Having just wrapped up the last of the 2017 spending, I took a look at the medical category for 2016 and 2017. Counting from Jan 18, 2016 to now, the total cost of getting pregnant and then getting un-pregnant was been $25,196.66. That does not include my insurance premiums, hundreds of dollars in supplements, or the approximately, 2,000 home pregnancy tests I've bought. During that time period, it's our second greatest expense, only falling behind our mortgage.
I know I am actually really lucky. That total covers 3 OI/TI cycles, 9 surgeries, nearly 6 weeks in-patient, and two deliveries. It could be so much higher, if we'd needed more cycles or if we need to move to IVF. It's tough, though, when I see that total and think about what it "bought" us. It bought us an hour with the most precious little girl you can imagine. It bought the chance to give our twins life. It bought five glorious weeks of feeling Quinn move inside me. It bought more tears and heartbreak than I can quantify (and as a nerd who likes spreadsheets, I'm usually really damn good at quantifying things). It's bought me near constant physically pain and months missed from work. It bought amazing, touching connections with friends and family members who have reached out. To echo what appears to be a recurrent theme: it bought us hope and the loss of hope.
I'm working on my 2018 budget now. Planning for 3 OI/TI cycles, and hitting my OOP max for medical care. I honestly can't tell if that's me being optimistic or pessimistic. I can tell you that I stand behind my response when a friend asked me "What will happen if you don't have kids from those cycles?" Answer: "I'll have more money for other things in 2019."