The
title seems pretty self explanatory but for those of you who think I'm just
being cheeky, tonight's blog post comes with fair warning: If you are my parents or
my siblings or my child in the future, or a run of the mill prude who still
thinks vaginas and women's health is too taboo, do not read any further!
Tonight
I am airing some laundry that I have kept pretty well to myself. It's not ugly laundry,
it's not abnormal laundry (sadly, it's more common then I'd thought), it's not
dirty at all. And yet,
it's something that has managed to make me feel like a failure as a woman and
as a wife, something that has tested the relationship I am beyond lucky to be
in. It's occupied more then
3 years of my life, and that's how long it's taken for me to gather the courage
(and my husband's blessing) to talk openly about it.
I
know that all sounds pretty intriguing and dramatic, but again, this is a blog
about my vagina. And it's
not a sexy blog.
Most
mothers will complain (half jokingly, or dead seriously) that their children
ruined their vaginas. If
you're able to experience a vaginal delivery, it comes with a slew of after
effects that can last a lifetime if not treated properly; muscle weakness,
trouble peeing (or not peeing..), etc. Our child, despite the
size of his head, was not what ruined my vagina, however. My doctor did.
I
always feel it necessary to point out that while my vagina has been a painful,
infuriating situation since my delivery, my doctor is the one who diagnosed my
Endometriosis. It feels
like right thing to do, defend him at least a little. This man saved my life,
quite literally, but he also ruined my vagina. He, and his archaic male brain destroyed my
vagina.
Our
son really should have been born via C-section. My hips dislocated more
then once during a way too long labor and I was on so many painkillers that I
couldn't tell when to push, but I was terrified of being cut open. (A C-section is a lot
different then a couple laparoscopies.) Because of my naturally
tiny vagina, and my tilted birth canal I was pushing him down instead of out,
and the quickest way to hurry the process a long was an episiotomy. (Please keep any and all
anti-medical intervention comments to yourself, thanks.)
My
episiotomy wasn't even that bad! I have friends who were
snipped or tore right from the front to the back! (If you're a man and
you're reading this, did you know that?! Did you know that while
books and romantic comedies preach that a woman's body is made to have babies,
babies can actually rip a gigantic hole through us?! Can you please take a
moment to appreciate that!) My
episiotomy terrified me once it was mentioned, but it was very straight
forward, it was also very straight (sometimes they're on an angle). I went into shock almost
immediately after our son was out and the nurses had rushed him away, so I was
nearly unconscious when my doctor gently mentioned he was going to stitch me up
and get out of our way. I
remember SO little of my labor and delivery experience, but I remember him
joking, 'don't worry, daddy' to my husband while starting the stitches. I thought he was joking,
anyways.
The
Husband Stitch is really, an absolutely unnecessary 'practice'. Vaginas are fucking
resilient, and while we'd all assume that a human being coming out MUST stretch
a vagina, it really doesn't. Not
after only one human being, anyways. But society would assume
that it would. Society
also assumes that the tighter a vagina is, the better. And therein lies my
problem.
The
Husband Stitch is essentially an extra stitch thrown in after repairing a tear
or an incision, to insure that things down there are good and snug for the
husband after those cautionary 6 weeks have passed and sex can safely resume. Because of course, after
a woman has carried a fucking watermelon inside her uterus for 40 weeks and
then pushed said watermelon out of her tiny vagina after hours of inconceivable
contractions, doctors should worry about how the husband feels.
Let
me tell you, my husband would have been MUCH more satisfied had my doctor given
him a secret tip on getting your newborn to sleep for more then 2hrs in a row,
instead of an extra stitch. This
stitch has done him no good.
I
was genuinely looking forward to that dreaded 'mom vagina'. The one I was born with
was too small in my opinion, and I was excited for some extra room. My husband is not
freakishly endowed, but we JUST fit. Before having a baby,
sex almost always began the way the first time began; not totally comfy. It always took a minute
before I could really enjoy myself. Luckily, I really
enjoyed myself after that first minute or two.
Like
most new moms, the idea of having sex again after birthing a baby and
especially after stitches is fairly terrifying. Your insides are jello
and all out of place for weeks after a baby comes out, and stitches in your
vagina literally suck the breath out of you every time you stand up or sit
down. You KNOW it's not going
to be enjoyable! The tips
my mom friends and I passed around included, 'get very drunk first', and 'put a
pillow over your head so your husband can't see the awful faces you make or
hear you crying'. No mom
that I knew enjoyed it for a while, so for a long time I told myself that what
I was feeling was normal. I told
myself that it would get better the more we did it, though that was hard
because who really wanted to do it when it felt the way it was feeling?!
