For years, my husband Ethan and I carried the quiet grief of something we could never seem to fix.
I couldn’t have children.
At the beginning, he was gentle about it. Every time another pregnancy test came back negative, he would wrap his arms around me and whisper, “We’ll try again.” He made it sound simple, like hope was just something we had to keep reaching for.But after the fourth failed treatment, something in our lives shifted.
We stopped talking about baby names. The nursery we once spent hours planning quietly turned into a storage room. Boxes replaced the dream we had carefully built together.
Neither of us said it out loud, but the silence between us grew heavier.
Sometimes we’d sit in restaurants and I’d notice Ethan staring at families nearby—parents helping toddlers with their food, babies laughing in high chairs. The moment he caught me watching him, he would look away quickly, pretending he hadn’t been staring.
We both pretended everything was fine.
It wasn’t.