A day in the life of…anxious nerd edition

This will be short and sweet. I need sleep. Like… a lot of sleep. 

Tomorrow is my HSG scan and having never had one before I am slightly nervous. HSG scans are done to detect any problems in the womb or fallopian tubes. Primarily it is a box to be ticked for the NHS while we stroll through the winding maze of fertility help. The procedure will start with a dye being injected into my cervix and then an x-ray will be taken of my uterus to rule out any problems that blood tests and other scans cannot detect. There is a chance I’ll be in mild discomfort throughout and possibilities of cramping after. Oh what fun!

Ultimately these tests are there to rule out anything else that may be causing my fertility problems, but it is also another uncomfortable box to tick, another hoop to jump through for paperwork that treats us like a number instead of people. I wish this whole ‘journey’ was easier. I wish I didn’t have to be naked from the waist down in front of another stranger. So far, I’ve had three external exams and three not so external exams. That’s three women who have seen parts of me I’d rather lock away from the world. Mr W can’t even be in the room with me this time, due to the x-ray machine, and that means this anxious lady is going to cry. Whether it hurts or not is not why I’ll cry, it will be the feeling of shame, embarrassment and, dare I say, violation. I feel violated every single time. Yes I give my permission, but damn it feels so invasive. It also makes me feel turned inside out, like they’re turning me out like a bag trying to find a problem. I just feel like a vessel that is broken. 

Christ, that turned down a path I didn’t realise existed. Maybe I did realise. But maybe, jumping through these hoops while riding this rollercoaster of emotions feels futile sometimes. It is so hard to work out whether you are actually cared about by the doctor sitting in front of you or whether he actually thinks you need these tests. Is he just going through the motions? I very nearly had a 4th scan in 2021 down to an admin error. A completely unnecessary scan that was meant for someone else. If I hadn’t questioned it I would have had it without reason. It wouldn’t have made any sense on my file and the only thing it would have done is chip away at my remaining dignity. 

I am well aware that there are other procedures out there that are more invasive and are thrust upon people more than 3 times in their life. I am also very aware that after the two years of being mucked around by the NHS I have very little faith in their processes. So this journey we are on has, so far, left my mental health beaten up by an unexpected battle to get here today. Having a scan that I may or may not need. It is not lost on me that the scan may show something I, we, the previous doctor has been unaware of. I am prepared to accept further complications. What I wasn’t prepared for was the doctor saying that it wouldn’t do any harm having a HSG, just cos. I’ll tell you what buddy, let’s use this speculum on you and see what’s going on down there, just cos.  

Tonight we continued our very long tour through our DVDs. (Yes we still own dvds.) They are, obviously, hey it’s me, arranged in alphabetical order and once they were unpacked onto the beautiful shelving Mr W made all those years ago, we made a pact to watch every single film in order. We are now in our sixth year of watching said movies and are only just finishing the ‘P’s’. It was the turn of one of my movies tonight and although a favourite of mine at age 14, I could not stop myself from enjoying it even now. Mr W sat in silence as I smiled and laughed my way through. It was definitely not his cup of tea and yet he didn’t mock me. He did wince when I told him there was a sequel that I unfortunately do not own. Woe is life. 

It crossed my mind as I brushed my teeth and came up to bed. When I sat on my very grown up bed, in our grown up home, that we pay for with our grown up money, the fear I have for tomorrow comes from a place inside where the child who laughed at that movie still lingers. She wants to stamp her foot and tell the doctors off for putting women through the tests just to tick some boxes. She wants to shout out her name and make it clear she’s not a number. She just wants to be a kid again when things were easy. 

This anxious nerd just wants to be on a real rollercoaster and get lost in a maze because it’s fun. I want to feel and know that everything will be okay again. That I won’t get lost down the rabbit hole of poor mental health because this battle took everything away without giving anything back. 

Drowning in prayers

Because there is no life without the wave. That was it. That’s all. Everything. A greatness that had engulfed her but not suffocated her in its depths, but pushed her to the surface with grace and adoration. Two working together to keep one another flowing. Their time together seemingly short but lasting a lifetime. Relying on each other for their strength and power. The hidden depths don’t frighten her and its power over her is forgotten in that brief but unending moment. Crashing her against the rocks unforgiving and endlessly painful the wave beats her. Its power once overlooked is the death of them both. She would have drowned in the idea, yet ‘the wave’ casts her aside with the other debris. The wave will keep coming back, and she playing in the surf mournfully remembers the time she had wanted to join its deafening silence, the crashing stillness. When it does come back she allows the ice cold thought to embrace her soul again before being thrown against the shore. She knows no other way than this. She could move to calmer waters but hears the call of waves breaking and knows…. only too well…. she will eventually drown in salty tears.

