Love and Marriage, Waiting for Baby Bird

An Open Letter to My Fellow Infertility Wives

Whew, girl!

Infertility . Is . Exhausting. 

It’s not for the faint of heart. It’s overwhelming, scary, and stressful! Goodness, it’s stressful! Especially with all of the charting, timing, and planning for “intimate rendezvous,” that isn’t so…well, intimate anymore. Maybe it’s gotten more mechanical. It’s turned into business, not pleasure. And sometimes, doesn’t this journey feel lonely? Because while your husband is by your side, his mind seems elsewhere. It’s as if he is somehow sleeping through your crisis. He isn’t talking about it, and whenever you do, he doesn’t fully engage in the conversation. And him having an ugly cry and hiding underneath the covers because of another negative pregnancy test? That’s rare. Or his emotions? They are nothing like yours. And so, you can’t help but think, “Does he know how serious this is?” 

And those doctor’s appointments?

Yikes!

I can see you sitting there nervously in the waiting room. Your palms are sweating—heart racing. You can’t even sit still or concentrate as a million questions and “what ifs” are racing through your mind. Fear, doubt, and worry cripple every part of your being the longer you must wait for the nurse to call your name. While anxiously waiting, you think that your husband must feel the same. However, you look over, and there he is, casually sitting in his chair, flipping through a magazine, oblivious to what is happening. While watching him seem unfazed by it all, you become angry as you think, “Does he know how serious this is?

Or what about those negative pregnancy tests? They punch you in the gut and bring you to your knees on the bathroom floor, broken and crushed. You are sobbing and screaming, “When will it end?!” But there he is, still standing. He is trying to pick you up, hold you close, and whisper hope into your ear. He tells you that it will be okay. You will be okay. Together, you will be okay, and it won’t always be this hard, this overwhelming, or this stressful. He tries to tell you there is still next month, and it just wasn’t the right time. But all you can think is, “Does he know how serious this is?”

Or those small reminders you always see while strolling through Target, sitting down for a nice steak dinner, or shopping in the mall? You see them at every turn. You see the pregnant woman with an adorable baby bump. You notice the mother smiling with her children as she tickles their bellies. You walk past the cute outfits hanging on the display, and as you see them all, tears fall from your eyes, and you feel your heartbreak. But as you grab your husband’s hand and look for the pain in his eyes, you discover that he never even noticed. Instantly, you feel alone, thinking, “Does he know how serious this is?” 

But friend, can I tell you from one infertility wife to another?

He does.

He notices the baby showers you attend that hurt your soul beyond words. He sees that the doctor appointments are sometimes too much for you to bear, and the baby dedications, Mother’s Day celebrations, and other holidays, especially Christmas, cripple you to the core. He understands that the nine pregnant women you counted in Target will make you cry yourself to sleep. Or that one more negative pregnancy test might break you because it’s breaking him. And do you realize what else he is mindful of? The shame. And the embarrassment, the fear, and the disappointments. And he knows about the tears. The tears you shed and the tears he sheds when no one, including you, is looking.

And it’s all because he knows.

And he cares.

But if there is one thing I have learned throughout this journey, it is that our husbands deal with every aspect of infertility differently. They aren’t as emotional or open. They aren’t as stressed, fearful, or hopeless. It’s not because they don’t know how serious this situation is, but it’s because they understand if you both were a mess every month and curled up on the bathroom floor or pacing the hall before each doctor’s appointment, then who would be the one to pick us up when we fall? Who would calm us down and hold us tight when the doctor whispers words of defeat? Who would remind us while we are at our lowest point never to lose hope because next month might be different? And who would hold the umbrella when the grief of shattered dreams, negative pregnancy tests, and thoughts of fear come pouring down on us like an unexpected afternoon thunderstorm? Who? I will tell you. It’s him.  He would…your husband…your biggest supporter…your superhero.

