Three weeks after my wife died, I found myself sitting in my car outside the mall, staring at two sleeping newborns and listening to a voice I wasn’t ready to lose.
Ivy and Lily rested peacefully in their stroller while Claire’s old voice message played through my phone speakers.
“Mason, don’t forget the zip-up sleepers,” she said.
In the recording, I laughed. “What’s wrong with the button ones?”
“Try dealing with buttons at three in the morning,” she replied. “You’ll cry before the babies do.”
Then she laughed.Twenty-one days since I watched doctors try and fail to save her.
Twenty-one days since I became both mother and father to two tiny girls.
Everyone kept calling me brave.I didn’t feel brave.
I felt exhausted.
Lost.
Terrified.
But Claire had wanted yellow sleepers, and somehow that mattered.
So I climbed out of the car.The mall felt overwhelming. Everywhere I looked were complete families—mothers carrying toddlers, fathers holding hands, grandparents smiling beside strollers.
I kept my eyes down and pushed forward until I reached the baby store.
The yellow sleepers were exactly where Claire would have expected them to be.
I picked up two sets and smiled sadly.“Mom was right,” I told Lily. “Buttons are evil.”
Then Ivy began crying.
A second later, Lily joined her.
Within moments, both babies were screaming.
I checked Ivy first and immediately saw the problem.“Oh no, sweetheart.”
Her diaper had leaked through everything.
Before I could fix it, Lily’s face turned bright red and she started kicking furiously.
She needed changing too.
I grabbed the diaper bag and headed for the nearest restroom.“We made it through today, Claire.”
The room was quiet.
The girls slept peacefully.
And for the first time since losing my wife, I felt something I hadn’t felt in weeks.
Hope.
Tomorrow would still be hard.
The day after that might be harder.
But as I watched our daughters sleeping beneath the soft yellow fabric she had wanted so badly, I finally believed we were going to be okay.
One day at a time.