and thanks for your lovely comments. I'm intrigued by your last post - I'm sure there is something to be said for loving a younger man, but I do hope you've left out a number. If he really is only 2 then could this be part of the problem?! Only kidding.

The other thing I wanted to say was not to assume that you necessarily need a counsellor or psychologist or therapist who will understand what you are going through. I have been very lucky in that I've been seeing a therapist who herself had fertility problems and adopted 10 years ago, but that is actually co-incidence and really just adds a bit of extra insight. All you really need is someone to help you sort through your feelings and that doesn't have to be someone who's been through the same thing. It needs to be someone who is properly trained. In fact, when I rang the Samaritans the other night (do they have them in the US? They're a free counselling helpline you can call anytime of the day or night) I spoke to what sounded like a man in his 50s. There is no way he could relate directly to what I was going through but he was absolutely fantastic at listening and helping me work my way through my tangled feelings.
I'm sure that as a cognitive psychologist you must have worked with clients whose experiences are completely different from anything that's ever happened to you but does that make you less effective? I wouldn't have thought so. I expect there is something to be said for specialising, so you can reassure people that their feelings are very common, for example, but I don't think it's essential. I still reckon it would be worth giving it a try but I promise to come down off my "therapy is marvellous" hobby horse now, cos it is an individual decision.
Enjoy your art - that's one of my hobbies too and you've spurred me on to get on with one of my projects that I put away for the summer, so thanks.
take care
love Caroline