To
be blunt, I tore every time we had sex after I had a baby. Every time. Nothing substantial,
it's not something my husband could visibly notice without really
looking. Imagine
the worst paper cut you've ever had, then imagine it in your vagina. Right where the incision
had started. It
didn't hurt the entire time, just for a minute or two (which was normal for us,
though this hurt was much worse then before) when we started and then again
once we were finished. More
often then not our sexy time ended with me lying on the bed with a hot cloth
between my legs. Tucks
Pads and essential oil ointment were always accessible.
Like
plenty of constantly-sucky things, I got used to it. (If you can get 'used
to' chronic Endometriosis symptoms, you can get used to anything.) Ouchy sex became the
norm, though, naturally I initiated the act much less. 'Oh! I'm super in the mood! Oh, but it is going to
hurt..sooo maybe tomorrow..' Of course,
plenty of couples notice their sex life slowing down at least a little once a
baby is introduced into the mix. And then Lupron
happened.
Lupron
is referred to as the Chemo of hormone therapy. Despite the Laparoscopy
I had when our son turned 1, my Endometriosis still had me in a revolting and
desperate state, and a Hysterectomy was finally agreed upon. Lupron was part of my 4
month pre-op treatment, hoping to shrink the Endometrial growths, and prepare
my other parts to be executed. Lupron
is basically chemically-induced Menopause, and most women experience
exaggerated Menopause side effects like hot flashes, mood swings, bone loss,
nausea, chills and fatigue. I was
made aware of those side effects, so I wasn't shocked when they hit. The symptoms that did
take me by surprise were the random blood pressure plummets (I kept passing
out), and the skin thinning. Lupron
is full of lady hormones, so of course it would effect lady parts; I expected
dryness, but it also caused the skin in and around my vagina to thin out. The skin that was
already tearing.
Sex
became unbearable. The
tearing was worse and the pain was so much worse, and now it didn't go away
after the first few minutes. I feel
absolutely awful saying that sex with my husband (my super sexy, amazing
husband who I love a ridiculous amount) became traumatizing. That part, was very
depressing. That
feeling was so unfair. After 2
(of 4) months of Lupron sex ended in tears (vagina tears but also
crying-tears), which is more mortifying then I'd imagine, despite being with
someone I'm completely open and comfortable with. The last time we had sex
I couldn't stand it, and we couldn't finish. And I sobbed. Snot-sobbed. I felt beyond guilty
because naturally my husband felt bad, even though none of it had anything to
do with him.
Yes,
you read that right; the last time we had sex was before my Hysterectomy. Yes, the hysterectomy I
had over a year ago. Yes! We haven't had sex in
over a year!
Holy
shit, it feels good to let that out. Nauseating, but good. Do you know how much
shame society subconsciously makes you feel when you're not giving your husband
sex? And that's what it's
seen as, a husband not getting sex. Society thinks men need
super tight vaginas, and that a man not getting sex from his wife should be
pitied. Do you know how many
times I've read comments in 'support group' forums claiming that a husband not
getting regular sex has the right to cheat on his wife? Because men have a natural NEED for sex,
and they DESERVE it. And
honestly, that's why I haven't written about this before, for fear of crying
and then slugging the first person who (even jokingly) cooed, 'aw, your poor
husband!'
Obviously
this situation has sucked for him. Mega sucked. Despite how many times
he's seen me on and around a toilet, despite how different my body looks after
having a baby, by husband is still remarkably attracted to me and not being
able to just do your wife, is frustrating. It is frustrating in a
way that I can't understand. You know
who else it sucks for, though? Me! I also haven't gotten
any sex in over a year! And on
top of that, I can't sit for an extended period of time without starting to
ache or sting!
When
I found out my Hysterectomy would be 'Laparoscopic-assisted Vaginal' (they make
tiny incisions in the abdomen for the camera and tools, but in the end the
organs are removed through a hole made up inside your vagina, to avoid slicing
your whole abdomen in half) I got my hopes WAY up. Many Hysterectomies
preformed that way require an episiotomy (especially when you've got a giant
disease-ridden uterus), and we agreed that it was the perfect opportunity to
repair my initial episiotomy. Ta da! I was nearly more
excited for the new lease on a sex life then I was for the chance of living an
Endo-symptom-free life.
I
already said that we haven't had sex since before my Hysterectomy, so,
obviously it didn't work.
Making
a small vagina bigger is much harder then making a bigger vagina smaller. Surgeons are very rarely
asked to do that, meanwhile vaginal Botox and vaginal lifts are still all the
rage. I said (more then once)
that my vagina was just too small, but my surgeon (the same one) and his team
focused on the tearing aspect of my complaints. To insure the skin would
no longer tear, they used surrounding tissue to reinforce the area after my
Hysterectomy. I cried
a lot (hysterical IV-pain killers crying) after my first follow up with him in
the hospital, the day after the surgery; they'd left an ovary in, and they'd
'repaired' my vagina instead of resizing it.
Ps. I thought vagina
stitches after having a baby was bad, but vagina stitches after mega organ
removal is actually worse.