Because wives, he is your superhero even in the silence. Even in the awkward hugs and the band-aid words he uses to try to give you hope as he picks you up off the floor. He was born with that innate desire to “fix” what breaks, and he longs to save the day, causing you to smile again. Therefore, let him. Let him kiss you on the forehead and tell you everything is okay rather than immediately shove him away or yell at him for being so irrationally optimistic. Let him feel he is rescuing his damsel in distress because while his strategies are not the best, his heart and motives are pure.

It is his way of showing that he cares.

And he knows.

Therefore, while he is busy being your superhero, wives always remember to be busy letting him know that you think he is your superhero. Or that he is enough and completes you. It’s so easy to let our desires take over and cast a dark shadow over the blessings we already have in our lives. It’s so easy to stop making those most important to us feel as though they are just that — important, which is not uncommon. It happened with the notorious Hannah of the Bible. Her story of barrenness is in 1 Samuel and is an excellent example of how we can’t let having a child shadow our love for our husbands. In their struggle, her husband, Elkanah, asked her, “Hannah, why are you weeping? Why don’t you eat? Why are you downhearted? Don’t I mean more to you than ten sons?” That last question stings, right? It always rocks me to the core and reminds me of how important it is to make our husbands feel that even while we don’t have children yet, the time we have together as a couple is just as important. It’s just as memorable and fulfilling. And it reminds me that they want us to see them for more than their ability to procreate.

So, to my fellow infertility wives, let’s be busy ensuring they don’t get lost in the shuffle of our charting, timing, and doctor’s appointments. Let’s stay busy enjoying the journey of just being the two of us while we are on our way to making it the three, four, or five of us.

Let’s also continually remind them daily through simple words and gestures that they are still our main squeeze, our better half, and our superheroes. And most of all, let’s extend grace to them. Grace when they don’t engage in the conversation like we would hope or ask more questions at the doctor’s office. Grace when they don’t notice the pregnant women and the new mommies overtaking the church pew. And grace when their band-aid words, gentle kisses on the forehead, and big bear hugs don’t help. Because while you think he doesn’t know the seriousness of your situation, he does. But you know what else he knows? He knows when he isn’t enough. And he knows when you don’t think of him as your superhero.

Therefore, hug him a little tighter tonight. Kiss him a little longer, dig out that first love note or photo you took together, and let it remind you why you fell in love in the first place. Because can we be gut-wrenching and honest together for just a second? What good is it to bring children, whether biological or adopted, into a family when your marriage is suffering and becoming shattered as a result of it?

With all my love,

Your friend and fellow infertility wife


My name is Elisha, and I am the founder of Waiting for Baby Bird Ministries, which first began as an infertility blog in 2013. I know the struggle of infertility and loss as me and my husband have been married for 17 years, and despite the last 12 of those years unsuccessfully being able to conceive due to PCOS. However, we continue to stay positive as we believe the Lord for a miracle. However, despite my womb remaining empty after my miscarriage in 2012, my arms have not. In 2017, my husband and I adopted a little girl, now 13, after spending 1,273 days in foster care. My mission is to share my story to inspire and breathe hope into other women facing similar circumstances.


I would love to connect with you personally, so if you liked this post, pass it on; then come find Waiting for Baby Bird on the public Facebook page or join me on Instagram @waitingforbabybird. I can’t wait to “meet” you!


If you are looking for a faith-based infertility community of other women who “get it,” head to the *PRIVATE* Waiting for Baby Bird Support group for hope + encouragement. There you will find opportunities to ask for prayer, enter into exclusive giveaways, watch *LIVE* encouragement videos from me, author of “Waiting for Baby Bird,” and share your heart with others on the same path and so much more! So what are you waiting for? Find us here!

63 thoughts on “An Open Letter to My Fellow Infertility Wives”

  1. I am a firm believer that most of us chose our partners in life before the whole baby thing ever went awry. And, today even after 5 losses, I still chose my Mr., and he still chooses me. Yes, we cope differently, but we’ve learned so much about each other and what our differences are. So, today we chose to work together through all our ups and downs and we chose to nurture our love and our marriage as our first priority. The babies, they may come or they may not, but more then anything we want to be together today and into the future.

