I was nervous when my little sister was born 22 years after me — but she has changed my life for the better |
I made my family watch Modern Family when it came out because that show was
us. There were my loving parents – now divorced but friendly and still
co-parenting me — and my brother. There was my well-meaning and kind
stepmother.
And now there was my little sister, born 22 years after me (technically, she is my half-sister, but I only use that phrase when someone insists on an explanation for the age difference).
The show was hilarious, just like our own familial life was hilarious – except for when people thought my sister was my child and my dad was my husband (gross).
Modern Family |
Our family wasn’t always this way, though.
I grew up in the suburbs playing in a cookie-cutter backyard with my
parents, my brother, and the token family dog. I knew a few girls at
school with divorced parents, but I didn’t give it a passing thought.
After all, my family was closer than most: Both sides – paternal and
maternal – not only came to all my soccer games, but shared the holidays
together. Now, I realize how rare and special it was — but at the time,
I thought everyone had that.
So when my parents did
divorce when I was in high school? I laughed because it made no sense
(they were always great partners) — and then I cried my eyes out.
I
was 16, but I wasn’t stupid. I knew my dad wouldn’t be alone for very
long — he just isn’t good at it. And I’ve always had an imagination, so
it wasn’t hard to picture the outcomes. Would he find a woman with
other children? Would I have to learn how to handle step-siblings? Or
would he find someone younger and have a new child? For some reason, that was the scariest option to me.
And by scary, I mean terrifying.
For years, I wrestled with the idea
of my dad having another baby. I thought love was a pie, to be split,
and I already felt a little ripped off when it came to my piece (it had
been a tough few years leading up to the divorce). I cried. I yelled. I
vented to my friends, to therapists. No matter what I did, I could not
get over it. Believe me, I desperately wanted to be over it.
This idea of another kid in our family was the monkey on my back — especially when my dad married my stepmom.
I
liked her a lot. She had no children, though, and it was obvious she
loved kids — especially babies. And she just so happened to be in the
last of her natural childbearing years. I tormented myself over this
possible baby. What if it was a girl? Would I ever be special to my dad again?
And then one day, there was this still, small voice inside of me that
said it would all be okay. I can’t explain it, though I wish I could.
There is no logical reason, no piece of advice someone gave me,
explaining why acceptance happened when it did.
But the point is, it did. I can honestly say that from the moment I knew about Ava, I loved her.
This person – who is now six years old – is one of the greatest joys in my life.
Because
of her, I learned that love is not a pie at all, but something that is
ever-expanding. She didn’t take anything from me. Instead, she gave.
Seeing the way my dad loved her so purely and wholly from the moment she
was placed in his arms helped me to know I was loved in that same,
complete way — before we both let the complications of life distract us.
In
that hospital room, my greatest wish was to bottle up all that love so I
could give it to her the first time she was bullied, the first time she
looked in the mirror and didn’t like what she saw. I wanted her to know
there wasn’t ever anything she needed to do to be loved more, or
anything she could do to be loved less.
We simply forget that magic kind of love as we grow up. What a privilege it was to be reminded of it.
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