After
finding out I was pregnant, my brother opted to propose to his girlfriend. They’ve only been dating for around a decade
so clearly he couldn’t have had this epiphany any sooner. God forbid the other Royer jump to any hasty
conclusions. My brother and I are quite
different. I’m more of a “take action
now, think later” type of girl. I’m not
saying this tactic is without consequences.
Exhibit A: Full Blown Pregnancy.
But at least I get things done!
Regardless, between my shoot from the hip behavior and his “I’m sure
we’ll figure this all out later” strategy, we basically ruined everything.
Brother did a valiant job of
trying to include me in his wedding. He
opted to shotgun the situation and planned the entire charade for April in the
Dominican Republic. This would guarantee
that I would be just pregnant enough to look terrible in a bridesmaid’s dress
but not pregnant enough to not be able to go.
It was the perfect plan.
My mother, Mimi, and her three
sisters are what I like to call “crazy.” So when my
mother called me and left the following voicemail, I deleted it immediately and
moved on with my life.
Hey
hun, it’s
mom calling. I talked with your Aunt
Nancy and she says there’s a CDC warning that’s just been released for pregnant
women who are traveling out of the country.
I wrote down all the info so that you can ask your doctor about it. Call me back.
Now I love my mother, but this
is the same woman who called me three months before we were leaving for Europe
to remind me to bring a sweater. I mean
how does one even respond to something like that?
Hey mom! Got your message about how I’ll probably need
a sweater three months from now so I went ahead, pulled out my suitcase, put
one sweater in it and am just going to keep it there until we leave. Also, I wanted to let you know that I have the
internet here in Los Angeles and am also pretty up to date on different layers
of clothing but thanks for the tip! Oh,
and thanks for identifying yourself as “mom” when you called. I wasn’t sure who it was.
Sadly, the voicemails did not
stop. Aunt Nancy called next followed
quickly by Aunt Naomi. These bitches
were relentless. They were warning me
against some purported virus that was sweeping third-world countries by way of
mosquito. It seemed sensational and
suburban so I kept brushing it off. I
wouldn’t say my family is internationally friendly. I went to Thailand during a coup once and my
mother still refers to it as my suicide mission. These women would not give up and eventually
I was forced to Google their snoozy horror story. Unfortunately, it seemed that in this
particular instance, the witchy trio weren’t being as reactionary as I had
originally thought. I called my brother
for a full debrief:
Me: Ya know how the women in our family are
crazy?
Brother: Go on.
Me: They claim there’s a disease
in Dominican Republic that’s specifically terrifying for pregnant women.
B: Doubt it.
Me: That’s what I said! But I Googled it. And it doesn’t look good.
B: What’s it called?
Me: The Zika virus.
B: Sounds made up.
Me: Agree. I just figured they were being weirdo
Americans. But I looked it up. The symptoms read like a sci-fi novel. Basically if you get this thing while you’re
pregnant, your baby will be born with a small head.
B: Who cares? Nobody likes a big head.
Me: Right, but the head is like
literally miniature.
B: Like Beetlejuice?
Me: Exactly like Beetlejuice.
B: Oh my … Is that the only
symptom?
Me: I think it starts with small
head and ends with death.
B: WHAT?!
Me: I know! It’s horrid.
It’s called microcephaly.
B: But it’s in like rural parts
of the Dominican, right?
Me: Well here’s the thing. I did a little research and this is what I
just read in the New York Times, “On Tuesday, the Health Minister of the Dominican Republic
reportedly advised women there not to have children.”
B: Is this a joke?
Me: It doesn’t seem like it.
B: Why do these things happen to
you?
Me: WHAT DO YOU MEAN “THESE
THINGS?” OH, NOW I’M RESPONSIBLE FOR AN ENTIRE CARIBBEAN EPIDEMIC?!
B: Alright just calm down. We’ll figure it out.
Well “we” did figure it out and
apparently “we”
all decided to go ahead and get married in Dominican Republic while Preggy McPreggerson
stays back in California trying to find different objects to fashion into a
noose. Obviously it’s not my brother’s
fault that a crippling shrunken-head disease struck a region at the exact same
time of his wedding and at the precise moment that I had been knocked up BUT IT
IS SEEMING A LITTLE RIDICULOUS THAT THIS SHIT KEEPS HAPPENING TO ME! Hey, remember the time my whole spine fused together and then the drugs that I was given to fix it gave me Lupus? THIS SEEMS LIKE THAT!
The rest of the week is a
blur. After I got off the phone with my
brother, I was inconsolable. I don’t
know a lot about modern medicine or foreign diseases but it was obvious that I
would not be attending his wedding. I
was super mature about it, in that I immediately turned to Husband and said, “HOW COULD YOU DO THIS TO
ME?!” I then cried myself to sleep, woke
up crying the next morning, went to work, cried at my desk, refused to speak to
any of my family members and pouted for weeks.
This is going to sound harsh,
but I don’t like my unborn child. I
found out it was a girl recently and I can tell you that she is not for
me. Basically she’s not even born yet and
she’s already tearing my family apart. I
mean… I hope when she gets here she apologizes because to me, it’s just seeming
like we’re getting off on the wrong foot.
Everyone I know who has kids has
told me that once that little bundle of joy gets here, I’ll immediately forget
all the pain I suffered in creating her and I’ll just be so happy that I have a
beautiful little girl. I’m guessing
those people have never been on a Caribbean vacation before.
Creating life is a miracle
sent from heaven lot like being a prisoner of war. You’re totally isolated from your friends and
family while forced to endure unspeakable psychological hardships. I guess the only difference is that if I make
it through this I don’t get a Purple Heart.
Instead, I’ll be rewarded with an entire person who’s forced into my
custody for eighteen years which in some ways makes me its captor. Ah… the circle of life.