Specialist Therapy for IVF, Miscarriage & Infertility - Online

The Hardest Part of IVF is Often the Emotional Impact

 

When people think about IVF, they usually think about the medical side of treatment. The injections. The scans. The appointments. The procedures. And of course, those things can be difficult.

Before starting IVF, most of us expect that part to be hard. We prepare ourselves as best we can. We learn about medications, treatment protocols, egg collections and embryo transfers. We focus on what needs to happen medically in order to give ourselves the best possible chance of success. And that can also involve focusing on becoming as physically healthy as possible.

What many people don't anticipate is the emotional impact.

However, for many women, that becomes the hardest part. Not because the medical side isn't challenging, but because IVF is so much more than a medical process. Once you begin, you tend to realise that IVF is something that can impact  almost every part of your life and it's much more challenging than you anticipated.

Living with uncertainty

One of the most difficult aspects of IVF is the uncertainty.

You are constantly waiting. Waiting for appointments. Waiting for scan results. Waiting to find out how many eggs were collected. Waiting to hear how many fertilised. Waiting to find out whether embryos developed and how many. Going through the two week wait after transfer. Waiting to take a pregnancy test and see if the cycle has worked.

And there are no guarantees or certainty with any of it. It is a medical science, but it is also a bit like a lottery. One that requires everything from you. Yet there is no way of knowing ahead of time how your story will unfold. Living with that level of uncertainty for months and often years, with so many stumbling blocks and so much disappointment and loss along the way, can be exhausting and debilitating.

The emotional rollercoaster of hope and disappointment

IVF often involves repeatedly allowing yourself to hope. Hope that this cycle will be the one. Hope that this embryo will work. Hope that this treatment will finally bring you closer to the family you long for.

And hope can be incredibly important. Without it, many people feel they couldn't continue.

But hope can also become painful.

Because every time we allow ourselves to hope, we risk disappointment, grief and a sense of loss. As IVF continues, many women find themselves caught between desperately wanting to believe and desperately wanting to protect themselves from being hurt again. It can become emotionally exhausting and hope can become a complicated, confusing thing. Something that starts to become associated with pain alongside, or even instead of positivity.

When life starts to feel like it's on hold

Many women describe feeling as though their life has been put on hold during IVF.

Plans get postponed. Holidays are cancelled. Career decisions may be delayed.

Finances become focused on treatment at the expense of other things.

Relationships can begin revolving around appointments, medication schedules and difficult conversations rather than spontaneous connection and shared moments for the sake of it.

Meanwhile, it can seem as though everyone else is moving forward. Friends are becoming pregnant. Families are growing. Life carries on around you. And it can leave you feeling stuck.

This can be hard to accept, and it can feel as though life is passing you by with nothing to show for it.

The loneliness of infertility and IVF

One of the things I hear most often is how lonely and isolating IVF can feel.

Friends and family may care deeply. They may want to support you. But unless someone has experienced infertility or IVF themselves, it can be difficult for them to fully understand what it feels like to live with the ongoing uncertainty, fear, hope and disappointment.

You may find yourself hiding how much you are struggling. Putting on a brave face. Pretending you're coping better than you are. Or avoiding conversations altogether because you don't have the energy to explain.

That loneliness can feel incredibly hard to bear and you can end up feeling even more isolated.

Why support matters

The reason I feel so passionate about supporting women with IVF and the impact it has on them, is because I know how profoundly difficult this journey can be, and how the impact is often unexpected and hard to deal with.

As a counsellor and psychotherapist who has lived through infertility and IVF myself, I understand that this experience is about so much more than fertility treatment.

It's about grief.
Hope.
Fear.
Loss.
Relationships.
Identity.

And the uncertainty of not knowing what the future holds.

Having a space where you don't need to explain why this feels so hard can make a real difference. A space where you can talk honestly about what you're carrying. Without judgement. Without pressure to stay positive. Just support. From someone who personally understands what it is like to go through this, but who also has the professional experience and expertise to be able to help you process what you are going through, and can help you navigate your way through it.
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If you're going through IVF and finding it harder than you expected, you don't have to carry it alone. I offer online counselling and psychotherapy for women navigating infertility, IVF, pregnancy loss and the emotional challenges that can come with these issues.

Contact me to book a free telephone consultation or an initial appointment


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