Photo by Dave Watson
Please check out his work on https://www.instagram.com/davewatson_uk/ or at https://davewatson1980.picfair.com

When you wish upon a star




Recently I have started to lose a lot of hope and am finding solace in my dreams. In my night-time escapades I am pregnant, we have a child, we are floating along a blissful highway of completeness and can travel anywhere in the world without flight cancellations and the threat of covid. There is a lot to stay asleep for. The stars shine outside in the night sky blinking on regardless.

With all our education into what is out there; even the most learned man, woman and child glances up at the night sky and projects their hopes and dreams into the big dark nothing. We cannot dictate our dreams, we cannot sleep and live forever in the playground of the night. So our second best bet is to send our wishes into the universe hoping the stars hear our calls and grant us their magic. For what are the lights in the darkness but hope and safety.

The facts say that millions upon millions of miles away there are balls of gases that burn so spectacularly bright that we can see them, even here. The light travels through space and time to us and even long after the gases have burnt out, the light continues on. Reaching out.

If we trace the night sky and find a star to wish upon it’ll become like an old friend you return to. And forever you’ll find your star out there. No dream dies as long as there is hope. No star dies without one final light in the sky. So as long as we continue to project hopes to the stars there is no hope to be lost. It is travelling through the big nothing to reach your star and when it does I like to think that light will fill your life and your belief will burn brighter than it ever did before. It’s believing in more than facts. It’s believing that one day your star will come through. It’s knowing that the simple things in life bring the brightest lights out.

All you need to do is reach right back to it. Don’t lose hope. The stars are always there. And in turn hope is always there.

And that ‘when you wish upon a star your dreams come true.’

Through the fire and the rain

Well we survived.

Our first fertility appointment is done. There were some expected moments. Weight, BMI etc. Other unexpected moments, like the explaining of certain things with diagrams and having read my history which the last guy didn’t bother doing. I’m having a procedure which I was not expecting but am taking it as another ruling out of any unseen problems. There were two moments that upset me. Or maybe, angered me, I’m not sure.  The Doctor asked me a question and while I was talking his mobile phone rang and he answered it. I continued talking to the nurse and when the Doctor had told the person on the phone he would call back later, he asked me to repeat what I’d said. No! How about you not take a personal call while your patient is in the room, talking and answering your question. But no obviously I didn’t say that, I just repeated myself. All he had to do was say, sorry excuse me one moment, answer the phone, tell them he would call them back. But he said nothing of the sort. To be honest, it is things like that I don’t accept from anyone so me feeling anxious and nervous about the appointment didn’t add to it. It’s just plain rude. I’m a person. Not a number on a sheet. ANYWAY! The other was when I asked for weight loss advice and he said I don’t know. Nice and blunt. Thanks buddy. So I’ve taken to the internet again and will call my GP because trying for 20 years has got me nowhere. 

But ya know what, I’d fed up with having all the research in the world and it still does not get me anywhere with the NHS. They have their criteria and I can either like it or lump it. I’m not a naturally rebellious person but it does feel like the criteria is old and unbefitting of the fertility problems people face. Especially those with PCOS. The thing is, I can sit, stand, stomp my foot screaming and shouting the actual facts of PCOS and it won’t make a difference. I’m one voice. The government does not care. The top dogs in the NHS who govern fertility funding do not care. And I’ve reached the point that its time to jump through their hoops. I have no fight left in me. I have to prepare for the fight of losing a substantial amount of weight if I ever have a chance of getting help. It may happen naturally if I lose weight. Who knows. There’s a chance. But if I dont fall naturally I still fit their stupid criteria and have a chance of ovulation and hormone drugs. Some would liken it to blackmail. We’ll do ‘this’ if you do ‘that’. It’s sad when you really think about it. Because PCOS isn’t caused by weight. If they treated the causes, treated what I’m deficient in I could be a happy, healthy curvy mum. Rather than unhappy, unhealthy, skinny tick on the criteria. 

Jumping through the hoop is the only way. Time to bite the bullet and play their game. 

And I’m coming to peace with it. It was driving home today in the rain when I looked in the mirror and saw the most beautiful colours in the sun setting sky. On the mirror were droplets from the weather, but in the mirror were the reds and purples that glowed between the rain clouds. I often look to the sky for guidance and a sense of calming. It’s my place of perspective. 

The sky tonight was no different. It told me that though the rain may be hard and make you want to turn back, scream or shout, wondering if you can carry on, it can also mean that something beautiful is waiting on the other side. That giving it time, to be cold and rough and tough to face, rain can also be what’s needed to make a better tomorrow. So I’m taking solace in the rain and the sunset tonight. Sometimes the journey will experience hard times, rain does that. Sometimes it’ll make things blurry and shift the focus. But it’s not forever. The appointment was hard, the journey seems harder but at least I’m on my journey now, with Mr W, and it’s on the way to something beautiful.

Pink hair do care

Tomorrow is a big day. 

