Sunday, January 8, 2017

New Years and New Experiences

It is 2017, and there have been some interesting changes in my life. My husband, Seamus, joined the US Air Force, to be a captain pharmacist. We moved from our home of almost 2 years (Mesa, AZ) to the Las Vegas area. After struggling for 1.5 years to get pregnant, we tried IVF. I left my job as a phlebotomist, and am considering another career shift. So, here's a dive into the current world of the Tallgurrl.

I've been married to Seamus for 2 years. It has been an interesting time. We rented our first home, did the budgeting thing, adulted. I came out as bisexual to him. (I realize that many people may see that as something that should have been mentioned earlier, but other than him knowing my STI status, it really wasn't his business. I chose not to give him specifics about past sexual partners because he didn't want to know. He only cared so far as he could potentially develop something. But I came out to him in our first month of marriage because he should know.) My coming out didn't really change anything. We both comment on the attractiveness of people in films or on tv. Otherwise, since we practice radical honesty and monogamy, it is a non-issue. {About radical honesty, we call that sharing the honesty, and if we weren't ready to talk about something that means saying "I'm not ready to talk about but we'll discuss it later." This kind of honesty means that we knew what we got when we picked up each other.}

Through the 2 years, Seamus has been dissatisfied with his job as a commercial pharmacist. They were very unclear about expectations, shifted him around a lot, and lied to him, all while holding him accountable for ALL mistakes that he made from not being kept abreast of his company's current standards. I have a family history of being in the military, and so I encouraged him to apply to join. I figured that they'd help with his student loans, he'd get cross-trained to work in every potential PharmD job, and he actually would have upward mobility in his career. With that in mind, he joined the Air Force and his first duty station is near Las Vegas. Our move was largely uneventful, but has me nostalgic for our former landlord. We live in a one story house, 3 bedrooms/2bathrooms, 2 car garage. It is in a quiet neighborhood and close to all of the important shopping. He drives in to work, and gets that quiet time to have his deep thoughts.

Basically from day one, we have been trying to have children. After a year of failure, we decided to see a specialist. After extensive testing and 6 months of failed attempts with Clomid, we did IVF. That means that I had eggs extracted from me, and they were fertilized with Seamus' sperm in a petri dish. Those fertilized eggs were watched for several days, and then one embryo was put into my uterus, with the hope that it would implant and grow to a baby. We also opted to genetically test the remaining embryos, to check for any anomalies that could prevent implantation. The first attempt failed. And of the 9 embryos: 1 was weird and so discarded; 1 failed implantation; 4 were genetically unholy; and 3 are frozen female kid-sicles to be used at a later date. Since we've moved to Vegas, I will need to find a rock star fertility specialist to work with my kid-sicles and get our spawning on.

When we decided to do the IVF, I decided to quit my job. The process of IVF entails a plethora of doctor's appointments, ultrasounds, procedures. Add to that the needed ZERO stress relax time after procedures and you're taking more time off from work. There are few employers that would give the time off that is required to go through all of that. So I quit. I was going to do it eventually. I had no desire to continue working in Arizona while my husband was serving in the military somewhere else. With the downtime that came with both the failed IVF and my husband undergoing his Air Force officer's training, I had a lot of space to think about my next step. I wasn't sure that I wanted to continue working as a phlebotomist. 12 years is a long time for a career that was supposed to be a stop-gap. I have an Associate's degree in Russian. I could go back to school for a Bachelor's degree in ... something. I could go into sales or real estate. I could finally write the book I've always meant to get done. I'm still not sure what I want to do, but the book option is still knocking around my mind. In the meantime, continuing this blog sounds like a good start. I've been lax for a long time, but this year I'm fixing to get some words out at least once a week. I'm pretty sure that the 3 readers who used to follow me have since left me. Who knows? Maybe someone else will start being interested.


The weather is cool and cloudy. Though it is winter, the potential and hope for growth are heavy in the air, like a mist.


Thank you for reading. May 2017 be a year of hope, new beginnings, and love.


The Tallgurrl

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