By Marcy Hallerman for Kveller.
My little sister was born when I was three years old. We grew up really close, and shared everything. Toys, friends, even the chicken pox.
Throughout the years, she always wanted to do everything I did–when she was in preschool she would sit at the dining room table while I was doing my homework, and my mother would have to give her an assignment too. One time she even took my practice spelling test, and I think she did better on it than I did!
As we got older, and figured out our own directions, our lives were still similar in a lot of ways. We went to the same college, got married within six months of each other, and started talking about expanding our families right around the same time.
I envisioned holidays, birthday parties, and backyard BBQs, with both of us having little ones running around together. Just about six months after my husband and I started trying, my sister announced that she was pregnant. I was so happy for her, and figured I would be next. Her child would be a few months older than mine, but that was OK.
My nephew was born in November 2006, two months premature, small but healthy. He was adorable, and I loved being an aunt.
The only problem–I still wasn’t pregnant. And I wasn’t pregnant a year and half later, when my sister told me that she was pregnant again. My second nephew was born in February of 2009, after I had gone through three rounds of IUI, found out I had thyroid cancer, and put conceiving on hold for surgery and radioactive iodine treatment. In 2010, I completed my first round of (unsuccessful) IVF, and was beginning to lose hope of ever becoming a mum.
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Sometimes things aren't meant to happen
Beautiful and inspiring. For someone who is also facing infertility and ivf as our only option to concieve, this story provides me with new hope. It surprises me how taboo infertility, miscarriage and assisted conception is - more should be done to normalise these heartbreaking life challenges. Thank you for sharing this wonderful story.