Sexuality and Fertility

Infertility brings about many changes in a couple’s relationship. It may bond them closer together in unspoken sadness and hope, it may bring out feelings of resentment, of guilt, of mutual support and understanding – a sharing never before experienced. As the initial months of investigations turn into frustrating years it is not surprising that sex quickly loses many of its associations with pleasure and becomes instead an activity with a functional purpose.

Failure to conceive can test self esteem, self worth and sexuality. All these negative feelings are reflected in the bedroom, which is, after all, where all the ‘problems’ started.

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There are significant periods which impinge on feelings about sexuality of the individual or the couple faced with infertility. These are:
1. Trying to get pregnant;
2. Investigation and diagnosis;
3. Treatment;
4. Development of children; and
5. Menopause.

1. Trying to get pregnant

The usual advice for a couple trying to start a family is to have unprotected sexual intercourse (i.e. using no contraceptives) for twelve (12) months before having fertility investigations. This time-frame should be shortened, obviously, if the woman is in her late 30’s or one or both partners has some history of fertility problems. Doubts about one’s fertility almost always result in a heightened awareness of signs of fertility that surrounds us. Pregnant friends, noisy children in supermarkets, media coverage of new reproductive technologies, hints from eager parents wanting grandchildren—all these can begin to erode the sexual self-confidence of the man or woman wishing to have children.

Inevitably, sexual intercourse is timed for the fertile time of the woman’s cycle. Spontaneity goes out the window as the sexual life of a couple comes to be associated month after month with procreating and the failure to conceive. Men often come to feel like a stud bull, and women may feel it is pointless to engage in sexual activity when it is unlikely to result in pregnancy.

2. Investigation and diagnosis

Those not faced with infertility would be staggered by the number, complexity, and invasiveness of medical procedures that a couple with a fertility problem go through in their search for an answer to why pregnancy is not occurring.

“It is like donating your body to science while you’re still alive!”

Investigative tests include blood hormone assays, hysterosalpingogram, laparoscopy. The power play dynamics in the doctor-patient relationship take on a new dimension when fertility is being investigated. Couples are desperate to find an answer to their difficulties and hence are compliant and rarely let the clinician know they are under stress. They must expose the most intimate aspects of their lives – their sexual relationship and their desire to have children.

“There is no inner recess of me left unexplored, unprobed, unmolested. It occurs to me when I have sex, what used to be beautiful and very private is now degraded and very public. I bring my chart to the doctor like a child bringing a report card. Tell me, did I pass? Did I ovulate ? Did I have sex at all the right times as you instructed me?” 

A semen analysis indicates the quality and quantity of sperm within the man’s semen. It requires the man to masturbate either at home or at the fertility centre. Most men feel their masculinity is ‘on the line’ when having this done, sometimes to the extent of being unable to produce the specimen. It is not uncommon for the man to become impotent for a short time while he is undergoing such procedures.

“The first time it happened I thought “here it is – middle age. I’ll never get it up again.”

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3. Treatment

A couple’s decision to commence a treatment program, such as IVF or donor insemination, signifies hope and excitement that they can overcome infertility and produce children like everyone else. However, like the investigative period, it again signals a further, if not more intense, invasion of their sexuality and sexual relationship.

Once accepted onto an IVF program, most women are confronted at each attempt with the barriers to becoming pregnant, to become mothers, and thereby expressing a major aspect of ‘femaleness’. The relatively low pregnancy rate – means many patients will leave the program with a reconfirmed sense of failure, at least for a short time, and certainly if they have had little emotional support.

The use of donor gametes to cause a pregnancy, as in a donor insemination program where the male partner is infertile, brings home to the man his inability to reproduce. Some of the feelings of inadequacy may have been worked through during the period following diagnosis, but it is not uncommon for these feelings to be re-aroused when the program actually begins. At most fertility centres men are encouraged to be present while their partners are being inseminated. This encourages bonding between the couple at this time, and especially gives value to the participation of the male partner in the act of conception of their child.

With nearly all forms of infertility treatment, rarely is the infertility cured, and clearly not so where donor egg or sperm is used. For example, women with blocked fallopian tubes who become pregnant on an IVF program, still face further IVF attempts if they wish to become pregnant again. A feeling of defectiveness may remain despite pregnancy and a live birth.

4. Development of children

For those who achieve pregnancy through treatment, and indeed for those couples who go on to adopt a child, there are several stages in the life of these families which will impinge upon feelings about infertility. Adopting mothers are often asked ‘Why don’t babies grow in your tummy?’ And the child conceived by IVF may well want explanations of varying complexity as the years go by about how they were conceived. Simply talking about ‘the facts of life’ with these children will touch on areas which, at least for a time, were very sensitive.

5. Menopause

Menopause is a time when all women are confronted by their sexual identity, because the physical signs of being a woman are changing forever. It is a difficult time of adjustment for many women, and for those with infertility it may mean saying goodbye, yet again, to motherhood.

Summary

It is ideal to give the individual, or couple, with infertility the opportunity to vent their feelings. These may include frustration, anger, feeling ‘taken over’, as their sexuality gets trampled upon throughout the course of investigation and treatment. Much is done to restore a sense of personal worth and validation when these feelings are identified and accepted. Those experiencing infertility need to know that it is normal, expected and almost inevitable that their relationship with their partner and sex life will take a beating for a time. It is useful to introduce couples affected by infertility to others with the same problem, so they can see with their own eyes that infertility does not mean being a failure. Infertility counsellors often encounter resistance in clients in the traditional counselling situation.

One of the goals of infertility counselling is to help the client separate sex from reproduction, so that sex is perceived as valuable and pleasurable for its own sake rather than a means to an end. On a practical level, this may mean throwing away the temperature chart for a while, or taking a break in the middle of a treatment program to have a romantic holiday. Intimacy needs to be re-kindled. A couple may need help to bring back the spontaneity into their relationship, e.g. by changing the location and time of sex. Occasionally couples may benefit from referral to a sexual therapist if their sexual problem has become entrenched or if their sexual problem is deep-seated and existed before the diagnosis of infertility.

(Thanks to Concern NSW for the provision of anecdotes used in this article).
ADAPTED FROM AN ARTICLE PRODUCED BY THE INFERTILITY FEDERATION OF AUSTRALASIA