Our first appointment with the fertility clinic after a 14 month wait. It’s been a long wait and after a rollercoaster of a week in terms of cancellations and getting a last minute appointment for tomorrow, I’m in a bit of shock. I feel sick with anxiety. I feel I already know what’s coming. I’ll be offered the tests I have already had and I’ll be told to lose weight. Doctors petrify me at the best of times but when it comes to my weight I’m really sensitive and know I’ll sit there like a child being told off. I almost feel the need to impress this Doctor to be treated like a human. It’s true, I’ve spoken to other people who are overweight recently and they feel like second rate humans because of their size. I used to think it was all in my head. 

Today I had a baby shower to go to. After yesterday’s 30+ degrees of hot weather and a rough night’s sleep I knew I needed to feel good about myself so I could relax and put on my happy face. Baby showers aren’t the hardest thing to deal with when you are struggling with your own fertility, usually it’s the baby announcements, but I can’t estimate how I’ll feel on the day. So getting ready today I wanted to wear something to keep cool but also not feel like this huge beast. I love a new pair of trousers I bought recently, but they are wide legged and therefore make me look bigger. Not good for confidence at all! They are so lightweight that I put them on and said to the mirror, you deserve to feel cooler like everyone else. I went to the wardrobe to get a cardigan and realised it was my go to ‘cover-up’. Not because the temperature may have changed during the day, but because it covered my arms, back, bum and body. I use it to hide away. I closed the cupboard door and left the house before I could change my mind. No safety cardigan in sight. I deserve to be cool on a hot day!

I also reasoned that having recently dyed my hair pink the focus would be on that and not on my chubby arms. Ironically, I did have a brief thought that this day was going to be about the mummy-to-be and no one would pay me a bit of attention! It’s funny, I’ve had pink hair for two weeks and as I’ve been out and about I get a few looks and I automatically think they’re staring at me for my weight. Or something else. It’s only when I catch my hair swishing around my face that I remember its pink. I forget all about it. Does it make me uglier? Prettier? I have had to remind myself recently that what I wear and how I look is the least interesting thing about me. It’s a mantra I’m really trying to live by. 

‘The way you look is the least interesting thing about you.’ 

A recent,  little quote I have acquired from the ‘Go Love Yourself’ podcast by the lovely Laura Adlington and Lauren Smith. If you need a boost, a different perspective on weight, appearance and everything in between, I highly recommend it! 

As much as I’ve fought for this appointment I am so nervous and going back to my pink hair I’m actually wondering if it is going to work against me. These are the worries that plague my mind. Is this why I couldn’t sleep last night? Or was it really the incredible heat and hayfever symptoms? Maybe I won’t sleep tonight instead. The rain has taken away the pollen and the temperature has more than halved since this morning. So there’s only my anxieties left. Yay! What if they see me, my hair and write me off before even talking? I feel as if this will be an interview. That I’ll have ticks and crosses against my name. I have to remind myself over and over that I deserve the same as everyone else. 

Why should I regret the hair? It has been a shake up and a bit of fun. Something to mix things up a bit. Life has been a bit static recently for sure. My hayfever does prevent me from getting a full night’s sleep and therein lies the problem I believe. My anxiety gets a lot worse when I’m tired. And then I can’t sleep because I’m anxious. Hello, vicious circle! 

Isn’t this a fun post? 

As we are home now and my appointment is in 13 hours I feel my stomach tying itself in knots and my need to keep busy is ridiculously strong. I knew that keeping busy today would help. However going to a baby shower when you yourself are going to a fertility appointment isn’t the easiest thing to deal with. Usually, as I said, baby showers aren’t too hard to deal with. I think it’s because you have time to prepare. You know when the baby announcement is made, like the birth, a baby shower is part and parcel. I just think today caught me right in the heart. It reminded me of our journey and I did have to excuse myself for a quick cry in the toilets. These kinds of things just remind me of what we don’t have. 

Tomorrow is the first step of a journey that will be difficult. I’ve already been told that. One thing I’m glad of is Mr W. He has my back. He’s my fighter. He picks me up when I fall. He tells me to wear the trousers I love. To ditch the cardigan. And to dye my hair the colours of the rainbow if I need to. Because no matter what I wear or how I look. I am me. And that will always be enough. 

Letter to our future baby

I wish you were here.

You just need to be here in my arms. Looking up at me. Me and you. Your dad is next to you. You are just sitting. Living. Breathing in this world where we are. I feel like I know your face. I know your noises. I can feel your touch. I have seen it in my mind a million times. You’re real. There are times I feel I’m starting to lose who I am because who I am doesn’t make sense without you. You are what we hope for everyday. There’s so much love just waiting for you. Love for you from everyone. You have no idea how much you will be loved when you are here. It just seems so hard. So impossible to think of you actually being here. I don’t know how long it will take and I’m scared of it never happening. 

This road, this journey we are on, just feels like it’s never going to start. That it’s never going to end. Such a long road with its twists and turns and u-turns that I’m just not strong enough to take for much longer. I’m not even worried about an announcement or a baby shower. It’s just holding you. I think once I hold you, I’ll never let go. I’d never want to give you up. And never let you down.

