married for six years), but we had stopped using contraception for a reason - to get pregnant. I'd always suffered with jealousy when friends announced their joyous news, even when I was in my twenties and it was the last thing on my mind. I had these confusing, deep-rooted feelings that I was being left behind, I guess very similar to FOMO. Seeing our friends and the wonderful relationships they had with their children certainly made me think about being a mother a lot; I didn't want to get to 45 and regret the decision if we had decided not to become parents. I guess I just took it for granted that it would happen one day, as most people do.

Three and a half years later, it turns out Mother Nature isn't that great at throwing, not in our direction anyway.

October 2016, Queen Mary's Hospital, Roehampton. I get my referral for a laparoscopy with suspected endometriosis. Endo what?!