Conceiving a baby can be easy for some and difficult for others. In cases where it's difficult, the reason can be as serious as infertility, or as benign as a lack of understanding of the conception process.
Every woman has at least one good friend who seems to
conceive just by saying the word "baby". Every woman also has a close friend who
desperately tries to conceive but cannot.
But no matter how strong the bonds of sisterhood, women seldom discuss
an issue as sacred as conception. One
couple in six experiences fertility problems serious enough to warrant medical
intervention, but they tend to feel ashamed of their difficulties. Men wonder about their virility and potency;
women worry about their essential femininity.
Getting pregnant is neither mystical nor magical. Many women
simply do not know their bodies well enough to manage Mother Nature's
cycles. And many women do not understand
that the more they stress and obsess with conceiving, the less likely they are
to succeed. Before couples resort to expensive, often frustrating fertility
treatments or in vitro fertilization, they should give Mother Nature fair
opportunity to work Her own designs.
Get a Check-up
Women typically do not rank reproductive health very high on
their priority lists, so they skip annual obstetric check-ups. Women who want
to become pregnant should have a complete exam before they start trying. A complete exam is especially important for
women who are susceptible to yeast and bladder infections, or women who have been
treated for a sexually-transmitted disease.
A complete battery of tests also may uncover problems in your fallopian
tubes that obstruct ovulation, or problems in the uterine walls that inhibit
attachment. You would not take your car
on a long road trip without getting it examined; the same principle applies to
your reproductive system. Pregnancy
stresses and tests the bodily system all the way to its limits. Make sure it is healthy.
Mindset Matters
Plan it, manage it, but do not stress about it. Anxiety, stress, and depression change your
body's pH, making it more acidic. Although the pH change is almost
undetectable, it is just enough to make a woman's reproductive system
inhospitable to otherwise healthy sperm.
A woman's body is far more sensitive to her moods and intuition than her
mind, so that a woman's body responds to her partner's frame of mind as much as
to his touch. If your partner is not
thoroughly committed to parenthood, your body can tell. Many specialists encourage couples struggling
to get pregnant to first seek marriage counseling, because both partners must
understand and embrace everything about parenthood. Open and honest emotional communication
fosters "effective" sexual communication.
Know Your Cycle
Chart your cycle for several months before you begin
seriously trying to conceive. The chart
serves to help you predict your ovulation, which can take place any time
between the tenth and the sixteenth day after you begin your regular monthly
period. You also must take your
temperature every day from the beginning through the middle of your cycle,
because body temperature spikes at the time of ovulation. As you reach the middle of your cycle, you
may supplement the thermometer with an ovulation predictor. Designed and fashioned to work just like an
in-home pregnancy test, the ovulation predictor changes color to indicate a
change in your hormones as you ovulate.
When the thermometer rises and the predictor changes color, it's time to
get busy. You are most likely to conceive
on the day you ovulate and for two days afterwards.
Give those Little Swimmers some Help
Mindset matters and mechanics matter even more. When you are trying to conceive, deep
penetration gives sperm a healthy head start on their journey to union with the
egg. Choose sexual positions that
promote deep penetration, and have sex two or three times each day during
ovulation. Keep in mind, however, that a
man's sperm need five or six hours to restore their full count. After intercourse, relax for a while, laying
comfortably on your back and tilting your pelvis up, so that the little
swimmers get some help from gravity. To
reduce strain on your back and abdominal muscles, support yourself with a
couple of pillows. As the little sperm
swim their hearts out, do your Kegel exercises to give them a little extra
push. You need to prepare your vaginal
muscles for delivery anyway.
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| About the author |
Lisa Olson is a fertility expert, a health consultant, and a nutritionist with many years of experience in helping infertile couples to naturally get pregnant. If you are struggling to have a baby, please visit Pregnancy Miracle for help. |
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