I feel like I’ve let your dad down. I feel like I’ve let everyone down. There is so much love for someone I’ve not even met. Someone who isn’t even alive. You are an idea. A wish. To be a mother is something I never ever wanted before and  now that I do it’s all I think about. My life is just one big distraction. 

I feel like I’m failing as a wife. That all the joy is just a mirage. A fake smile. 

I can see you growing up. Walking around this house. I see where your crib would be. Where your toys would lay on the floor. You’d be outside, where you’d run in the sun, playing.

I see you meeting your nan and your grandad for the first time. See Christmases and Birthdays. They all play out in my mind. I see that joy on your dad’s face. Nothing else compares. I wonder if this heartache will end. There’s such a small part of me that thinks it won’t and I’m scared. If our hopes don’t magic you into life what will happen? Wanting you is like no other feeling. Ever. I’m scared of what it means if you don’t become real.

I see your face in my dreams. 

Beautiful/Crazy

There are days when your emotions run so high and low that you can barely find balance. There are days when you wake up and you don’t want to go outside. There are days when you can barely move because you’ve been so busy the day before. There are days when you have things to do and people to see and all you want to do is avoid it all because you don’t want to plaster on a fake smile because all you can do is cry.

Today was one of those days. After a mammoth drive on jubilee Thursday we found ourselves tired and facing another busy couple of days. We had family visiting and spent the morning with them and then ran errands. We then see friends to plan for June 2023. Followed by another rushed evening and preparations for a very special person’s 90th birthday.

The party for my nan was absolutely amazing with lots of memories made with children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. I watched as my brothers and their girls sat with my dad and family and I just felt the sadness creep over me. At times so consuming I was breathless. Where was my child in those pictures? I hate it when out of nowhere those feelings arrive. It’s like one minute you cannot be happier and then the next you’re crumbling. How much longer can I keep it together? I know for a large part of it it’s due to how frantic we’ve been and how tired I’ve felt but what they are real emotions and they do come from a very real place of longing. 

I was able to distract myself by tidying up toys and bringing out the birthday cake and orchestrating the family photos but ultimately it’s all a distraction. And I wish I didn’t need that distraction. I don’t want to go through life doing these things they’re a great way of passing the time between feeling happy and feeling sad and wondering what feeling will win. Nevertheless, the look on my nan’s face as she arrived to see us all singing Happy Birthday in one big surprise, giving a little speech and seeing her birthday cake was amazing. One of the best feelings. To build that joy in someone you love so deeply can never be replicated. It’s a one of a kind triumph. 

Today we went to another family party, my cousin’s 30th. I was exhausted today, it was the 4th of 4 days that we’ve been bafflingly busy. And with more than 20 people to catch up with and talk to, it was tiring just thinking of it. So I put on a dress, wrapped up warm and wore really snuggly shoes and told myself to just sit and watch what was going on. It’s the safe option. And then we were thrust into the limelight to play giant Jenga. Why. Why. Why. It was a complete surprise and I didn’t know no how to say no. But honestly it was the best thing because we were up to play first, which meant that this tired gal got it out of the way and could sneak off to chill once more. We lost. Shucks. And then we watched other people play and attention grew and the crowd got silent, the birds sang and nobody dared breathe. You could hear a pin drop. And after the final was played and the winners had won we all sat down and laughed and talked and it didn’t feel like a chore. There was no fake laughter. No fake smiles. And no sitting in the corner. I was me again. No hiding. 

There was only one moment when the newest baby of the group was being talked to and played with, that I noticed what looked like a tear in Mr W eyes. It was then that I started to well up. I wish I could stop his longing and his pain. The best thing about this time of year is you can pass off red eyes as hay fever. After that moment the laughter and jokes were rapid fire and I found myself literally crying with tears of mirth however my body took over and the laughing tears turned to sobbing tears. I don’t know why this happens but buried beneath my jumper I was able to pass off the crying as laughing and carry on. Hiding away. I’m honestly grateful for today. It took me out of my head, I laughed with those I love so very dearly and I’m going to sit down with Mr W to relax.

Being kind to yourself is a daily challenge. There are lots of ups and downs. It’s hard to see the top when you feel so low and you daren’t look down from such highs. I will be reminding myself as much as possible that when you want something so bad it’s a hard hope to leave at home. It travels with you. The beautiful but crazy journey.  

Pcos, fertility and me

It’s easier to write this part of my journey down, because it’s more fact and time based. I warn you now, this is a long post. Because it’s been going for a long long time! That doesn’t mean that time has made it easy. The longer it goes on the harder it gets. In fact it’s been so hard I’ve considered giving in. Both Mr W and I have considered letting the other one go so they can go have their babies and be happy. But I’m afraid he is stuck with me. I want HIS children. He’s the reason I want children. I see him with children and it makes my heart swell. I know he feels the same way about having children and I think it’s why we are destined to be together. To be parents. I know we would love our child to the ends of the earth. A part of each of us. The most perfect finish to our family. 

