If I have children, thereโs a one-in-two chance that I will pass on the defective gene to them. That doesnโt mean theyโll look like August, but theyโll carry the gene that got double-dosed in August and helped make him the way he is. If I marry someone who has the same defective gene, thereโs a one-in-two chance that our kids will carry the gene and look totally normal, a one-in-four chance that our kids will not carry the gene at all, and a one-in-four chance that our kids will look like August.
If August has children with someone who doesnโt have a trace of the gene, thereโs a 100 percent probability that their kids will inherit the gene, but a zero percent chance that their kids will have a double dose of it, like August. Which means theyโll carry the gene no matter what, but they could look totally normal. If he marries someone who has the gene, their kids will have the same odds as my kids.
This only explains the part of August thatโs explainable. Thereโs that other part of his genetic makeup thatโs not inherited but just incredibly bad luck.
Countless doctors have drawn little tic-tac-toe grids for my parents over the years to try to explain the genetic lottery to them. Geneticists use these Punnett squares to determine inheritance, recessive and dominant genes, probabilities and chance. But for all they know, thereโs more they donโt know. They can try to forecast the odds, but they canโt guarantee them. They use terms like โgermline mosaicism,โ โchromosome rearrangement,โ or โdelayed mutationโ to explain why their science is not an exact science. I actually like how doctors talk. I like the sound of science. I like how words you donโt understand explain things you canโt understand. There are countless people under words like โgermline mosaicism,โ โchromosome rearrangement,โ or โdelayed mutation.โ Countless babies whoโll never be born, like mine.