14 July, 2020

It won't happen to me


One of the joys of being young, for most of us, is that we think we are invincible. We are vaguely aware of hard things happening to other people, or in other countries, but we come through unscathed. We cannot imagine these bad things happening to us. We live, happily, in denial. Then, of course, something does happen. For many of us, infertility might be the first indication that bad things can happen to us. To anyone. We were all, no doubt, aware of infertility, or aware of the fact that we might not find the partner we want to have children with. But again, it seemed to be something that happens to others.

Very early this year, I heard or read (I can’t find the reference, I’m sorry) an expert talking about this. Even when bad things happen, our brains automatically reset to “it won’t happen to me.” I guess this is understandable, or we would all live in a state of hyper-vigilance, one that our bodies and brains are not built to endure. But hearing it made me nod, explaining perfectly how infertility seemed so unreal to me, even when I knew time was clicking on. It also explains the need we have to search for a reason why this happened, even when we know there is no reason why. (Which I’ve written about before, here and here.)

Perhaps New Zealand culture accentuates that feeling too. There’s a common phrase here that sums up a large part of our culture. “She’ll be right,” is the refrain, meaning that everything will turn out fine eventually. “No worries” is another version of it. It has both positive and negative connotations, depending on circumstances. So it is no wonder that so many of us don’t predict our own infertility. I’m sure there are other examples in other cultures. In the USA, perhaps, the belief in the great American dream implies that everything is within your reach, and discourages an attitude that maybe things won’t work out for you? I’d be interested to hear whether others have seen cultural beliefs that encourage them to ignore risks. Or am I really stretching things here?

Regardless, this view that bad things won’t happen to us colours many of our societies. Even when we begin to face the fact that infertility might mean we will not get the children we want, we are bombarded by messages from society, from family and friends, that tell us to stop worrying. “She’ll be right!” in fact. We’re told to have a positive attitude, or to keep trying, to try just one more time, or to “just adopt.” IVF is waved as a solution even when statistics don’t back this up. (Read Pamela’s latest piece about messages about IVF here.) We are urged to “never give up.” We’re often not allowed to even contemplate the fact that this IS happening to us, even when it is obvious to ourselves, if not to everyone else.

Anyway, since infertility and loss, I noticed a distinct change in the way I felt about my own vulnerability. Perhaps part of that is just age and experience, but I definitely feel my experience of infertility and pregnancy loss influenced my new feelings about risk. Before then, I used to travel the world on my own (for business) and felt confident and safe. Since then, I have been much more aware of things that could go wrong. I’ve had a diagnosis that have accentuated my feelings of vulnerability, and a niece was born with a genetic condition that has reinforced my view that the world is random (the odds of two healthy people with a rare gene falling in love and having a child, which even then has only a 25% chance of developing this condition is surely random), and so by definition, it is unfair. Since infertility and loss, I’ve felt my mortality much more keenly, and feel very far from invincible. I’ve lost my default setting.

No doubt, our brains’ default setting (that it “won't happen to me”) evolved in humans as part of a survival technique. After all, if you were going out to hunt for food, you had to believe that you would survive the hunt. However, that doesn’t help us now, either in infertility terms or with the onset of the COVID pandemic. Initially, my reaction was “I’ll be fine.” But then as it became more serious, I realised that I was not immune to risk (ie I am not in my healthy 20s or 30s, even though they are not immune either), that I often had more severe respiratory illness than my husband (for example), and that my history of being on the wrong side of the odds (a 1 in 400,000 chance of having a second interstitial ectopic, and 0.3% chance of development TN). As we learned more about COVID, I started to feel more vulnerable too, so felt very comfortable with a lockdown and taking safety precautions, and followed the rules assiduously.

What we are seeing in so many countries around the world is the prevalence of this belief that “it won’t happen to me.” Vulnerability is scary to feel, and it is easier to take the attitude that everything will be okay. I can relate to this. So many of us felt this way about our own fertility. But as we all sadly know, everything will not necessarily turn out as we want. I think knowing too that we don’t always get what we want has made it easier to accept that I am not travelling internationally this year, or – most likely – next year or maybe (gulp!) ever again. I’ve accepted that my life was forced to change at least once before. I can do it again. I may not like it. I may even have to grieve. But I know I’ll get through it.

With COVID – and fertility – the evidence now seems very clear. But too many people are denying the evidence. Some of that is the fault of politicians and messages that have been delivered. But some of it is just our brains resetting to our “it’ll be okay” default. As I once said to a friend about her soon-to-be-ex, when people stick their heads in the sand, all you can see are a$$holes. It made her laugh, which was much needed at the time. It made me feel better about my own vulnerability. Losing this default setting, accepting and not fighting the idea that “maybe it will in fact happen to us,” has actually made me feel more content with life, accept my mortality, and go with the flow a little more than I might have otherwise. It has helped me be a bit more adaptable.

Has your knowledge that anything CAN happen to us helped you in the current circumstances?




11 comments:

  1. This is a great post which really resonated with me. I've seen a lot of descriptions of infertility as being the first time that a certain population of women (to which I belong) discovered that working hard and following the rules and doing everything right didn't necessarily result in success.

    Because I did meet with success through IVF (and then had the unexpected success of the pregnancy without intervention), I think I skipped the realizations that you discuss until my Dad had his accident in 2016. That really ripped the carpet out from under my feet, and it also really drove home how people simply cannot break out of the "it won't happen to me" mentality until it DOES happen to them (or someone very close to them). I could watch people's eyes as I told them what happened to my Dad, and I could see the exact point where they stopped being able to grasp what had happened, because to truly understand it would mean they'd have to accept that the universe is random and there's no such thing as 'fair'.