So here’s the full medical side of my journey. It’s hard to write. And for those living with PCOS it may be hard to read. I don’t want you to see it as all the doom and gloom it’ll inevitably portray because everyone’s story is different. And I seem to have found the rabbit filled with rabbit poop. For a long time it didn’t seem to be going anywhere. But let’s just dive right in shall we?

As I mentioned in my blog ‘Pcos and Me’, I got my first period at age 13, and then nothing for over 6 years. I plucked up the courage to go to the Doctors at 19 when I noticed other symptoms of the condition ‘Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome’ I had read about. I’d only ever been to the doctors about chest infections before. I remember feeling so embarrassed and ashamed of the condition. I thought back then it was my fault. That my weight was the cause. I sat in the Doctor’s office. Hands shaking. And briefly told her what I thought was going on. As I explained why I thought I had the condition, tears fell down my face. I’d been bullied over my appearance all my life and now all the added symptoms were making me feel like a freak.

“WHY ARE YOU CRYING!” She said abruptly, a look of disdain on her face. It’s funny, even after all this time, I can see her before me, her face painted with this ugly expression.

I honestly don’t know what I said. It certainly wouldn’t have been anything to defend myself. I was not a fighter back then, I’m hardly one now, although I’ve learned to bite back a lot more. I was prescribed the pill and sent for a scan. The scan itself was intrusive and I’d never felt so violated. I was extremely inexperienced back then and I wish I had known what I know now. To be diagnosed with Pcos they can do a blood test, the cysts on your ovaries (if you have them) are a symptom, not a cause. I may have been bold enough back then to say no. 

For 8/9 years I was on the pill, the only precaution I was told to take was with my legs. The pill itself could cause blood clots in the legs and if I felt ‘odd’ I should go back to my GP for a follow up. I suffered with headaches, was moved to another pill and that was the story for all those years. False periods, brought on by a pill. That was their answer. Hindsight is a wonderful thing.

Fast forward to February 2016 when I had one of the worst ear infections the walk-in centre physician had ever seen. I was prescribed strong pain medication and antibiotics. It wasn’t until my mum mentioned the need for Mr W and me being careful as antibiotics would cancel out the pill. So I stopped taking the pill during that time. A month later, my period was late. We were really happy. It wasn’t on the agenda with moving house on the horizon, but the possibility was exciting nonetheless. Two weeks passed, and my period returned. It’s funny how much you never knew you wanted something until it’s taken away.

We both decided I would stay off the pill. Just to see what happened. Naturally. It took a year for my periods to come back naturally. But as I hadn’t had one in 6 years before the pill I was astounded. From early 2017 to our wedding in late 2018, we wondered, but nothing happened. After the wedding, I started my research into Pcos and fertility. I had been using Ovulation pee sticks to track my cycle. But after 3 months of expensive tests, nothing was showing that I had ovulated. I started tracking my basal body temperature. I was woken up at exactly the same time every morning, by Mr W when he left for work, with a thermometer shoved in my…mouth (haha) and track my temperature. It helps people with Pcos track ovulation much better than the OPK sticks. The sticks detect the luteinizing hormones in urine, and when this is particularly high it means an egg has been released. This gives you a clear indication on when to do the baby dance. Checking your temperature is more accurate when you have Pcos, because the shift in your hormones often renders the sticks useless. So we started temping. And yet no baby.

By September 2019, I wanted help. I was scared. Doctors left a sour taste in my mouth. I registered at my local GP’s as a new patient. We had lived here for over 3 years and I’d avoided them for long enough. I was told by the nurse who took my registration that the surgery was getting all new doctors, fresh from medical school, that they’d be fresh, raring to go and wanting to do good. I must admit, I was drawn in by her excitement. Before my appointment I took the time to write down my entire history. All the results I had from the temping, the lengths of my cycles for the past two years and our desire to have children.

She was lovely, she listened when I talked about my research and held my hand as I cried. Unfortunately my emotions, whatever they are, leak from my eyeballs. It’s seen as a weakness by a lot of people. When I’m upset I see it as a release. When I’m angry, I see it as the much needed vent my body needs instead of screaming at someone. Anyway!

She ordered blood tests, and told me exactly what they would be looking for. Most of which I had researched so I was really pleased. Another external and internal scan. And we’d rearrange a date for the results. Blood tests are easy. The scan went okay, but the woman couldn’t find one of my ovaries and said she “wasn’t at liberty to tell me what she saw”. Hey, thanks lady. It’s only my body. No I didn’t say that. I wish I had. 

