Then, almost overnight, something changed.
One evening the baby became unusually restless. At first it seemed minor — a little whining, extra discomfort, perhaps gas or fatigue. But the crying intensified steadily until it became continuous and panicked. His face flushed deeply red. His body stiffened with tension. Breathing became strained between desperate screams.
The parents tried everything they knew.They fed him repeatedly, changed diapers, rocked him for hours, paced the apartment through the night, and searched desperately for some position or movement that might bring relief. Nothing worked. The cries carried a kind of distress that instinctively told them something was wrong, even though they could not identify what.
Exhaustion eventually pushed them toward emergency medical care.
At the clinic, staff performed a routine examination, checked vital signs, and concluded the infant was likely suffering from colic — a common but frustrating condition many babies experience. The parents were advised to try soothing techniques, massages, and supportive care at home.
From the perspective of the medical team, the assessment probably seemed reasonable. Common conditions appear commonly. Hospitals see exhausted new parents fearful over symptoms that often resolve harmlessly.
Yet medicine, like parenting itself, sometimes depends on noticing what does not fit neatly into expectation.
Over the next two days, the family barely slept. The crying persisted relentlessly despite every recommendation they followed. Fatigue began clouding their thinking. Anxiety deepened quietly because one of the hardest parts of caring for an infant is that babies cannot explain pain. Parents must interpret distress through fragments: movement, tone, breathing, temperature, expression.
On the third night, while his wife finally tried to rest, the father continued pacing the apartment alone carrying their son.
Then he noticed something subtle.
The baby moved one leg freely while holding the other strangely stiff and bent. It was not dramatic enough to stand out immediately, but unusual enough that instinct told him to look closer.
He unbuttoned the baby’s clothing carefully and removed the socks.