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Despite the fact that Alison pushed her painful infertility experience to the back of her mind for two years, she was determined to help other people in her position. After finding a sound engineer, her podcast quickly became a reality.
"It's not a medical podcast, and it's not clinical," she explained. "It's just people telling their stories about having babies, or in some cases, not having babies. I want to tell those stories about people not having kids because it's real life. Unfortunately, sometimes you don't have a baby if you want to have a baby. And that's heartbreaking. It's just important to show the good and the bad because that's just real life."
The sky is certainly the limit in terms of who she plans to have share their journey. "I want to talk to same-sex couples. I want to talk to single dads. I feel the possibilities here are endless," she said. "And it's been exciting, and the response has been mind-blowing, and people have been coming out of the woodwork like, 'I know someone,' or 'I want to tell my story.'"