The next appointment at the GP, armed with my notepad, results were discussed. No cysts on ovaries. But my blood tests results as well as my other symptoms confirmed Pcos. I finally had a diagnosis. 12 years after asking for help. I had a path I could follow. She referred me to the hospital under the Gynaecological department. It took 4 months to see someone. In March 2020, a week before the country went into lockdown, I saw a consultant. They weighed me. Measured my height. And he ordered a blood test and internal scan before even looking at my notes. When he said what he had done, I told him that I had already had them. His response “Oh, well, you can do them again.” Oh wow, thanks, I just love being probed! And no I didn’t say that either. By this point, I thought it was what was needed. After all, I was under the hospital now. The rest of the appointment was solely based on my weight. It didn’t matter that weight is a symptom of this condition. That despite dieting and/or exercising, nothing much made a difference. He was working to an NHS criteria that bound him to rules and to treat me like a number. I asked what the next step would be, and he said they could try me on an ovulation drug to induce ovulation, but I had to lose weight. So for now there wasn’t anything they could or would do. I mentioned Metformin. My research had taken me down the route of the insulin drug that was given to diabetics. Now, I’m not diabetic, it’s been tested when I’ve had blood tests. But it’s had a success rate in helping women with Pcos fall pregnant. I remember the look on his face as I was talking. But he gave me the prescription anyway. I felt a small victory but remember having to sit down inside the corridor once I had left to cry. Mr W tried to console me. But I felt I’d hit a wall. Why was this criteria so harsh? 

I was able to get my prescription before the world lost its mind. My next appointment letter was sent for October 2020. Six months! I had the blood test and scan, this time the nurse (different lady) spoke to me through it and was so lovely, she must have known how hard I found this. I doubt anyone feels any differently. The next appointment came round, and due to covid, or so I thought, was conducted over the phone. It wasn’t the consultant this time, but a lady. Nothing was mentioned about my tests and all questions were based on my weight. They told me they’d arrange another appointment for 6 months and another blood test. Initially this was cancelled due to covid and in May 2021 I had my phone call. Another phone call. Another different person. He said my latest blood test results showed great changes and it was all pointing to good news. Then he said “Can I ask, do you want children?”. I remember being so shocked I laughed. I said that of course I did, that’s why I was going through all of this. He said that he would refer me then to the infertility clinic. The appointment would take approximately 3 months to come through the post. 

I remember, afterwards, I hadn’t asked for my blood test results. I was curious to see what had changed. I had written them all down from the first test, so I wanted to be able to compare them. I called the hospital and after getting through the absolute maze of the switchboard and endless answering machines I got through to my consultant’s secretary. She said she wasn’t allowed to give me my results. And that was that. I believed her. Afterall, she knows what the NHS are allowed to do and not do. Right?

A few weeks later, I received an appointment for another scan. I was so confused. I had asked the man if I needed any more tests and he said no. The scan appointment was in less than two weeks, I didn’t know what to do. I sat on the couch and decided I needed to know why I had to have another scan. For the better part of 7 hours, I sat on my phone, going between the switchboard, answering phones, the endless ringing of the reception and getting nowhere. In the end, I called the maternity department, just so I could talk to someone. By then, I was spitting feathers. I spoke to a woman, who I now feel so sorry for, and explained the situation. She said she would send an internal email to my consultants secretary and they would call me. Low and behold, she called. I explained what had happened and she said that I had been sent the scan appointment in error, she had no idea how it had been sent to me, but she was sorry. It turns out the woman it was meant for, had a different name, date of birth and was in severe abdominal pain, and needed the scan. I often wonder what on earth they would have said if I had had the scan and what would have happened to the other woman. While on that phone call, I asked the woman again for my blood test results, she said, and I quote, “Well, I’ll send them to you this time, as we kind of owe you.” Gee, thanks! I also mentioned that I hadn’t had my referral yet, she confirmed that it had been sent electronically to my GP and to check with them. She gave me the time stamp down the to second I was sent. 

My doctors said they hadn’t received anything, August came around, and I still hadn’t had my referral come through, so I called the hospital again, geared up for another long wait. They said they would send it again electronically. I checked with my GP. Not received. This to and fro-ing had become a real issue. Another call saw me ask the hospital to send it via the post to me, and I would personally walk it (on a velvet cushion) up to the GP’s office. I was told once again, they couldn’t do that. But they would send it via the post to the GP. I leave it a few weeks, and yet the doctors don’t receive it. You can imagine by this point, I’m losing my mind. The very real feeling of paranoia has set in. Another phone call the hospital  to check what’s going on. Yes, they posted it. And yes they have the right address. They’ll send another one. By November, I felt like a yo-yo between the two offices and I was not getting anywhere.

