Hi mommy!
Jennifer, I understand you meant well when you made the point that we shouldn't be ashamed of doing IVF. It's so true!

However, mommy2be, you're not talking about being ashamed but being forced to explain that intimate process to strangers because your husband blabbers around a little too much. I also love explaining the whole process and educate people, like Jennifer, but I can assure you I would have felt incredibly uncomfortable if people I don't know came to me with intimate questions and I realized my husband had talked about our IVF treatments with other people without consulting me first. My best friend is VERY private in general, and she really chose the people around her who know she used DS and IUI to become pregnant. She would be mortified if her husband disclosed that information to their friends without telling her, he would be in for MONTHS of "we have to talk" and "why did you do that, it's our private life!".
I understand it's a bit awkward to tell people "I don't want to talk about it" when you don't know them very well and they seem very eager to know. Why don't you just send them right back to your husband? After all, he's the one who knows them, who talked to them without your consent, he knows what the procedure is about. If he feels okay with disclosing the details, he can suffer the consequences of his big mouth. If I were you, that's what I would say. I would play innocent and say something like, "Oh, so XX told you about our treatments? Well, I'm sure he'll be happy to give you more details! Why don't you ask him, dear?"
And lastly, making jokes and comparing you to Jon and Kate + 8 is just plain rude. It's not you being too sensitive, it's them not understanding all the long marathon you went through. I would be FURIOUS to hear them compare me to that couple. It's rude and condescending and ignorant. And I could go on! Jon and Kate + 8 were an ACCIDENT, not the norm for heaven's sake!!! Once we do become pregnant, we CRAVE normality at last. I'm certainly like that; the announcements were hard to make because of the marathon effect. From now on though, I can have a normal pregnancy and so are my interactions with others. Finally!
Hang in there sweetie... I hope you can have a good talk with your husband and make him understand that the repercussions of his behavior really hurt your feelings. Some people, and some practitionners have a hard time considering us normal pregnant women. They treat us like high risk pregnancies even if we're carrying a singleton, they pressure us to do genetic testing because they consider our babies are more at risk of genetic defects. I've heard so many things from friends on this forum, it makes my head turn sometimes. But YOU know, deep down, that your baby is just like any other baby. The things you went through to meet him or her, though, are indeed different than most people, and it can make quite an impression on them.
Either way, I send you a big hug and I hope things get better soon. Take care!
Sophie xxox