    1. I agree :). I was prompted to write this post after receiving numerous emails from other women who are frustrated and struggling to understand why their husbands react differently and them feeling as if they are not as invested.

      1. The absolute best thing we ever did to help us understand why we were reacting differently was to speak with a counsellor together. She helped us learn how we are processing things differently, how to support each other in ways that are effect for the other person, how to disagree respectfully and how to nurture our love through this. I would recommend to anyone going through IF/RPL to speak to a professional who is experienced in IF/RPL.

      2. Oh yes!! It is so important to practice good self care and good marriage care during difficult times especially rpl and if. You guys are an excellent example of staying strong as well as a calm persistence. They are so inspiring as a couple

  2. This is perfect. I remember last month when I had my Clomid meltdown, I asked B why he didn’t want to go to appointments with me and why he didn’t care. It’s hard that they process and deal so differently than us, but we need to remember that without them we wouldn’t probably be worrying about a family anyway!

  3. Oh, Elisha! I am SO thankful for this post. You are SO right in all you said. Having walked the full gamut of this journey, I can totally agree that our husbands FEEL this as much and as deeply and as widely as we do. Their brains are just wired differently, and they respond in a different (and what we sometimes perceive to be INdifferent way). Infertility hits them every bit as hard, but, as you said, they retain strength to keep picking us up and putting us back together again. Thank God for our dear husbands who are every bit as true and loving to us as Hannah’s was to her. We are abundantly blessed! They do not get near the credit they deserve…ever….so, thank you, sweet friend, for acknowledging and celebrating them today!!

      1. Thank u so.much for ur words of knowledge. I see my self in ur posts. I jst feel touched n will surely go close to him tonight n hold him so tight👍

  4. Wow. Are you in my brain? This is exactly how I feel.

    It’s also even harder on men because they can’t cry on the phone with a girlfriend. This isn’t the kind of thing the bros are good at helping with. So his pain has nowhere to go.

  5. Thank you for this lovely post Elisha. Your blog is always such a comforting place to come to feel belonging and a sense of community, when in this journey through infertility it is so easy to feel isolated and excluded. This is a good reminder to nourish and look after your marriage, and not overlook its importance. I may not have been blessed with a child (yet) but I know I am so so lucky to have my husband.

  6. I really have to say thank you for writing this!!!! It means so much to know that we are all feeling the same way about all of this. You have put my feelings into words that I have never been able to put out to family and friends. I have been told that I am such a strong person, I never thought I was, but until I started going through IVF. Again thank you for putting it into words that others can understand.

    1. Hey Latora! Thank you so much for taking the time to read and comment! And can I just say that you are a strong person? I mean seriously! Anyone who can go through infertility and IVF is strong in my book 🙂 Hang in there! I am believing and hoping with you!

      For He settles the barren woman as a happy mother of children. Praise the Lord. ~Psalm 113:9

  7. It’s almost scary how much I identify with this post! I am so thankful for my Hubbie even though we have experienced this infertility journey differently.

    1. I am so thankful for mine too! Sometimes I just stop dead in my tracks and think about how awesome he truly has been through all of this.

  8. You have such an ability with words. Thank you for this post today. Makes me think of my hubby & how he has his own unique sense of support.

  9. This is a beautiful post!! There are times during my infertility journey where I wondered why my husband seems “fine” when I am in tears and just so overwhelmed and sad. I think that men and women deal with this process differently and that is definitely part of it. The other thing that I have realized is while my main focus is on getting pregnant – his main focus is on getting pregnant AND looking after me. He seems “fine” because he is worried about me and is so focused on making sure that I am okay. This journey is a crazy one and I am so grateful that I have my wonderful husband by my side – I couldn’t do all of this without him!

    1. I think we all wonder why our husbands “seem” fine when it appears our whole world is caving in around us. But they just deal with life differently than us. And it’s a good thing God wired us this way. There is no reason for the whole household to be losing hope. hehe! Thank you for taking the time to comment. I pray that you have an awesome day! xo

  10. So much love with this post. As bad as I want to expand our family I thoroughly enjoy the time that we have with just us.

