Get your tissues ready…
During the third trimester of my pregnancy with Ava, I was woken up every morning at 6:30 a.m. with the “Calypso” text notification sound, a sort of Caribbean upbeat tune that did not at all fit with the frigid winter freeze that I was living in at the time.
Before I even opened an eyelid, I knew the messages were from my sister, Sarah. She woke up every day at six, and, while eating a breakfast of egg whites and turkey bacon, would slowly type me messages loaded with pregnancy advice, or things she saw on her favourite show, A Baby Story. Sarah loved babies; she wanted at least 10.
There was an ironic element to this aspiration, as she could never have babies. The chances of her bearing a child were slim to none — closer to none. She was born with a dual diagnosis of Prader-Willi Syndrome (a genetic disorder causing, among other things, an insatiable desire for food which often results in obesity) and cerebral palsy (contributing to slight cognitive delays and low muscle tone, thus causing an inability to walk unassisted). As a family, we never told Sarah that her future would not turn out the way she so happily imagined it would; collectively, we couldn’t see the point. Just because a dream can’t come true does not mean it shouldn’t be dreamt.
"Ava I am so happy to be your aunt," she wrote to Ava before she was born. "I love you already, more every day. You come over any time you like. When you are sad about something, me and your mum and dad will always be there for you."
When Ava was born, the hospital had gone under a maternity ward lockdown due to the swine flu virus, so Sarah couldn't come in the room to meet or hold Ava like she'd anticipated. I wasn't sure how she'd react, considering that Sarah could become overly emotional when triggered by certain situations. My husband, Daniel, proudly held the sleeping Ava up behind the window of the nursery, and Sarah began to cry. I felt distressed that the hospital staff would not let her back into the unit, causing her to become upset, but she later told me, "Kate, I was just so happy to see Ava that I cried."