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Sinéad Wade is the author of Inconceivable, a memoir about endometriosis, infertility and the long fight to be heard. Published by Cranthorpe Millner in May 2026, the book traces her decade-long journey through misdiagnosis, multiple surgeries, IVF, pregnancy loss and the eventual breakdown of her marriage - and the unexpected joy that came after. Sinéad lives in Co. Limerick, Ireland, with her husband and daughter Lucy.
From the injections to the waiting, the hope to the grief, Sinéad offers an unflinching account of what fertility treatment is actually like - physically, emotionally and relationally. This talk is for anyone who has been through it, is going through it, or loves someone who is.
Sinéad's story is also a story about what happens when women's pain is not taken seriously. She speaks about the systemic failures in women's healthcare, what medical gaslighting looks like in practice, and how women can learn to advocate for themselves in a system that does not always advocate for them.
Across more than a decade of setbacks, Sinéad developed a hard-won understanding of what resilience actually means - not positivity for its own sake, but the quiet, stubborn decision to keep going. She speaks about the tools, perspectives and people that helped her through, and what she would tell her younger self now.
There is a version of infertility that gets discussed in medical settings, and there is the version that actually happens. Sinéad talks honestly about the grief, the impact on relationships and identity, the things nobody warns you about, and what it means to keep going when the road keeps changing.
Endometriosis affects 1 in 10 women, yet the average diagnosis takes eight years. Sinéad speaks about what those years looked like from the inside - the dismissals, the misdiagnoses, the surgeries - and why closing the diagnosis gap matters so urgently.
Endometriosis affects 1 in 10 women worldwide, yet on average it takes 8 years to get a diagnosis. In this intimate, heartfelt memoir, we follow Sinéad's journey through pain, miscarriage, medical gaslighting, heartbreak, misdiagnosis, botched procedures, betrayal, and numerous treatments - before she finally found her inconceivable future.
Inconceivable is an uplifting and empowering reminder that we are not alone, and that once we put ourselves and our own needs first, wondrous things can happen.
After every knock, no matter how severe, I would find a renewed strength to try again. And again.
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