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| | Illustration: Palesa Monarang | | When Meredith Lynn Kramer was in her late teens, doctors told her she had very little chance of ever having a baby of her own. She had contracted pelvic inflammatory disease, an infection of the reproductive organs that affects more than 1 million American women a year and that leaves one in ten patients infertile. As a result of the illness, Meredith had developed a lot of scar tissue that would make it very difficult to conceive a child. | When she got engaged at 24, she was thrilled that her fiancé already had a daughter from a previous relationship. "I couldn't have kids, but now I had an instant family with this sweet little girl," she says. But much to their surprise, Meredith became pregnant a few months later when she was still in nursing school. | Dive into all our stories on style, self, culture, and power. Subscribe now to save over 40% on unlimited access to the Cut and everything New York. | For the continuation of "Summer of Smut," we spoke to Julia Whelan about recording hundreds of audiobooks with "all levels of spice." | | | | Read More » | | A new Supreme Court decision allows emergency abortions to continue in Idaho, but the legal battle isn't over. | | | | Read More » | | Three people share how their personal-injury settlements affected their lives. | | | | Read More » | | The most famous person on the internet this week is Hailey Welch a.k.a. the "Hawk Tuah" girl. | | | | Read More » | | Author Yulin Kuang explains how to write the kind of sex scene that gives readers "that pulse-pounding, dry-mouth, flushed feeling." | | | | Read More » | Sign up to get Brooding, a subscriber-only newsletter interrogating modern family life, written by Kathryn Jezer-Morton. | | | |
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