The internet tells moms that self-care is bubble baths, face masks, and lighting a candle.
Maybe for some people it is.
But if I’m being honest, every time I take a bubble bath, I am nine times out of ten interrupted by a cat testing its tightrope-walking abilities on the side of the tub or a five-year-old barging in to ask why she can’t take a bubble bath too.
Self-care comes in many forms.
Self-care can be:
Botox
Filler
Therapy
Going for a walk alone
Getting a tattoo
Lunch with a friend
Drinking your coffee while it’s still hot
Self-care has become just another thing moms are supposed to do perfectly.
We’re told to take care of ourselves. Prioritize ourselves. Fill our own cup.
Fill our own cup? With wine?
Meanwhile, we’re juggling camp registration, laundry, work, activities, doctor appointments, grocery shopping, and family responsibilities.
Sometimes self-care feels like one more thing on the to-do list.
Let’s talk about Botox and tattoos.
Somewhere along the way, we decided there are versions of self-care that are acceptable and versions that need defending.
A bubble bath? Self-care.
A face mask? Self-care.
A massage? Self-care.
Botox? Suddenly we’re having a debate.
When did Botox become vanity and not self-care?
I am not ashamed to admit I have tattoos. I have had Botox. I have had filler.
My tattoos are deeply personal. They represent my IVF journey, resilience, and the reminder that moving forward is possible even when life doesn’t go according to plan.
A small tattoo that reminds me of resilience, growth, and that moving forward is possible—even when life doesn’t go according to plan.
I didn’t get them for anyone else.
I got them for me.
The same goes for Botox.
I’m not trying to look twenty-five.
I’m not doing it for my husband.
I’m not trying to become someone else.
I do it because it makes me feel good.
After years of taking care of everyone else, there is something incredibly restorative about doing something entirely for yourself.
One of my closest friends owns Great Falls Aesthetics, and one thing I’ve learned from watching her build her business is that most women aren’t walking through her doors chasing perfection.
They’re looking for confidence.
They’re looking to feel like themselves again.
Sometimes self-care isn’t relaxing in a bathtub.
Sometimes it’s reclaiming a piece of yourself.
Sometimes it’s marking a moment that changed you.
Sometimes it’s getting a tattoo.
Sometimes it’s getting Botox.
And sometimes it’s simply doing something because you want to.
The older I get, the more I realize self-care isn’t really about what you’re doing.
Sometimes self-care is simply choosing yourself for a change—and that’s okay.
Note: One of my closest friends owns Great Falls Aesthetics. While this post isn’t sponsored, I wanted to mention her because she’s helped me see that self-care looks different for everyone and that confidence and self-care are deeply personal.
I have come across some version of this post countless times while scrolling Instagram.
My first reaction?
“What the hell?!”
After stewing for a minute, it usually becomes:
“Good for them.”
Because I genuinely mean that.
But those posts also force me to sit with an uncomfortable reality: not all fertility clinics are the same.
When we started IVF, we chose a clinic that was well known in our area. We didn’t spend months researching labs, comparing embryology programs, or interviewing multiple doctors.
Honestly, we didn’t know we were supposed to.
We assumed a fertility clinic was a fertility clinic.
What did I know?
I figured anyone looking at my age and low ovarian reserve would be aggressive. I assumed there was a standard approach. A standard protocol. A standard level of care.
I had no idea how much these clinics could vary.
The labs are different.
The embryologists are different.
The protocols are different.
The philosophies are different.
And when you start hearing story after story from people who switched clinics and finally found success, it’s impossible not to wonder.
Would another clinic have done something differently?
Would another doctor have recommended another approach?
Would the outcome have changed?
The truth is, I’ll never know.
This isn’t about blaming a clinic.
It’s not even about regret.
It’s about realizing how much uncertainty exists in infertility.
You can choose the most popular clinic in your area and still be left wondering what might have happened somewhere else.
People often ask why someone doesn’t just switch clinics.
