As if getting AF isn't annoying enough, this month's was abnormally painful and heavy. I know that's typical for the first AF after a miscarriage, but this is my third AF, and it was much worse than my second {and maybe even my first, too}. Which of course had me Googling and then wondering after reading random web posts whether I could have experienced a chemical pregnancy. Apparently the bleeding from a chemical pregnancy can often be accompanied by more cramps than usual. What I've come to realize though, if not accept, over the past several months is that there are some questions I will never have answers to. In this case, I didn't take an early pregnancy test so there is no way to know for sure whether I could have experienced a chemical pregnancy or whether I just plain got unlucky with AF this month.
Regardless, I guess we're officially now in the bucket of couples who are "TTC", or trying to conceive. I don't know why I dislike that expression so much. I think it's because the very terminology implies that while we're "trying" we're really failing {or else we'd be pregnant}. I might as well say we're "FTC".
Hopefully next month brings better results... But knowing that the odds of getting {and staying} pregnant quickly aren't really on our side makes it hard.
- According to this UCSF Medical Center, "In nature, 50 percent of all fertilized eggs are lost before a woman's missed menses." In a study referenced on this miscarriage site, "in a study that found that 22% of all natural conceptions fail to complete implantation, it was also found that 31% of pregnancies confirmed after implantation end in miscarriage." Those are not great chances.
- According to this Baby Center post, of all couples trying to conceive, approximately:
- 30 percent get pregnant the first cycle (about one month)
- 59 percent get pregnant within three cycles (about three months)
- 80 percent get pregnant within six cycles (about six months)
- This trend continues and by about four years, 93 to 95 percent get pregnant.
I am bursting with disappointment and impatience after one month... I can't imagine going through this for many months or, gulp, years without losing my mind.