Article: Most IVF clinics include counseling sessions with IVF treatments to help you cope with infertility issues and the stress of the treatment. Some countries, such as the UK, require IVF clinics to offer counseling before, during, and after treatment.  It's common to experience bouts of anxiety and depression during IVF treatment. A therapist or counselor can help you work through them. Ask your IVF clinic if counseling is included in the overall cost of the treatment, or if you'll have to pay extra for it. If you're already seeing a counselor or therapist, you might be able to continue seeing them rather than using the clinic's services. You might also be able to find a counselor on your own. Support groups include others who are dealing with infertility or undergoing IVF treatment. Sharing stories and connecting with others who have experienced some of the same issues as you can help you feel less isolated and alone. If you live in the US, you can find a support group at https://resolve.org/support/find-a-support-group/. Once you're pregnant, your IVF clinic may offer workshops and counseling sessions to help you through pregnancy and raising your child. If your IVF clinic doesn't offer these services, it may be able to recommend programs in your area. You might also consider joining a support group for expectant mothers, either in-person or online. These groups share stories about their experiences and can help you work through any difficulties you might have along the way. If you don't become pregnant after your first IVF treatment, you will likely feel frustrated and defeated. You might blame your partner, or your partner might blame you. Going to counseling sessions together can help you work through these issues. While couples therapy is important, it's also important to go to counseling sessions by yourself. Private sessions give you the opportunity to talk about your own insecurities or say things you might not feel comfortable saying in front of your partner.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Talk to a licensed counselor or therapist about infertility. Find an infertility support group to meet with. Get help adapting to parenthood if your treatment is successful. Consider couples therapy if your treatment is unsuccessful.

Problem: Article: Consult the person at the front desk to find out the password and log into the network. Some libraries also loan laptop computers and tablets. Coffee shops and fast food restaurants usually have free Wi-Fi that may or may not be password protected. It is good etiquette to buy something, and some places impose time limits. The same is usually true of bookstores, where some loitering to use Wi-Fi or read is acceptable. Many service-related industries give Wi-Fi to their customers while they wait. Shopping centers may encourage people to spend more time in food courts by having Wi-Fi. Find a chain that you can use while you travel and at home. Hang out in the hotel bar and use your Wi-Fi, if you are not staying in the hotel. Some airports have free Wi-Fi, while others ask you to pay per hour of use. You may be able to find coupons for discounted wireless access. Some Amtrak tickets come with free Wi-Fi. Although the journey is slower than air travel, you will be able to access the Internet.
Summary: Go to the public library. Buy a coffee or a burger. Get an oil change. Go to the mall. Sign up for hotel loyalty discounts. Go to the airport. Take a train.

Empathy with another person conveys warmth, validation, and caring.  It is the foundation of healthy relationships, building upon listening and respect.  Empathy requires that we contribute our own similar experiences through conversation and reinforce values that we share with the other person.  When someone views you as empathetic, they are more likely to confide, trust, and hold you in esteem, the foundational pillars of a good relationship. Practice empathy, not sympathy: Sympathy is a feeling a sadness inspired when we hear someone else's pain and focus on our own similar tragedies. Empathy keeps the focus on the other person, attempting to listen to and feel her pain, unique from your own. Compassion requires self-analysis to examine the causes of our own pain and inspires unwillingness to inflict that same pain on others. It means supporting the right of others to thrive and be happy, even if we do not always agree with their views. At its base level, compassion is an act of kindness that reassures others that we find them worthy and valuable.  Try to enact compassion in your own life by:  Offer compassion to those who have mistreated you: Perhaps the hardest act of compassion is to someone we are tempted to believe does not deserve it.  The best thing to do is to put yourself in the other person's positions and imagine what events they have gone through that have produced the anger and pain they inflict on others.  Allow yourself to feel empathy for that pain, and channel it into kindness and tolerance for that person. Focus on common ground: People are more alike than different.  We all thrive on similar things — love, trust, support, belonging.  Just because these desires may manifest outwardly in unique ways does not mean that we are unalike.  When you find yourself dwelling on difference, try to shift your focus back to similarities by reminding yourself that, like you, this person is seeking happiness, known suffering, seeks safety, and is still learning about the world. Reciprocity is an important component of developing strong connections with others.Think of ways that you can lift a burden from the shoulders of another, if only for a moment. Showing you are there for someone and really care for them can help deepen your relationship.  Offer acts of kindness. For example, you babysit for free when a neighbor needs a night off from the kids, help a friend move, tutor your little sister in math. Do these things with no expectation of payment or reciprocity — do it simply as a kindness. Do something nice for others. You could give a gift or words of encouragement. Show support by lending a helping hand or offering to assist in some way. Share responsibilities in roommate or shared housing situations (such as cleaning and paying bills, etc).
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One-sentence summary --
Empathize. Show compassion. Give back.