But “just switch clinics” isn’t nearly as simple as it sounds.
It means more consultations.
More testing.
More time.
More money.
Sometimes tens of thousands of dollars more.
A lot of people don’t stop treatment because they want to.
They stop because the well has run dry.
They are out of resources.
Out of energy.
Out of hope.
Believe me, if I could do one more round at a different clinic just so I could say I tried everything, I probably would.
But that isn’t our reality.
Infertility is cruel in so many ways, but one of the cruelest parts is how few answers you’re left with.
You put your body through injections, procedures, surgeries, appointments, waiting, disappointment, and grief.
And at the end, there are still questions.
Questions nobody can answer.
Not all fertility clinics get the same results.
That isn’t an argument for endless treatment.
It isn’t a reason to second-guess every decision you’ve made.
It’s simply a complicated reality that many infertility patients eventually discover.
Infertility asks us to make enormous decisions with incomplete information.
And sometimes what remains after treatment isn’t just grief.
It’s uncertainty.
It’s learning to live with questions that may never have answers.
There is nothing “basic” about stopping IVF and returning to the so-called natural route. There is no guidebook for what comes next. The protocols and procedures that once dictated every step suddenly disappear. The appointments, alarms, and instructions are gone—but the emotions and unknowns remain. There is no protocol for going back to the basics.
When we decided to stop IVF and try naturally, I wasn’t prepared for how difficult this next part of our journey would be.
During IVF, everything had structure. There were calendars to follow, medications to take at exact times, appointments that filled the weeks. There was always something happening. Even when things were hard, there was a sense of movement—like we were actively doing something to grow our family.
When IVF ended, that structure disappeared almost overnight.
There were no more early morning monitoring appointments. No more medication schedules. No more calls from the clinic explaining the next step. The silence after all that noise felt strange. After months of constant activity and decision-making, the journey suddenly became quiet again.
I thought the quiet would feel like relief.
Instead, it felt like uncertainty.
I remember the first period I got after we started trying naturally again. I wasn’t prepared for the wave of emotions that hit me—and continue to hit me every month after that. I know the chances of me getting pregnant are slim, yet I still cling to that small, fragile hope that maybe this month could be different.
It’s back to ovulation strips, tracking cycles, and the dreaded waiting.
Each month carries the quiet belief that this will finally be the one with a positive pregnancy test.
And then the period comes.
Every time, it feels like a quiet, recurring loss.
Infertility has a way of changing how you experience time. Months don’t just pass—they are measured in cycles, ovulation windows, and two-week waits. Every month begins with cautious hope and ends with the same familiar disappointment.
Still, we keep trying.
Because after everything, defeat already feels familiar—so why not keep going?
There’s also a strange mental math that infertility creates. You start calculating timelines in ways you never did before. You think about ages, about how many cycles might be left before another birthday passes.
It’s exhausting carrying those numbers around in your head all the time.
And while we try, pregnancy announcements begin to appear everywhere.
On social media. In group texts. In casual conversations I wasn’t prepared for.
Friends are growing their families while I am still counting days, tracking cycles, and waiting.
There is an immediate ache that follows the news—one that arrives before I can stop it. It’s a strange, conflicting feeling: being genuinely happy for someone while simultaneously grieving for yourself.
You want to celebrate with them. You want to share in their joy. But there’s also a quiet sadness sitting beside that happiness, reminding you of the family you are still hoping for.
There is no manual for how to navigate this space. No instructions for how to hold joy and sadness at the same time.
You simply learn to carry both, whether you’re ready or not.
And beyond real life, there is social media.
A constant stream of curated joy—pregnancy announcements, newborn photos, growing families. Instagram doesn’t show the waiting, the tracking, or the quiet losses that happen in between.
It’s a bizarre thing being on social media and posting life while making it appear as normal as possible.
I still take my daughter to do fun activities. We still have family gatherings, playdates, birthday parties. Life goes on.
From the outside, everything looks normal.
