This is a little long, but it all relates to my question at the end, so I ask for a bit of patience.
In early 2006, my husband and I decided to try getting pregnant. It took us six months to conceive and I lost the baby at eight weeks after a very stressful death in the family. This required a D&C, because my body refused to miscarry on it's own (even though there was nothing in my uterus.)
After that, I concieved fairly quickly (within three months), only it turned out to be an ectopic pregnancy which required surgery, heartbreak, painful recovery and the loss of part of one of my fallopian tubes.
My next was six months later, and I carried for five weeks before losing the pregnancy. Three months after that, another.
This most recent was concieved on my five-year wedding anniversary, and we found out I was pregnant on Christmas. I know this sounds stupid, but I felt like this was the lucky one... I carried to ten weeks before having a miscarriage. This also required a D&C.
I'd like to put in here that in each of the pregnancies, I ate right, excersised, stayed away from cat litter, alchohol and ciggarrette smoke, took my prenatal vitamins; in general, I tried to stay as healthy as possible.
With my most recent one, I was on doctor-ordered bed rest for two months, because of my history, but I tried to excersise my arms and legs (they said that would be okay, they just didn't want me standing or walking a lot.), and basically did whatever I was told.
They also ran tests because of the history, to find out if there was something wrong, and everything came out (surprise, surprise) completely normal. I *should* be able to have a baby, but it's not happening. And I know it's not my husband, because he's had two children from his previous marriage.
My question is this (sorry it took so long to get here): Are there any similar stories out there, with women who have miscarried several times and then carried to term? We're using protection right now, mostly because this whole thing has taken such a toll on our hearts, but I'd like to know if I should try in the future, or if I should just let it go.
Thoughts? Serious ones, only, please.
Thanks.
In early 2006, my husband and I decided to try getting pregnant. It took us six months to conceive and I lost the baby at eight weeks after a very stressful death in the family. This required a D&C, because my body refused to miscarry on it's own (even though there was nothing in my uterus.)
After that, I concieved fairly quickly (within three months), only it turned out to be an ectopic pregnancy which required surgery, heartbreak, painful recovery and the loss of part of one of my fallopian tubes.
My next was six months later, and I carried for five weeks before losing the pregnancy. Three months after that, another.
This most recent was concieved on my five-year wedding anniversary, and we found out I was pregnant on Christmas. I know this sounds stupid, but I felt like this was the lucky one... I carried to ten weeks before having a miscarriage. This also required a D&C.
I'd like to put in here that in each of the pregnancies, I ate right, excersised, stayed away from cat litter, alchohol and ciggarrette smoke, took my prenatal vitamins; in general, I tried to stay as healthy as possible.
With my most recent one, I was on doctor-ordered bed rest for two months, because of my history, but I tried to excersise my arms and legs (they said that would be okay, they just didn't want me standing or walking a lot.), and basically did whatever I was told.
They also ran tests because of the history, to find out if there was something wrong, and everything came out (surprise, surprise) completely normal. I *should* be able to have a baby, but it's not happening. And I know it's not my husband, because he's had two children from his previous marriage.
My question is this (sorry it took so long to get here): Are there any similar stories out there, with women who have miscarried several times and then carried to term? We're using protection right now, mostly because this whole thing has taken such a toll on our hearts, but I'd like to know if I should try in the future, or if I should just let it go.
Thoughts? Serious ones, only, please.
Thanks.