Twenty years ago, I lost my baby and my husband in one devastating December. The only thing that held me together was buying toys for a little girl at a grocery store.The girl knocked on my door, now grown, with tears in her eyes and a secret that would change everything.
It’s been two decades, and I still remember the way silence rang through my house that December. No baby cries. No lullabies. Just the ticking of a kitchen clock that didn’t care that my world had shattered.
I was five months pregnant when I lost my baby.
No warnings. No final kicks.
I was five Just a hospital room filled with cold fluorescent lights and a doctor’s voice trying to be kind. And then, nothing but a crib that stayed empty.
I would stand in the nursery at night, holding tiny onesies that would never be worn.
I’d arranged stuffed animals on the rocking chair the week before. I left them there untouched for months. The yellow walls we’d painted together mocked me every time I walked past.A week later, my husband packed a suitcase. I thought maybe he needed air, maybe he’d stay with his brother.
Instead, he looked at the floor and said, “I need a family. And I don’t see one here anymore.”The doctors had told me the damage was too severe.
That I wouldn’t be able to carry another pregnancy. That my body had betrayed me in ways I couldn’t fix.