In quiet rooms where hope is spun, Between a scan, a needle, and a whispered done, Infertility waits unnamed, unseen, A silent ache where dreams had been. Hormones chart the passing days, Numbers rise, then fall away, Each follicle is a fragile plea, Each cycle is bound by uncertainty. The woman bears the calendar’s weight, Dates circled, delayed by fate, Her body mapped, her blood reviewed, While blame walks softly, often skewed. In laboratory light so cold and white, Embryos glow in guarded light, A single cell, a fragile start, Holding the sum of a hopeful heart. The embryologist speaks in silence deep, Counting cleavage, watching sleep, A morula forms, a blastocyst grows, Though no one can promise where life goes. Failed implantation, grief unseen, No rituals mark what might have been, Just words like “negative,” “try again,” And courage stitched through private pain. Partners differ in how they cope, One holds fear, the other hope, Masculinity bruised, femininity blamed, While infertility remains unnamed. Psychiatry walks beside this path, Not to measure loss in math, But to hold distress, anxiety, and shame, And remind them-this struggle has no name. Infertility is more than cells and charts, It fractures time, identity, and heart, Still, between petri dishes and prayers, Hope survives-fragile, yet still there. The relationship between psychological distress and infertility is complex and interdependent, with significant implications for treatment outcomes and psychological adjustment among couples undergoing ART.1,2 CONCLUSION The poem explores infertility and assisted reproduction not only as a biological issue but also as a journey into the deepest recesses of the mind and heart. Through expressions of unacknowledged grief, anticipation of future uncertainty, and the unequal emotional burden associated with gendered experiences, the poem argues for the integration of psychiatric and psychosocial support into fertility practice. Financial support and sponsorship Nil. Conflicts of interest There are no conflicts of interest.
Lele et al. (Thu,) studied this question.