23rd December, my 6 monthly phone call with the hospital. Another different lady. No results to read out. Only the same question about my weight. I broke down. And she listened. She was so kind. I let it all out. How I felt left out in the cold. That my weight was the only focus for this department. How hard I had tried for years. That I was being left behind. My mental health in tatters. When I told her about the referral and the troubles I had had. She said “What if I print the letter off and you give it to your GP?” I was sitting on the bed at the time, and I felt my body crumble. I explained that I had suggested that months ago, and was told it wasn’t an option. She said she didn’t know why and that as it was 3:30pm I’d have to go and get it right now, as they closed at 4pm. I interrupted Mr W’s Christmas cooking in the kitchen and we raced to get it. Bless her, she gave me all my letters and updates in printed form. By now my faith was all but gone and I said I wanted copies of the letters before ever letting anyone else get their hands on them. 

I enjoyed Christmas after the 2020 debacle and by January I had my copies. I took them to the GP and explained EXACTLY what needed doing. That they were for a referral and it needed actioning. I even left with copies. I knew the referral could take three months. So thought by the end of April I would have answers. 

I celebrated my birthday in March for the first time in three years and after a discussion with family earlier that month decided to contact the GP for an update afterwards. I had a lovely birthday and upon my return prepared myself for another phone call. At this point I am so geared up for bad news and being ‘fobbed off’ I’m not sure what else could possibly happen. Up until this point shock has hit me at each and every turn and I have believed everything I’ve been told. This is key to remember. 

The call to the GP is awful. I explain why I’m calling, I would like an update on the referral that was requested in January. I know that it has only been two months, but an update would be appreciated. That’s when the bomb is dropped. The referral has NOT been sent on to the hospital. I lost my shit. I said how could this happen when I basically, no not basically, literally told the receptionist what she had to do. The lady on the phone said she had no idea but she would call me back. She did in ten minutes. She had spoken to my GP personally who had requested the referral now marked as ‘urgent’ and I would have an appointment within a month. I could even go that night for the confirmation of a referral which would give me passwords and such to call the appointment line for an update. 

I applaud you for reaching this far. It’s quite the story isn’t it?

Four weeks later, no letter, I call the appointment line for an update, they say it can take up to 18 weeks as this is a routine referral. I say no it was put through as an ‘urgent’. No, they say, I’m afraid it wasn’t and only your GP can make the adjustment. Now I’m a calm person. I assure you. But now it is 11 months since the referral was first mentioned. I’ve been on and off the phone chasing people from pillar to post. I was a human yo-yo. I called the GP and got the same lady I spoke to in March. She remembers me. Fancy that!

I explain the situation, and ask to speak to the practice manager. She is shocked. But I am finally done screwing around. He called me back within half an hour. I literally leave no detail out. I tell him everything. He says I am to go through him from now on and he will change the referral to urgent. And will personally email the appointment line to detail what has happened. He also says he will see if he can hurry along any of the tests they may need.

As of the 27th April, I have an appointment. WE have an appointment. For August. At the time I was quite upset and called the proactive manager to see if it could be brought forward. He said he would try but he was personally surprised how close the appointment was. Even at 3.5 months away. 

My dear Mr W has had to deal with the psycho that has erupted out of me on numerous occasions. The fighter in me is exhausted. The scariest part is I believed everybody every step of the way. Am I stupid for doing so? Does it honestly take blowing your lid to get stuff done? That ultimately is so very sad. 

We’ve come to terms with the date of the appointment and have planned to get as healthy as possible. If I have to walk into that appointment and have them point out my weight, it may honestly just break me. I am not my weight. This condition is not my weight! Something has changed in the last few days in my mind. Even if we weren’t trying to conceive. My weight is also a cause for concern with health matters. According to blood pressure and cholesterol checks, I’m healthy. Really. But weight does affect other things and I want to be around for a long time. I have a lot of living to do. With Mr W. With everyone who makes my life what it is. There’s also a whole world to see. 

Since I’ve got the appointment letter it has been moved to the beginning of July. I’ve had a day to process it. I’m not scared to admit that I was absolutely shocked. It’s 7 weeks closer than the other appointment which means seven weeks less time to lose weight. But it may just be 7 weeks closer to a baby. 

The fear of Doctors is not going to go away anytime soon. I believe the other day I said I was petrified and to be honest my hands shake, I feel sick and my eyes leak again. Just at the thought of being in that office. The trust you place in them is enormous. I wish my story was different. I wish the lady who saw me when I was 19 was empathetic. She didn’t need to be sympathetic. I didn’t need a shoulder to cry on. I just needed to feel like I wasn’t alone. That I wasn’t a freak. I’ll talk about how I’ve tried to combat that very feeling in one of my next Pcos blogs. 

The fact it’s taken me a year to get this far is an extortionate amount of wasted time. Especially when you consider the longest amount of time to get an appointment was initially 12 weeks. I’m really trying to be positive. It’s hard considering the anxiety I deal with on a daily basis. The downfalls of the last year and the fight to get this far have left me unsure of who or what to trust going forward. However, something like this must make someone stronger. Surely that’s how it works. 

Maybe the doctors will start fearing me!

Photo by Dave Watson 

Please check out his work on https://www.instagram.com/davewatson_uk/ or at https://davewatson1980.picfair.com

Little Excerpts. A Day in the life of.

