Award-winning urologist - and pioneer in Men’s Health - Dr. Paul Turek blogs weekly about issues such as infertility, vasectomy and vasectomy reversal, sexual and hormonal dysfunction and more. Keep up with latest in this fascinating field of medicine.

 

Wire wheels from a vintage car. Lots to clean and fix to reduce stress

Cleaning a set of these every week is one way to "busy your hands."

Two patients told me that they were getting divorced this week. They came to the office and thanked me for all that I have done for them. They wished that the assisted reproductive technology had worked and given them children, but it didn’t. The relationships simply couldn’t tolerate the strain and gave way. Unfortunately this is not uncommon.

The Stress of Infertility

Don’t doubt for a minute that being infertile doesn’t have the same impact as having cancer. Very little can tear holes in the fabric of a relationship like infertility can. Add to this the romance of the holiday season and you have a recipe for potential disaster. Gathered families encircled by the howling laughter of children; smartly dressed kids at parties just learning to be polite; parents reveling in the enchantment written on the faces of children hearing holiday stories. To the infertile, its like having walking pneumonia—it just never seems to get better or go away.

Eight Ways to Reduce Your Holiday Stress

Maybe it’s not that bad. Maybe the holiday season is just more stressful. What can you do about it? Here are some tips for men as the holidays approach:

  1. Take smaller steps. Stress and depression are like the flu: give them some time to run their course and pass through. You will make it, and you will be stronger because of it.
  2. Make a plan. Spinning out of control without a plan for the problem can cause great anxiety. Simply agreeing to take the next month off and start again in the New Year can make all the difference in the world.
  3. Enjoy each other. After all, you have found a soul mate that is going through the same experience. Give and get that big hug that can make all the difference in the world
  4. Express yourself. Cry on her shoulder and not in a closet. Vent about that wicked day by journaling. A belly laugh or a primal scream is even better. Empathy is a very rich and particularly human experience with immense healing power.
  5. Relieve your stress. Exercise, yoga, massage and acupuncture are fabulous ways for men to “vent” and relax. There is something about those endorphins that waft through the body after a long run…
  6. Be mindful. Take your eyes off the Ipad and lose circular thoughts that lead to nowhere. Take note of the present. Quietly observe life. Breathe to relax. You are an organism, not a machine.
  7. Try fasting. From emails, texts, news, stock quotes. Do you really think that you can keep up with the web growing at a rate of 7.3 million pages per day?
  8. Busy your hands. There is enormous therapy to be found by working with your hands. In the words of Michael Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft: “Fixing things feels good.”

 

Related posts:

  1. The Skinny on Holiday Cards
  2. Fertility from Sterility
  3. The Quiet After the The Storm of Cancer
  4. Insider’s Guide to Vasectomy Reversal
  5. Adding Hope to Health
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About Dr. Turek

A founder of the male fertility and male sexual healthcare movement, Dr. Paul Turek is also an internationally recognized master microsurgeon who specializes in vasectomy and vasectomy reversal, FNA testicular mapping, sperm retrieval and male erectile and sexual dysfunction.

He is a former Academy of Medical Educators Endowed Chair Professor of Urology, Obstetrics & Gynecology at UCSF and while there, directed a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant for training new leaders in men's reproductive health. He has authored more than 175 publications on genetic, urological and epidemiological issues in men's reproductive health and regularly consults for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the NIH and other branches of the US government and industry on matters relating to men's reproductive health. He currently holds an NIH grant to create a human artificial testicle to make sperm.

He is Past-President of the American Society of Andrology, a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, the Société Internationale d'Urologie and the Royal Society of Medicine (London). Dr Turek is also Editor of the Reproductive Volume of Netter's Images, 2nd Edition. His hobbies include vintage cars and long board surfing.

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