I once believed love revealed itself in darkness, that devotion would kick in when it mattered most. That belief nearly cost me my life.
My name is Rachel Monroe. My husband, Andrew, was supposed to be my anchor. But the night our daughter was born, I learned how hollow attachment could be. At thirty-eight weeks pregnant, my first contraction hit like a tidal wave, stealing my breath and bending me forward. I tried calling Andrew—four rings, the casual background chatter of a restaurant, and then: “You’re probably just uncomfortable. Drink some water.” He was leaving for a weekend trip. I was alone.
By the time I got my hospital bag and myself into the car, my body was a war zone. Three blocks later, another contraction nearly tore me in half. I swerved into an empty parking lot, collapsed over the steering wheel, and tried to breathe like they’d taught us in birthing class. My calls for help went unanswered—my sister, my friend, the hospital triage line—and then my water broke. Alone, scared, trapped in the dark.
And then headlights swept across my windshield. My chest froze, my doors locked, my mind spinning between hope and fear. Whoever was out there didn’t know the storm that had already begun inside me—or that I would fight through it, for myself and for the tiny life I was about to bring into the world. READ MORE BELOW