Eight Months Pregnant, She Was Thrown Downstairs at a Birthday Party-mdue - Chainityai

Eight Months Pregnant, She Was Thrown Downstairs at a Birthday Party-mdue

At my grandfather’s birthday party, my father threw me down a granite staircase when I was eight months pregnant because I would not give my seat to my sister, who had just had a tummy tuck.

As I lay on the landing, terrified and unable to breathe right, my mother shouted that I was faking it and embarrassing the family.

Minutes later, in the ER, a doctor looked at the ultrasound monitor and said one sentence that made every sound in the room disappear.

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I had been tired before that night.

Not normal tired.

Not long-week tired.

The kind of tired that lives in your bones after five years of hoping, paying, waiting, injecting, grieving, and starting over anyway.

Five years of IVF had turned our marriage into a calendar of appointments and a drawer full of medical supplies.

There was a medication schedule folded on my nightstand, covered in tiny check marks Mark made because he trusted paper when my hands shook too badly.

There was a blue folder in his desk where he kept insurance denial letters, clinic receipts, bloodwork summaries, and every form that tried to make our child look like a billing problem.

There was an ultrasound picture tucked inside my wallet, soft at the edges from being touched too often.

It was not a beautiful photo to anyone else.

It was grainy and strange and hard to read.

To me, it was proof that hope had finally found our address.

I had given myself hormone shots in restaurant bathrooms while other women laughed near the sinks.

I had sat in clinic parking lots with my forehead on the steering wheel, waiting until I could see well enough to drive home.

I had stood at baby showers with a paper plate in my hand while relatives complained about getting pregnant too easily.

I smiled because people get uncomfortable when pain refuses to be polite.

By the time I reached eight months, my back burned every afternoon, my ankles pulsed, and sleep came in small broken pieces.

Still, I was grateful.

Every kick felt like an answered prayer.

Every ache felt like proof.

That was why I almost stayed home from my grandfather’s birthday party.

Mark said we could send flowers and a gift.

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