After my husband and I had been married for about five years, we
decided that it was time to start a family. I somehow believed becoming
pregnant would be easy, as before marriage I had been warned repeatedly
by my mother that this was the case. However, after failing to become
pregnant after three months of trying, I became increasingly concerned.
Following medical advice, I charted the time of the month where I
ovulated and should be most fertile. I followed all advice available at
that time, but still did not become pregnant. Each month when I
realized that I had not become pregnant, my anxiety level increased. I
began to wonder what my life would be like if I couldn’t get pregnant
and even pictured my life and emptiness without children. Each month,
when my period arrived, my thoughts and emotions became more and more
focused on my lack of success in becoming pregnant.
During this time period, my husband received a job
transfer to another, far away, state. After discussing it, we decided
that we should delay having a child until we had relocated, thinking
that would make it easier for me to find a new job at the new
location. However, the night we received the transfer orders, and
after making the decision to delay pregnancy, we did not use birth
control. After months of unsuccessfully trying to become pregnant, I
was not the least concerned about the lack of birth control.
Because I was no longer obsessing over becoming
pregnant, it was two months later when I first realized that I was
pregnant. Later, as I reflected on this chain of events, I came to the
conclusion that my increase in anxiety and negative thinking, which was
fueled monthly when it became clear that I was not pregnant, was
probably acting as a block to my becoming pregnant. How ironic, I
thought, that the very desire to have children could be the factor
which interferes with conceiving them! I suspect each of us have heard
stories of couples who, after years of trying to become pregnant, adopt
a child, only to discover a few months later that the wife is pregnant.
Later, after I established a private practice, I
counseled a 40 year old woman who had become very upset over her
inability to have a child. Her husband had been diagnosed with cancer,
which would soon require chemotherapy treatments that could damage his
sperm, making pregnancy unadvisable. Reminded of my own experience, I
created an audio tape for her to listen to repeatedly. Her first child
was born on my birthday. Her husband’s sperm was frozen so that she was
able to use it to have a second healthy child a couple of years later.
Since that time, a number of women have told me
that listening to this audio tape helped them to become pregnant. Other
patients requested audio tapes to help them become pregnant as they
went through in vitro fertilization treatments (IVF). IVF involves
removing (aspirating) eggs from the woman, fertilizing them with sperm
outside of her body and them reintroducing the fertilized egg (embryo)
into the woman’s uterus.
Pictured below are triplets born to a woman who listened to this script to accompany her IVF procedure.
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