I
was overly cautious after surgery. We waited a lot longer
then the suggested 8 weeks, because I was terrified. I was terrified that it
would hurt, and terrified of the possible disappointment. Because what the fuck
would we do if my vagina was still broken? Get a divorce? Find my husband a side
piece?
My
vagina is too small, and now it is also a brick wall. Basically. Between the reinforcing
tissue and the scar tissue there is absolutely no give to the skin down there. All (most?) vaginas look
smaller then a penis, but they naturally stretch to accommodate. Mine doesn't.
Initially
I thought it was just me, again. I kept thinking I was
just too anxious, or not horny enough thanks to the post-uterus hormone
imbalance. And I
bet plenty of people would assume that, after reading this, that I just haven't
tried hard enough, or I just haven't wanted it bad enough. But I want it, and we
have tried. We tried
hard, and a lot. This
time, it is something that is substantial and obvious to my husband. He can not get it in. We tried hard, and a
lot, and then we stopped trying.
And
this is when everyone starts to wonder, how the F do you survive a sexless
marriage? And I
tell you that it has not been easy.
Holy
shit, there is an absurd amount of importance placed on sex inside a
relationship! I would
never say that it isn't important, because it is. But it is not the most
important aspect. I know
that now.
We
really love each other, and we both WANT to have sex, that definitely makes
things easier. It's not
a sexless marriage because one or both of us have lost the desire or grown less
attracted to each other. It's not
his fault, it's not my fault, and that definitely helps.
In
the beginning, things were very tense. We both tried ignoring
the lack of intimacy, and we both became quite passive aggressive, and bitter. We avoided talking about
it because we were both, it turns out, scared of what might be said. He was scared I would
say that I didn't want to try anymore and that I was fine never having sex
again, I was scared he'd say we couldn't be together anymore if we didn't have
sex. The conversation wasn't
super happy, we both got angry and we both got sad, it took a few days to get
through, but it was a game changer.
When
I say that we've had a sexless marriage for the last year and a half, I simply
mean that we haven't had stereotypical intercourse. After that conversation
though, we make a conscious effort to keep our relationship plenty sexy,
regardless. Turns
out, penis-in-vagina is not detrimental to a healthy sex life. (Duh, all of my LGBTQ
friends moan.) It
definitely helps that while I refer to it as 'broken' my actual vagina works just
fine; my vaginal opening is a joke, but everything else is just fine. Luckily! Some women suffer from
'sexual dysfunctions' even though their vaginal openings are plenty
roomy!
This
is where I'll start to keep personal details personal, but it works. We make it work.
Sometimes
it feels a little like work, I won't deny that. I won't deny that I've
screamed at my TV while watching some cheesy movie where the couple gets all cute
and then just bangs, because that's how it should be. I should be able to just
bang my husband whenever I want to! Banging, is in fact
easier, and that's what keeps me a little bitter these days. When you've got a kid
and jobs and a social life and the need to actually just sleep at bedtime, it's
painfully obvious that's it'd be way easier to just bang and be done. Sexy-time requires more
effort and time, then just sex. But! Beggars can't be
choosers.
Though! Turns out, I have the
chance to choose again. After
the months of pain and frustration, after taking the necessary time to brace
myself all over again for the anxiety and the recovery, my surgeon and I will
meet in an OR once more, tomorrow!
Yes,
the same surgeon, because I'll be having a giant cyst removed first (being a
girl is SO fun sometimes!!), and then a plastic surgeon will join him in an
effort to actually fix my vagina, and return some sort of normalcy and care-freeness
to my sex life. (No
pressure, guys!)
It
seems like an obvious decision, another surgery, but it was actually really
stressful to land on. I've
used plenty of fancy descriptive words in other blogs, but I'm not sure any of
them do justice to the pain and anxiety that comes from dealing with layers
(yes, multiples, internal and external) stitches in your vagina. Unless you've had your
own, it's hard to understand, obviously. But isn't SEX worth that
week or two of awful pain, and the following month or so of frustrating
discomfort? That
question makes me want to scream, 'Why don't you ask a man that?! Why don't you go ask a
man if he'd hesitate to have his penis sliced open and then sewn back
together?!'
Of
course normal sex would be worth it! My track record leaves
me quite a skeptic, though. What if
it doesn't work, again? What if
this only makes things worse? This is
for sure the last time we will be cutting and stitching down there, I mean,
that surgical area is pretty minimal, there's only so much room and so much
tissue to work with. Could it
be worse then it is now? Insert
panic, here. Fuck.
But
I (WE!) can only be hopeful, run with that 'third time's a charm' mantra! Cross all the fingers
and all the toes and knock on wood and find some eyelashes to wish on, and pray
that I've been a good enough human being this year that the universe will look
down upon me and say, 'Yes. Yes, she
deserves an awesome, easy to use vagina. Duh.'
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