Women often wish to share their infertility woes with other women to seek consolation and solace.

Based on interviews with 50 infertile couples, study author Keli Ryan Steuber, assistant professor of communication studies in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences speculates that it has to do with protecting the husband's public face, and responding to societal pressure to pursue motherhood.
"It aligns with the idea that couples do more work to maintain the husband's public persona," said Steuber.
"For women, it may be a response to our pronatalist culture. There's an expectation that women want children, and sometimes those who are voluntarily childless are labeled as selfish or too career-driven. We wonder if that stigma overrides the stigma of infertility, to the point that women and their husbands feel compelled to clarify: 'We're not choosing to not have children. We can't have children.'"
The researchers discovered that couples were generally OK with spouses having different privacy restrictions for different support-network members. The key to keeping peace, Steuber said, is explicit conversations about privacy rules and the reasons behind them-like whether preferences are related to personal insecurities, general discomfort with disclosing the information, or trust issues with specific individuals.
"But boundaries are easy to violate if they're not crystal clear. It's important to have detailed discussions, and to reevaluate the rules in light of a new development in the process," Steuber added.
Source-ANI
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