Infertility and Your Relationship

Photo: Ian Kerner (CNN)
Photo: Ian Kerner (CNN)

Having a baby is one of the most exciting times in a couple’s life, but for couples coping with infertility and infertility treatments, conceiving a baby can be trying. The physical, emotional and financial stress of infertility can, if you’re not careful, hurt your relationship with your partner.

In fact, nearly one-fourth of women in a recent survey conducted by the nonprofit organization HealthyWomen reported that infertility had a negative impact on their relationships. The good news is that about a third of women in that same survey said their infertility struggle actually benefited their relationships with their partners.

The tips and information contained here will help you to emerge from your infertility journey with your relationship not only intact but stronger, regardless of what happens in your quest for a child.

Avoiding Blame

Photo: crazyamazyrumy
Photo: crazyamazyrumy

So you just got the diagnosis. Your sperm are “slow.” Or your wife’s endometriosis has blocked one of her fallopian tubes. Or the infection you had during your bachelor days damaged many of your sperm. It would be easy to turn to one another and shout, “It’s your fault!” But the reality is that no matter who plays the blame game, you both lose.

Does it really matter whose “fault” it is? After all, this is not something you have much control over. And it may be too late to change the few things you might have once controlled, such as trying to conceive when you were younger. The reality is what you’re facing today: Having a baby is going to be more difficult for the two of you than for many other couples.

To keep from turning down the blame lane:

  • Reassure your partner that you are both in it together
  • Remember how you feel about your partner, why you love her or him, why you want to have a child together.
  • Talk about your frustration and anger openly. Studies show that couples who keep their feelings hidden are much more likely to have problems related to the stress of infertility.
  • Attack the infertility issue as a united front. That means going to appointments together, coping with side effects together, grieving together, sharing the news together with friends and family.

Keeping Your Relationship Healthy

Photo: Your Dating Plan
Photo: Your Dating Plan

There are ways to protect your relationship from the potentially damaging stress of infertility, including:

  • Focus on yourselves. Remember that the two of you came first, before any thought of a baby. Even if you do have a child, the two of you still need to be a healthy couple before you can be good parents.
  • Schedule non-infertility dates. On these dates, neither of you is allowed to talk about children, infertility, medical treatments, adoption or anything to do with what you’re going through.
  • Bring spontaneity back into sex. Have sex dates that are not focused on reproducing. That can mean not discussing fertility before, during or after the sexual act or having sex without intercourse. Send a note inviting your partner to a pleasure-only sex date. Consider having sex in a different location or even a different environment. What about checking into a local hotel for just one night? Or go camping and let the fresh air energize you romantically. The key is to make it so spontaneous, so much fun, that you banish the “work” that sex has become.
  • Take a break. You and your partner might consider taking a monthlong break from trying to get pregnant. Reducing the stress and anxiety in your sexual relationship now will ensure that your sex life will remain a source of pleasure and relaxation for years to come.
  • Get physical together. Exercise is a fabulous stress buster. But why go it alone? Consider taking up tennis, dancing, swimming or kayaking—all fun, physical activities you can do together. Consider taking a yoga class together. It will not only strengthen your body but also teach you deep breathing, which is helpful in relaxing and focusing. Of course, there’s nothing wrong with long walks either. Just remember to hold hands.
  • Respect your differences. Each of you will deal with the situation differently. Just because you don’t cry or talk for hours about the infertility doesn’t mean you aren’t hurting. Men are more likely to distance themselves from the issue and become irritable. Women need to understand that this may be your way of coping.
  • Photo: Lipstiq
    Photo: Lipstiq

    Talk! She cannot read your mind. If you need her to be more supportive, tell her, but be specific. What do you mean by supportive? If you need time to be alone because you’re angry and upset and don’t want to take it out on her, tell her so she doesn’t think you’re shutting her out. If you have a hard time verbalizing your feelings, try writing them down in an e-mail or letter to him.

  • Agree on how far you’ll go. You can easily exhaust your bank account, marriage and emotional reserves through infertility treatment. It’s a good idea to talk before the rollercoaster ride begins about which treatments and how many you’ll undergo and how much money you’ll spend. You may not know at the outset what decisions you will face, but you can talk to other couples through a support group or ask your health care provider to give you research and possible scenarios that you can consider.
  • Seek outside help. Even if you think your relationship will weather the infertility storm, it’s still a good idea to talk to a couples’ therapist. You know the saying: “An ounce of prevention…” You also may consider joining a support group for people going through infertility treatments.

Sometimes it may seem as if your wife or partner is the only one experiencing infertility. She’s the one who gets the hugs and flowers; she’s the one who is asked about her feelings, her health, her emotional state.

But what about you?

Photo: Top News
Photo: Top News

Chances are, you’re suffering too. A recent study found that the male partners of infertile couples were quite likely to feel depressed and to have erectile dysfunction and other sexual relationship problems. Unfortunately, too often men try to distance themselves from infertility, keep their feelings to themselves and focus on plans to “solve” the infertility, all of which are less-than-ideal ways of coping that can harm your relationship.

Discussing your feelings with your partner will allow you to bond over feelings of being out of control. Initiating and participating in fertility-free dates or intercourse-free dates may allow you to reexplore the eroticism of earlier times in your courtship and provide relief from goal-oriented sex.

These tips can help the two of you maintain a strong relationship as you work through the physical and emotional issues of infertility in your quest for a child.

Keep Cool.

Source: Healthy Women

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