The first thing I saw when I opened my eyes was a white ceiling and a blurry row of fluorescent lights. The second thing I saw was my husband, Ryan, standing at the foot of my ICU bed, holding a clipboard instead of my hand.
“Emma,” he said, his voice flat. “You’re awake. Good. We need to take care of something.”
My throat burned. There was a ventilator tube, bandages on my chest, a brace around my neck. I tried to move my legs and felt nothing but a heavy emptiness. Panic rushed in.
“W-what happened?” I whispered.
“You were hit by a drunk driver,” he said, like he was explaining a parking ticket. “Spinal cord injury. The doctors say… you might not walk again.”
My heart dropped. I searched his face for comfort, for any sign of the man who used to bring me coffee in bed and kiss my forehead. But his eyes were cold, almost bored.
He pulled a stack of papers from a manila envelope. “Anyway. These are divorce papers.”
I stared at him, thinking the pain medication was making me hallucinate. “Divorce? Here?”
“I’m thirty-four, Emma,” he said sharply. “I want a life. I want a perfect wife, not a burden in a wheelchair. Sign it.”
The words cut deeper than any surgery. The monitors next to me beeped wildly. A nurse looked in, then stepped back when Ryan gave her a tight smile.
“You’re serious,” I managed.
He rolled his eyes. “You knew I didn’t want this kind of life. I can’t do diaper changes and push a wheelchair and listen to you cry every night. I’ve already filled everything out. You just sign.”
Share your thoughts, your own stories, or your advice in the comments. And if you know someone who’s ever been treated like a “burden,” pass this story along to remind them: they are worth far more than someone else’s idea of “perfect.”