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.