    1. So glad to hear! You and your hubby seem like you do so well together…you compliment each others strengths and weaknesses very well!! xo

  11. This article is so perfect. It is exactly how I felt for a long time, but I learned that men do react differently than we do. I’m the one who feels like a failure month after month, while my husband is just optimistic that it will happen the next month. I’ve only ever seen him cry when we had our two miscarriages, but when talking one day, he said that he thinks about them sometimes on his commute to work, which is 50 minutes and mostly through a country side, so he could’ve cried at some point, but is just strong for me. I do my best to make him feel appreciated and loved with surprise dates and other things. He is everything to me and I don’t know where I would be without him.

    1. Awe! I can totally feel the love you have for him through your words. It’s so sweet! ❤️. Thank you for sharing.

  12. I know these feelings. Joel is way more involved and pained than most I’ve talked to but even still sometimes I felt like he didn’t understand. This month was the first time I felt like he really really got it. Last week as we sat on our couch, the daddy/daughter camry commercial brought him to tears. He cried on my chest sad for the little girl he longs for 🙁 It broke my heart and it made me realize how thankful I am that he’s most often strong. I still cry thinking about that night of him losing it. Watching him grieve is 10x harder than grieving myself so I’m thankful he doesn’t lose it that often.

    1. Awe sugars!!! Bless his heart! It is so awesome though that you are able to comfort him when he needs it and he is able to comfort you when you need it! That’s amazing!

  13. love this. through this whole journey hubby is always saying he wants to make me happy. i always remind him, he makes me happy each and every day. no matter where this takes us, he is my partner, my world.

  14. Beautiful post. Made me cry. My husband lived through infertility really differently from me, as you say. But there have been moments in which he was more desperate and frustrated than me. Moments in which I had to be the hero and we swapped roles.. Those were scary moments because seeing him break down was really heartbreaking. But that’s also what couples are for: to support each other so that you can go on through the difficulties. If there is one thing I learnt through infertility is the value of marriage and of my relationship with my husband. We’re each other heroes and aware of it. It’s no small thing..
    Thanks for this beautiful post!
    xx

  15. Nail on head. I repeat. Nail on head.

    This is perfect. I needed to hear this today. I needed to cry over this. Thank you for sharing what God put in your heart.

  16. “Don’t I mean more to you than ten sons?”
    How have I always overlooked that line? I have read that verse a thousand times. I have never read it and felt such an ache as I did just now. I love that line. I need to write that one on my bathroom mirror to see every night before I go to bed.

    “What good is it to bring children, whether biological or adopted, into a family when your marriage is suffering and becoming shattered as a result of it?”
    Absolutely, 100% correct! I just love that you put this out there. It’s so true.

    Great post, Elisha!

  17. Thank you. Just tonight, I snapped at my husband after telling him about a newly pregnant colleague and he tried to make it better. I needed to read this. I could not stop crying. It is all so true. Thanks for sharing.

  18. This is perfect! My husband and I went through 10 years of infertility and I wish I had these words from the very beginning. I think I finally figured things out a little better along the way. But these are great for me to remember again as we begin our final IVF treatments this year. Having had success makes it easier, but it is still always hard.

  19. That’s beautifully written, Elisha! And oh-so-true. Its so easy to forget amidst all the disappointments and heartaches. They are aching too. They just cope with it differently. And thank god for that!

  20. You are like a mind reader to me :). I have no words.. How wonderfully you wrote our emotions in to a piece of paper!(well, in to a blog. I really appreciate your efforts in writing this. Beautifully written!:). Hugs<3

  21. I absolutely LOVE this!!! Sometimes we forget that this affects our husbands too, even though it’s happening in our bodies! Our husband’s need our encouragement and to know that they still matter!

  22. I love this post. There are times when I would get really down about not being a mom and he would try to make me smile, but I wouldn’t. Now I understand what he’s trying to do. This is so well written.

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