    I'm reading a book right now about why people survive in disasters (or don't). It was written in 2008 but it is so timely right now in explaining the mindset that you see and people's inability to see what seems to be right in front of them.

    I am 100% certain that we are being as super cautious as we are about COVID because I lost that feeling of invincibility. My anxiety has never returned to what I would consider a 'normal' level after 2016. I guess there are some positives to that given our current situation, but it is really frustrating to know that the people who don't think there's a problem (or that it won't happen to them) will be able to go out and act like everything is back to normal (our province is moving to stage 3 in most parts on Friday) only because the people like me are still staying home. And then if they're wrong, and their desire to return to normal causes a spike like has happened in the US (because our province is allowing indoor dining and bars to reopen which just frustrates me no end), then the fact that we stayed home will have been wasted.

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    1. Like you, my brain hasn't completely defaulted back to normal, though I'm probably better now than I was 15 years ago! Maybe it happens more easily when there has been risk, but no real damage. I don't know. I have a sister who, despite our parents' histories of cancer and despite her own heart attack from smoking, still smokes, and refuses to get colonoscopies/skin cancer checks. Her head is firmly in the sand.

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  2. Oh, fabulous post, Mali. I definitely lost my feeling of invincibility after our daughter was stillborn. Up until that point, my life had pretty much gone according to plan. We'd postponed ttc a little longer than I thought, and I was getting nervous when pregnancy didn't happen right away, but otherwise, yeah. I knew almost from the start that this was not a normal pregnancy, but I just couldn't believe that somehow, some way, things wouldn't turn out all right in the end. Until they didn't. Infertility was just the coup de grace. I agree with you, I have lost my innocence & my expectation that things will be all right, because they most definitely weren't, and it was a very unpleasant wake-up call. These days, I still HOPE for good outcomes -- I don't automatically assume the worst, as dh sometimes does -- but I don't EXPECT them as a matter of course.

    I agree that this blase attitude that "it won't happen to me" has contributed to the situation we (globally, and particularly in the U.S.) are in right now with COVID-19, and I agree with you & Turia that my past experiences why dh & I have been uber-cautious. BIL makes fun of us sometimes, but I don't care; I've been on the wrong side of statistics before, and I'd rather be safe. Seeing all the young people partying it up in bars & on beaches, with not a mask in sight, proves your point, I think. I saw a news story a few days ago about a young man who attended a COVID party in Texas. (!!!) Just before he died, he told the nurse, "I think I made a mistake, I thought this was a hoax but it isn't." Well, duh. And even those who recover (because most people will recover) are finding the effects are long lasting and sometimes debilitating.

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    1. There goes BIL again. Grrrr! lol

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    2. LOL! He really is a good guy... people love him. He's everyone's favourite buddy/uncle/cousin/etc. But he's just a little clueless sometimes...! (And a bit of a control freak -- like his brother, lol. ;) )

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  3. Oh. Thank you. This post is really helpful for me. It helps me understand why I'm taking more stringent precautions than my family is. They haven't (thankfully) experienced traumatic loss. Sure, we have different personality types and live in all different parts of the country, so those factors play a role too in how we are living during the pandemic. But, yes, that is a big difference between them and me: I definitely have no illusion, not even subconsciously, of invincibility.

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    1. Ultimately, I think we're just being more realistic! Tell your family that. lol

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  4. Yes. Yes. Yes. Thank you Mali for this post! There has been a certain level of anxiety in my life ever since surgery, treatment and grief... I worry more when I travel, just as you say, and like Phoenix I am taking more precautions than others with the Corona virus and am not always understood even by my own family. But before infertility I also never thought these bad things could happen to me! It is so comforting to read that I am not the only one <3!

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    1. I'm glad that this was comforting. That's why I read blogs too - to know I'm not the only one who feels a particular blog!

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  5. This is such a great, important post. It is so true that you lose your feelings of invincibility when bad shit happens to you, and while you (hopefully) learn that you can survive it and adapt to a new reality, you're never quite the same. I feel like I get annoyed when people say "you've had your share of bad luck, nothing else bad will happen for you!" because while it's nice, I guess, WHY NOT? There isn't some pot of bad luck everyone has and when it's full it's all smooth sailing. Why wouldn't something else happen? It's not that I'm inviting it or expecting it, it just stands to reason that you can't make the assumption that bad things won't happen. I agree with others that this feeling of vulnerability makes me super vigilant about the precautions to avoid COVID. People around me think we're totally overdoing it, but if this thing is preventable by reducing/avoiding contact when not totally necessary, how could I NOT do that? And yup, American Dream definitely calls for going for it and ignoring any obstacles or oppression or stumbling blocks along the way. There's a sense of "deserving" things that makes it hard for people to fathom that sometimes you just don't get those milestones or bad shit happens. Sorry for all the cussing. And holy moses, I can't even get started on the way (almost) everyone here in the U.S. is acting like a 16 year old with an undeveloped frontal cortex, throwing caution to the wind and saying it's unfair to do common sense precautions like masking for the greater good. Flocking to bars. Having parties. It makes ZERO sense to me.

    Great, thought-provoking post!

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    1. "Why not?" is the question that changed everything for me. When I asked "why did this happen to me?" I then asked "why not?" And there's no good answer for that.
      PS. Cussing (such an American word - lol) is good for the soul!

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