Struggles with Infertility

Being a parent is not something that everyone has as a goal in life. But once you decide that you want to be a parent, and you are unable to, your life can either unravel, or you can try to find meaning in your struggles. This blog is me trying to find meaning.

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

The Wait


For us, when it comes to the adoption process, the anxiety of the wait feels different. I can compartmentalize better, because I’m not focused on the physical aspects of my body, like I would if we were pregnant. Our wait has been about two years, most of which was the process of getting paperwork, training, and records checks done in order to be placed on ‘the list’. We admittedly undertook that exercise a bit slower than most, as we were still unsure of if this was our next step. But ultimately, we checked the last of the boxes in September.
The adoption process and timeline itself is lengthy and expensive. After a potential adoptive parent or couple is placed on the list, the wait in Alberta for private placement is two to three years. The timeline varies based on your matching criteria, and over the last few years the number of children placed for adoption has decreased for a variety or reasons. Some provinces in Canada have a wait list of up to ten years, so we count ourselves lucky. Costs range from $15,000 to $25,000 for private domestic adoption, while international adoption is closer to $100,000 depending on the country. As you can understand, this is why ‘just adopt’, which I’ve heard more than a few times in our 12+ years of infertility, isn’t really as easy at it sounds (stop saying that!).
So for us, we buckled in for a multi-year wait. However, a few weeks ago we received a call asking if we were interested in showing our file to a potential birth family. We had one hour to decide. You can imagine the stress of that hour given our current COVID-19 situation across the globe (I am working from home, Derek is a first responder, so out working with the public), and the fact that I just received a promotion at work. We were not prepared for this, and wouldn’t have been for at least a year and a half. We had one of the most critical conversations of our marriage in the same amount of time it takes to watch an episode of your favourite Netflix series, and said yes.
This doesn’t mean we’re matched. It means we are in a different type of wait. The type where you think about those birth parents daily, knowing that they are making one of the most difficult and loving decisions of their lives. You hope it’s you, and you reassure yourself you will be ok if it’s not. You think about what if’s and restrain yourself from daydreaming too much. It’s a different wait, but difficult in it’s own way. We hope this phase of wait is over soon, and that however it turns out, it’s the best decision for the child and birth parents.