"If you have been trying to get pregnant..." "You’re About To Learn Secrets That Most Women Will Never Know AboutFertility..." Are you having trouble getting pregnant? "Discover the Secrets to Super Fertility and Pregnancy from a Swedish Professor Who Thought She Was Infertile, But Took Matters Into Her Own Hands, Had Her First Child at the Age of 41... and Now Has 3 Beautiful Children in Her Happy Family" This helpful guide shows you the simple changes you can make in your life to increase your fertility and boost your chances of becoming pregnant, no matter how hard hard you’ve tried before…Dear Friend, Of course, you want to be fertile, make love, and get pregnant. But you’ve tried so many diets, charting programs, fertility blends and drugs you don’t know who or what to believe anymore. You just want to get pregnant more than anything else, and you should! My name is Helene Kvist and I’m a mother of three who conceived her first born at the age of 41. Let me relate my experience to you and see if it sounds familiar? My husband and I got married and shortly after we started trying for a baby. At this early stage I still thought of pregnancy in terms of adolescent sex education: that it only took once. I expected it to be easy. I thought of pregnancy in terms of convenience (giving birth during school breaks) and responsibility (would we be able to afford having children). Even though I knew that a woman’s fertility goes down in the mid thirties and that there were couples who experienced difficulties conceiving those were academic abstracts. The people close to me appeared to get pregnant easily Almost too easily it seemed, and I thought that would apply to us too. I was more concerned with being pregnant and having a child during an inconvenient time of my graduate studies, than with the possibility that we might not be able to conceive at all. The first year and a half I did not think much of the fact that I was not getting pregnant despite trying quite a lot. I had moved to the Midwest from California to pursue graduate studies, and my husband remained behind, until he could finalize some business and join me permanently. This meant that we didn’t have that much opportunity to try getting pregnant. I was also quite busy dealing with all the requirements for my degree and a bit anxious that a pregnancy would make it more difficult. I started becoming concerned once he had joined me, several of my professors had become pregnant shortly after marrying, and I had had a handful of false alarms consisting of quite delayed periods. I saw a nurse-practitioner at the University health center, who said she couldn’t find any obvious reasons why I might not be able to conceive. She recommended that I started charting my temperature and gave me the card for a reproductive specialist. I went as far as buying a thermometer. A fertility specialist appeared outside our budget at the time. Then I became pregnant! The timing seemed fortuitous. It was 2 ˝ years into my program - all the requirements that I had worried about were out of the way, and only the fun research remained. I was ecstatic, and informed everyone. Week 7, I began bleeding. An ultrasound confirmed that there was no heart beat. I remember the image of the little critter - at some stage between embryo an
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