'When are you going to have a baby?' can be a loaded, painful question - Action News
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NLLife

'When are you going to have a baby?' can be a loaded, painful question

A woman tired of being asked when she is going to start a family is opening up about the pain and stress of infertility in a new blog.

Baie Verte couple opens up in blog about struggles with infertility

Stefanie and Chris Howell take a cruise in October 2014. It was on this trip that they decided it was time to start a family. (Submitted by Stefanie Howell)

Stefanie Howell and her husband, Chris, live in the small town of Baie Verteon Newfoundland's north coast, on a street surrounded by young families.

While they love hearing the sound ofchildren playing outside, it is a constant reminder ofthepainful journeythey were keepingfrom friends and neighbours.

"I had one person tell me that I needed to have a baby so I could fit in on our street.Like you don't realize the kind of damage that's doing to somebody when you make those comments," said Howell.

The couple hasbeen quietly struggling with infertility for the past three years, going about their business day to day, "hiding and and pretending that everything was OK."

The couple hold their goddaughter, Raelin, and her brother, Ryder. Stefanie Howell says they, and all the other children in their lives, help fill the void they feel of not being parents yet. (Submitted by Stefanie Howell)

"We didn't want to burden other people with what we were going through, and most of our friends do have children and we didn't want them to feel uncomfortable being around us, and bringing their children around us because we were going through this, so we kind of kept it all bottled up,' Howell said.

Learning to rest

All that changed in January, when Howelldecided to open up about the stress and strain caused by trying and failingto have a baby in a blog she calledLearning To Rest.

"I just got tired of pretending, of hiding, you know, everyone asking questions, 'How come there's no babies yet?'
and I just got to a breaking point, I think I kind of needed everybody to know exactly what we were going through."

The extra emotional strain that that adds to a marriage is huge, it's massive.- Stefanie Howell

The journey since learning in 2016 she may have a bicornuate uterus, which is heart-shaped instead of pear-shaped and is associated with reproductive issues, has been long and painful.

Exploratory surgery also confirmed Howell was suffering from endometriosisa disorder in which uterine tissue spreads and can cause scarring and blockages. She hopedcorrecting that would be the answer to her fertility problems. But six months later, she still wasn't pregnant.

Stefanie holds her godson, Gregory. (Submitted by Stefanie Howell)

The Newfoundland and Labrador Fertility Clinic in St. John's gave the couple two options in June 2017, intrauterine inseminationor in-vitro fertilization the costly procedure, which involves fertilizing an egg with a sperm outside of the body, is not offered in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Four rounds of IUI over four months in the last half of 2017 put a big strain on the couple's marriage.

"I blame myself, my husband blames himself you get so stressed out you're blaming each other when really it's nobody's fault," she told CBC Radio's St. John's Morning Show.

"The travelling back and forth, wondering what we're going to do next, and if it comes to that we have to do IVF, the travel, the cost of extra medications, being away from our family, the extra emotional strain that that adds to a marriage is huge, it's massive."

A shot from Stefanie and Chris Howell's blog, Learning to Rest. (wordpress.com)

According toDr. Sean Murphy, a reproductive endocrinology and infertility specialistin St. John's, one in six couples of reproductive age hasfertility issues.

"Itis incredibly common, so whether you know it or you don't, you definitely know somebody who has had or is going through reproductive concerns," he said.

Most of the cost of IUIis covered by the provincial medical plan, but IVFis not.

"The gold standard for many reproductive concerns and diagnoses is in-vitro fertilization, but unfortunately it's not available in Newfoundland. So the costs become significantly increased once you start looking at that."

Murphy said the province hasthe medical expertise to offer IVF,but he assumes the cost is a barrier. Eastern Health doesn't have the specialized labs and otherequipment necessary to offer the procedure here.

Similar to cancer diagnosis

The coupleis in a holding pattern right now. Blood work for the last attempt at IUI indicated Stefanie may havean ovarian cyst, so the procedure was postponed. And Howell said she isn't emotionally ready to consider taking on the mental, physical and financial strain ofIVF.

I've learned that I just need to be honest, and to say were having issues.- Stefanie Howell

"Studies show the stress a couple goes through in dealing with a fertility diagnosis and treatment is at least equivalent to dealing with a new cancer diagnosis, so you can certainly appreciate what couples often go through," said Murphy.

One thing that has helped them deal with the strain is opening up to friends and strangers about the situation on their blog.

"Deep down I know there are a lot of other people out there that are going through these things, and I got to the point I just didn't want to feel alone anymore, and I don't want those people to feel alone anymore," said Howell.

Chris is a captain with the Baie Verte Volunteer Fire Department, and the couple work together in the same facility. Stefanie says most of their coworkers knew they were trying to start a family, but didn't know the extent of what they we were going through. (Submitted by Stefanie Howell)

The couplehoped writing about their feelings would be an outlet to help them cope, while letting other people going through the same thing know they had someone they could talk to.

"And that's exactly what happened.I had people messaging me from right across the country," said Howell.

"It has taught me that I am a lot stronger than I thought, my marriage is a lot stronger than what I thought it was, and I do have a lot of support."

Opening up has also changed how Howell responds when people don't realize they're bring up a painful and sensitive topic when they ask, "When are you going to have a baby?"

"I've learned that I just need to be honest, and to say we're having issues, it's not coming naturally to us like it [does] for some people, and we are working really hard at it."

With files from the St. John's Morning Show