Just a few glances at how living with Pcos and my mental health changes day to day:

25-2-22

As I’m doing the crap job of putting washing away (although it does help quell me on anxious days by being organised etc) I’m listening to a podcast on being plus size called Go Love Yourself. 

I’m not a podcast listener, but thought why not. And tbh they’re very upbeat, and it’s way out of my comfort zone to even think about being as confident as they are. However it has brought to the front of my memory block how many times I’ve been called out for my weight. 

I’ve found photos from nights out where someone in my friendship group has zoomed in on my stomach because it didn’t look flattering in a certain outfit or at a great angle. 

I’ve had someone draw me as a head on top of a circle when drawing a ‘stick’ person. 

I’ve even been flirted with on a night out and then had the guy go back to their mates laughing because they got the number of the big girl. 

This was all over a decade ago. Which seems so long ago and like yesterday all at the same time. And I was smaller then than I am now. And yet still wasn’t seen as normal or worthy of being treated like everyone else. 

So I’ll continue with the podcast, until it makes me cry, or rage, but it’s not been easy having those memories flood back. 

I’m not my weight. Nor my dress size. 

I’m a girl who has PCOS which 

– causes my weight to fluctuate whether I eat a salad or a burger

– makes my body cells stress out and alter the hormones in my system,whether I’m sitting down or running 5k

– go from laughing until tears are streaming down my face and then switch to actual heart wrenching sobs because my emotional well-being is shot to shit

– causes a vast number of fertility issues which can’t be solved by getting drunk and just ‘going for it’ with the husband or relaxing and let motherfucking nature take its course. 

– so many other issues that I tackle every single day

And yet PCOS is not my personality. I’m caring. I’m kind. I’m sarcastic as fuck. I love entirely and unconditionally. I’m awkward when I first meet people so I’m really really loud! I’m actually really shy. I’m quiet. I like to be quiet. I’m intelligent. I’m artsy. I’m creative. I have a filthy sense of humour. And a proper cackle. I say sorry way too much. I’ll help pretty much anyone just so they never feel bad about themselves or their day. 

I’m me. Not my weight. Not my dress size.

9-3-22

So for the last three days I’ve been in Birmingham. A trip I latched onto for a free hotel stay with Mr W while he worked here. I’ve been left to my own devices in a new city for 13+ hours a day. And if you’d have said to me as little as 3 years ago this would have been an issue for me I’d not really have thought about it. But I have been a nervous wreck! And I truly believe this is down to covid and lockdowns and losing that sense of independence.

So I’ve wandered aimlessly around shops, toured the old town, gone up to a rooftop garden and today I’m going to the cinema alone! Originally I planned to stay in the hotel room, sleep, veg and pamper. But my inner explorer could not be quietened. It’s that voice that helps me more than I know!

It feels so stupid to say I’m proud of myself because to be honest this is just an every day activity in the mundanity of life. If I hadn’t had such a breakdown when we got up here I’d not have realised what a big deal this was.

I have to remember to be kind to myself. But also remind myself that life has changed so dramatically and yet brave I’m still here. Deep down.

18-3-22

I look at this picture and feel sad. (the picture if you can imagine is me in jeans, a wrap top, posing in the mirror, I must have been going somewhere.)

Sad that this body turns 34 next week and hasn’t achieved what I want. Upset that it has let me down.

I try to be positive all the time, tending to my mental health daily and forgetting my body needs me too.

My body has let me down, it’s true, but more often than not I’ve just given in to it. Let it do its own thing. I’m kinda feeling the need to fight against it more and more. Which is hard because my mental health doesn’t let me fight much these days.

How can I control so much about my life to feel safe and secure,  without taking control of my physical health?

In a way, my body letting me down has led to me letting my body down too. I need to fight back. And I’m starting to believe I actually can. 

Today

So there we are, my biggest outbursts of the year. And it’s only May! We have an appointment looming with the NHS in August. I know they’ll mention my weight. And as I’ll discuss in the next Pcos blog, it’s been a rough ride just getting this far, and because of this, I’m angry. I don’t like being angry, it’s self- harming to the max and does nothing but add fuel to a fire. Except no one else is tending this fire. The NHS disappears and comes back at their own will. God love them for what they do for us Brits but it has been hell! My actual mental health plunges at every single mention of Doctors and hospitals. I’m yet to have a reasonable experience. I have to play a particular game of 2 steps forward 4 steps back with them and where I used to get depressed and shrink away, I can feel the sense of rage fuel actual determination. For the very first time, I’m sitting and thinking ‘Oh, so you won’t help me until XYZ is done? Well, let’s just do that then eh? Let’s get you to do your bloody job! Because I DESERVE THIS. Mr W deserves this!’

Deep breath! Breathe out the anger. Breathe in the determination. 

I’m off for a run now, pray for my back, knee and shins. Ta-ra!