DECADE
Every year that goes by, my blog
entries are less and less frequent. I
barely come over here anymore. I have
thought often of just officially shutting this down, for once and for all, and
retiring it. Cancel my domain name, pull
the plug, and move on.
But I can’t. I may ignore, avoid and all together shun my blog,
but I cannot and will not delete it.
Anyone who knows me knows how
nostalgic I can be. I sort of get a kick
out of knowing this site is here, anytime I want to visit. My blog doesn’t judge or reprimand me if I go
for months without posting an update. It
is always here for me when I need to browse back through the archives and
re-read some of my past entries. It is
always present, when I need it, to give me a chuckle, or a cry or (too often)
make me cringe.
The thing is, this blog has saved
my life.
I’ve been keeping this blog for
ten years, as of this coming Saturday.
Writing this blog led to my discovery
of the power of social media. The moment
I wrote my first post and hit the “publish” button, my world changed. I have always – always – put pen to paper to
get my feelings and emotions in check. I
was always journaling in high school, college, and throughout my twenties. Writing is the one way I can sort things
out. It is often messy and seldom clear
where I am trying to get to, until I get there.
Writing has never been detrimental – it always ALWAYS helps.
But everything changed with the “publish”
feature. Suddenly, I had an
audience. I was no longer the sole
author and reader of my words. People
out there in the real world were reading what I wrote. Furthermore, they were responding! Feedback to my words! It was exactly what I needed at a time I
really needed it.
I love that first group of social
media connections I made. Based on the
subject matter, I was interacting with 99% females. Ten years ago, we had our own little
community in our own corner of the internet and it felt like family. To this day I cherish these friendships intensely,
even though many of these women I have never met in real life.
There was a grrl who ate floor
cake. There was another gal who was “a little” pregnant. There was a not-so-drab lady named
Olivia. There was a mama in Brooklyn . There was a woman in South
Africa who was always SO close, there was a
chick who was a muse to her reproductive endocrinologist, and there was this brilliantly
hilarious woman with naked ovaries. (She
even had an alter-ego in her blog, called “infertile myrtle.”)
These women saved me. At a time in my life when I was feeling so
damned alone and so hopeless, these women who didn’t even know my name helped
me. They turned their flashlights on and
led the way for me down the pitch black and somber tunnels of infertility.
One by one, each one of us wrote
our own parenting stories. Some
adopted. Some had children via
surrogates. Some had miscarriage after
miscarriage after miscarriage and still found the courage to keep going. Some….well, some stopped posting and I just
don’t know if they ever became parents. And
some of us also found miracles.
(Those who know me well know that
my daughter’s existence is miraculous, even by the standards of infertility-odds. That story has been told many times, and I am
happy to tell it again to anyone who asks, but not here and not now.)
I have managed to keep in touch
with some of that group of women through the social media platforms that have
come to supersede my blog: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Foursquare, LinkedIn,
etc. I often sit back and marvel at the
photos of them with their children. Many
of these women have more than one child, and their oldest are around the same
age as my Amanda. I vividly remember
when the whole LOT of us were childless, wondering when
and if our time would ever come. Wouldn’t
it be something if we could get together, in person, and meet? Furthermore, imagine having our children
meet? A whole generation of children,
brought into this world not just by love but by numerous tears, injected
hormones, prescription drugs and countless surgeries. A whole generation of kids are on this earth
not just because the process of In-Vitro Fertilization worked, but because of
the support system that we created for one another.
My child exists because of the
love and support all of you “anonymous” bloggers gave to me. When I was absolutely convinced that I couldn’t
possibly endure one more cycle, one more progesterone injection, or one more
phone call from the office saying “We’re so sorry Dawn, but it didn’t work,”
you were there to get me through. You
talked me off the ledge. You shared your
own heartbreaking stories with me. You
gave me strength to put that day’s failure in the past, and take on tomorrow
with new hope. I wanted to quit so many
times, and the main reason I didn’t was because of all of you. You gave me the one thing I needed more than
anything else: understanding. Because of
the support from you wonderful women, it yielded me the gift of my life: my
precious child.
So.
Delete this blog? Not a chance.
I may only post a few times a year these days, rather than every couple
of days. But I can’t let it go, because
it is too much a part of my journey now.
So much has happened in the past
ten years. This blog saw me settle into
my first home with Anthony (in Dedham), it saw me through six intrusive IVF
cycles, one chemical pregnancy, two IUI cycles, four surgeries, a pregnancy
that actually resulted in a baby (imagine that!), two subsequent pregnancies,
two heartbreaking miscarriages, and a final surgery to end my reproductive
years. While I wrote in this blog we
built a brand new home in Attleboro, I became an aunt three times over, and the
Red Sox won the World Series THREE TIMES.
During the years I kept this blog I gained a wonderful brother-in-law,
my parents moved out of state, and my marriage deteriorated. While I wrote in this blog I took up a new
hobby, and with that hobby I went on to run two marathons, ten half marathons
and hundreds of 5K road races. I moved
back to Dedham as a single parent,
found myself on the brink of an emotional breakdown (more than once), and even
managed to find myself in a relationship for a short while.
Ten years is a long time. My view – literal and figurative – has changed
many times as I sat at this keyboard and posted my updates. So much can happen in the span of a
decade. This blog, if nothing else, is a
record of just some of those changes. We
are always moving forward and we cannot change the things that have happened to
us. But we can learn from our past triumphs
and mistakes. Reflecting on where we have
come from, and on just how far we HAVE come, only helps to shape the person
that we are still becoming.
Ten years ago I could never have
predicted I’d be where I am now: single mom to a beautiful and talented young
lady, raising her as best as I can in the town where I grew up.
Ten years from now, who knows? I’m sure things will be different then in
ways I cannot possibly imagine today.
But one thing I know?
This blog – my rock – will still
be here, for me to use however I need to.
Here’s to ten more years.