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Privacy vs. Secrecy: Whom Do You Trust?

The article titled Rules Help When Talking About Infertility:

http://www.doctorslounge.com/index.php/news/hd/22886

refers to a study that claims that infertile women are more apt to open up to others about their infertility, whereas infertile men are more inclined to want the news to be kept a secret.  It goes on to suggest that the couple set rules about who besides themselves can know about their struggle so they can avoid upsetting each other.

In my years of experience I have found that women as well as men sometimes subscribe to the die-hard macho attitude and be inclined to protect the man from facing the fact that he’s not Tarzan.  Furthermore, if the woman is infertile, whom to tell is not so clear-cut.   I’ve found that setting rules, while a good idea, is not so simple.

Complexities involve your sexuality, who should be allowed into the sanctity of your marriage, who has what kind of connection to family and friends, your capacity to communicate with each other, and much more.  It is a topic to which I address a whole chapter in my book, On Fertile Ground: Healing Infertility. Here’s an excerpt.

http://www.mind-body-unity.com/resources/bye_bye_privacy.pdf

This excerpt is from Chapter 4, “Infertility’s Impact on Friendships/Family: From Involvement to Isolation.”  The title hints at the complications.

The advice to set rules makes sense.  But as a therapist, when I work with people I like to frame things so that you can feel successful.  It you think it is easy to set rules and then you and your partner get tangled up in issues that are attached here, you’ll only wind up feeling worse.  It makes more sense to see the “whom-do-we-tell” issue as being attached to many things that you might need some professional help unraveling.

The Stigma of Infertility

The results of a recently released study of 50 infertile couples claims that couples hold back from sharing their infertility because they feel stigmatized.  While couples might feel stigmatized, in my 32 years of practice I have observed that it makes sense to hold back from sharing their infertility because it’s nobody’s business but theirs.

The report also indicated that there is more of a tendency to withhold this information if it is the male partner who is infertile.  I have seen this in some cases where macho attitudes—interestingly, held by both men and women—hold sway.

The report also stated that some couples reveal their infertility rather than have people think that the woman is too career-driven and therefore too selfish to meet the social expectation to have a family.  I have never seen this.  Many women are career-driven but still want a family—desperately.

Couples do need to communicate so as to be clear as to who is invited into the sanctity of their relationship and who is to be kept out.  But agreement is not always easy to arrive at.

There are so many areas in the infertility struggle that can lead to discord, both personal and interpersonal.  To tell or not to tell is certainly one of them.

The report left out the most important fact, namely that the crisis of infertility creates many opportunities.  Deciding whom to tell creates an opportunity to seek counseling and to learn how to navigate adversity together.

I don’t like the word stigma.   It smacks too much of victimhood, which is akin to powerlessness.  You may be out of the mainstream, but the opportunity to build strong and effective coping skills—together abounds.  Learning new coping skills that allow you to rise to the challenge is empowering.