The Baby Shower Touch That Made An Obstetrician Go Pale-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Baby Shower Touch That Made An Obstetrician Go Pale-nhu9999

The baby shower was supposed to be simple.

Not perfect.

Not fancy.

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Just one quiet Saturday in my mother’s backyard where everyone could pretend our family knew how to gather without turning something into a crisis.

By 12:40 p.m., the folding tables were already crowded with gift bags, yellow napkins, tiny onesies, and a three-tier cake that looked beautiful for about twenty minutes before the June heat started softening the frosting.

The backyard smelled like buttercream, cut grass, sunscreen, and the faint metallic tang of lawn chairs left too long in the sun.

My mother had tied pale yellow balloons to nearly everything that would hold still.

There was a small American flag hanging from the porch because she had put it there for Memorial Day and then forgotten to take it down.

That little flag kept flicking in the warm breeze while my younger sister Lauren sat near the gift table, thirty-two weeks pregnant and smiling like she was trying to make everybody else comfortable.

That was Lauren.

She could be dramatic about plenty of things, but pain was not one of them.

If she stubbed a toe, she yelled.

If she was truly scared, she got polite.

I should have noticed sooner.

Her husband Brent hovered behind her with a paper cup and a phone, asking whether she needed water, shade, a chair, a fan, or one of those little battery-powered misting bottles my mother bought at the dollar store.

My mother called him sweet.

I watched his face and thought he looked terrified.

Maybe new fathers always look like that.

Maybe everyone sees fear only after they have a reason to name it.

My husband Daniel was with me.

Daniel is an obstetrician, and in my family that means people start asking medical questions before he has even put his keys down.

My aunt wanted to know whether spicy food really started labor.

My mother wanted to know whether thirty-two weeks was “basically full term.”

Daniel answered with the calm patience he uses in hospital rooms at hours when nobody has slept and everybody is afraid.

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