That's the question that my husband posed to me this morning when we were talking -- yet again -- about whether to move forward with a different donor.
For me, there's another question: Am I comfortable picking another donor and starting the process over again, only to be heartbroken without ever making it to retrieval?
So I'm trying to look at what life would be like under both scenarios:
If we quit, I wouldn't need my health benefits that cover IVF -- that's the only way we've been able to afford all this.
That means that maybe I could go part-time and spend more time with my daughter.
As my husband put it after the first donor fell through: Maybe we should use this as a sign that we should do a better job with the one kid we've already got.
Not that we're bad parents. And, seriously, she's a fantastic kid. Personable. Funny. Respectful (most of the time). Loving. Generous. Smart.
But we both work long hours. We have opposite schedules. And she has always expressed a desire to spend more time at home instead of having to go to after-school care.
I've tried to go part-time over the years -- I've submitted proposals and job-share plans -- but my employer couldn't make it work. Now that news.papers are in such bad shape, I think they'd go for it. It would save them a good amount of money and the paper would still come out every day.
I could pick up my daughter after school every day. She could have friends come over for playdates. She could participate in after-school things at the park district. She could maybe join a sport team of some sort. These are all things that have been reserved for weekends because of my 10-hour-a-day work schedule. Oh, and I have to work weekends now, too. So even weekend activities would be limited if I continue full-time.
Going part-time means relying on my husband's benefits, which are excellent. However, since his company is self-insured, they are exempt from the state law that mandates insurance coverage for IVF.
No insurance -- no IVF. We just can't take on that kind of expense without putting an uncomfortable amount of pressure on us. I'm not good at most debt.
But I go back to that question ... am I comfortable with the choice to raise my daughter as an only child?
Well, the answer is: No.
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1 comment:
from what I know of you, Anne, I'm certain that you will make the best decision for you and your family. i'm rooting for you guys!
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