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Life

31st Mar 2018

Here’s why fake pregnancy jokes on April Fool’s Day aren’t all that funny

Jade Hayden

With April Fool’s Day just around the corner, there are plenty of jokes you’ll expect to see on social media.

One is that somebody has just gotten engaged except they haven’t at all.

Another is that McDonald’s or Subway or some other well-known food chain has run out of food because that’s pretty funny and hilarious and sure to piss a lot of people off.

There’s another April Fool that a lot of people tend to wheel out around this time of year too – that they’re pregnant.

And while this kind of joke may be funny to a few people, there are always the others who are unable to join in on what is supposedly funny due to their own circumstances.

One of those people is Kayla Lee Welch.

The mum shared a post recently detailing why April Fool’s jokes about being pregnant aren’t funny because many women, like her, have suffered miscarriages.

In the post originally shared last year, she wrote:

“This is why your April fools joke isn’t funny.
“This is why it’s not funny to lie and joke about being pregnant.
“This is what it looks like to have a miscarriage.”

Kayla said that a week before, she had started spotting and that she thought it was normal because it had happened with her other child.

But this time it wasn’t normal.

“And all I can do is cry. My eyes are so swollen and dark it looks like more than just my heart is broken.

“Crying so hard that you go numb and feel nothing anymore. Being so angry and upset at everything but not being able to explain why. Trying to be happy that your baby never knew anything other than love.

“And missing someone so dearly that you never even met. It’s a pain no one can describe. Because how can you properly grieve someone you never got to meet?”

“Please think twice before you post that April Fool’s joke,” she wrote. “Because what’s funny for a second in your eyes crushes someone else’s heart for eternity.”

Kayla finished her post by saying that “pregnancy is not a joke.”

The mum was met by much support from others who had the same experience.

“It’s nothing to joke about,” said one person, “and the first time I see someone use it as an April Fool’s joke I’ll snap.”

“I lost a child too I know it’s no joke,” said another.