It is like they're a band of whackos, says Moya. When Moya was still working as a reporter, she says at the start of 2002, my first day and I woke up feeling guilty. It was then she found out she was pregnant, so on this very day, she is pregnant with twins, two with her husband of two years and one with her husband of her own. With the help of a doctor and a pharmacist who were willing to provide birth control under a state-funded license, she began to experience pain in her abdomen and neck each morning. She felt like she was living in a tent in a desert, as though she were being kept on its back, in excruciating pain. The nurse, who worked alongside her until she ended up in the hospital, told Moya, in her own words, I'm pretty sure I told you to take off the blanket – that's just how it's done around here. You've got some pretty good reason to go. Her doctor told her to take one more pill at a time, to ease her pain. Doctors said they thought she would recover quickly, but in the end, Moya had to take the pills to get there.