Sleepovers to sleepless nights
Chat|March 26, 2020
Was I mad to consider IVF while still a teenager? Samara Davis, 20, Portsmouth
ANNA MATHESON, LUCY NOTARANTONIO
Sleepovers  to sleepless nights

Try as I might, I just couldn’t focus on the exam paper in front of me.

I was sitting my GCSEs – the pathway to A levels, then uni.

I had to do well.

But all I could think about was the pain I was in.

I was 16 and suffered heavy and painful periods.

Every month, I’d be bed-bound.

I was diagnosed with anxiety and depression.

Nothing the doctors gave me helped.

‘Why me?’ I’d cry to my mum, Sharon, 54.

Though I’d always been academic, I fell behind with my studies.

And here I was now, wondering how I’d get through the next hour.

In the end, it was a miracle I scraped five GCSEs.

Then, that summer, I collapsed at home.

Scans showed that I had a cyst on my ovary, causing bleeding in my pelvic cavity.

While friends enjoyed sleepovers and shopping trips, I was having surgery to remove the cyst and endometrial tissue.

Back home, I studied online for a Childcare diploma, too poorly to return to school.

After an MRI, I was told I had endometriosis, the condition where tissue that lines the uterus starts to grow in other areas.

I had it on my bladder, bowel and pelvic cavity.

There were three more cysts on my womb.

But worse was to come.

This story is from the March 26, 2020 edition of Chat.

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This story is from the March 26, 2020 edition of Chat.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.