But behind every “normal” post is the sadness that people don’t see.
This is what social media often is—showing the good parts of life and hiding the painful ones. The highlight reel instead of the full story.
That said, I do appreciate the people who are willing to share the real, raw parts of life online. The struggles with illness, infertility, grief, and the complicated realities that so many people quietly carry. It takes courage to show those parts of your life publicly.
I admire that honesty.
At the same time, I understand why most people don’t share those pieces. Some things feel too personal, too heavy, or too complicated to put into a small square on a screen.
So instead, life continues as usual—at least on the surface.
Trying naturally after infertility feels strangely invisible. There are no injections, no clinic visits, no outward signs that anything is different. From the outside, it probably looks like we simply decided to move on.
But internally, the same cycle continues.
Hope slowly builds throughout the month. You start noticing small things that make you wonder if maybe this time is different. Maybe this month will surprise you.
And then the cycle ends, and everything starts over again.
Some days I try to convince myself not to hope. To stop analyzing every symptom or wondering if this month feels different.
But hope has a way of showing up anyway.
It sneaks in quietly every cycle, whispering the same small possibility: maybe this time.
And maybe hope is the only thing that keeps us moving forward.
Infertility changes the way you see the world. It makes you more aware of the invisible struggles people carry every day. It teaches you a kind of patience and resilience that you never asked to learn.
So for now, we go back to the basics.
Not the simple version people imagine, but the complicated one that lives somewhere between hope and grief.
We keep trying. We keep living our lives. We keep showing up for our family and the life we already have.
And we keep carrying both emotions at the same time.
Because sometimes moving forward doesn’t look like progress.
I became pregnant with my daughter relatively easily. I was 34 when we found out we were expecting. My husband and I had waited about eight years after getting married before trying to conceive. Fast forward four years, and we are now facing secondary infertility.
If you’re unfamiliar, secondary infertility occurs when someone conceives their first child without fertility treatment but struggles to conceive again. It wasn’t something I had ever considered—why would I? I got pregnant within two months and successfully gave birth to my daughter. The idea of now needing medical intervention to have another child has been incredibly difficult to process.
After experiencing a chemical pregnancy, I went to my OB for an ultrasound to check my follicle count. That day, when my doctor told me I had only two follicles on my right ovary and none on my left, our IVF journey began.
I am grateful to have friends who, unfortunately, know the IVF process all too well. I had no idea how much support I would need—emotionally, physically, and financially. The toll IVF takes is almost indescribable. One of my closest friends warned me that the hardest part is having hope, only to be met with disappointment over and over again. She was right. With every hurdle you clear, there are five more waiting. There are no guarantees in IVF, and with that comes a complete lack of control—two very difficult things to accept.
I was 39 when I started my first IVF cycle—estrogen patches, injections, a mock embryo transfer, and an egg retrieval—only to end up with one embryo that came back chromosomally abnormal. Now, at 40, I’ve just completed my second cycle, with the exact same result. One embryo, not viable.
Waiting for that call from the doctor is gut-wrenching. It’s either a step toward a viable pregnancy or another cycle of injections and procedures. And now, here we are—about to start our final round of IVF, holding onto hope for a better outcome.
Failed IVF cycles bring grief, anxiety, depression, and guilt. After our first failed round, I felt lost. I wasn’t sure how to process the grief of losing an embryo. I remember listening to a podcast about the many ways people grieve during IVF, and it resonated deeply. The loss of a potential life—a little pocket of cells—was more devastating than I had anticipated. I had just put my body through so much, and for what? Nothing.
We had to pause before starting the next round. I needed to give my body a break, and we needed time to recover financially. This last round of IVF was the hardest yet—mentally, physically, and emotionally. The endless procedures, the uncertainty, the complete lack of control—it left me feeling utterly defeated.
It’s an incredibly painful reality to pour so much time, effort, and money into something with no guarantee. And yet, if we are able, we continue. Because even in the darkest moments, hope lingers.