After giving birth to triplets, my husband called me a “scarecrow” and started an affair with his assistant. He thought I was too broken to fight back. He was wrong.
What I did next made him pay a price he never saw coming and rebuilt me into someone he’d never recognize.
I used to believe I’d found my forever person. The kind of man who made everything seem possible, lit up every room he walked into, and promised me the world. Ethan was all of that and more.
For eight years, we built a life together. For five of those years, we were married. And for what felt like an eternity, we fought against infertility, month after disappointing month, until finally, I got pregnant…
with triplets.
Three babies on that ultrasound screen felt like a miracle. The doctor’s face when she told us was a mix of congratulations and concern, and I understood why the moment my body started changing. This wasn’t just pregnancy.
This was survival mode from day one.
My ankles swelled to the size of grapefruits. I couldn’t keep food down for weeks. By month five, I was on strict bed rest, watching my body transform into something I didn’t recognize.
My skin stretched beyond what I thought possible. My reflection became a stranger’s face — puffy, exhausted, and barely holding on. But every kick, every flutter, and every uncomfortable night reminded me why I was doing this.
When Noah, Grace, and Lily finally arrived, tiny and perfect and screaming, I held them and thought, “This is it. This is what love feels like.”
Ethan was thrilled at first. He posted pictures online, accepted congratulations at work, and basked in the glory of being a new father of triplets.
Everyone praised him for being a rock and such a supportive husband. Meanwhile, I lay in that hospital bed, stitched up and swollen, feeling like I’d been hit by a truck and put back together wrong.
“You did amazing, babe,” he’d said, squeezing my hand. “You’re incredible.”
I believed him.
God, I believed every word.
Three weeks after coming home, I was drowning. That’s the only word for it. Drowning in diapers, bottles, and crying that never seemed to stop.
My body was still healing, sore, and bleeding.
I wore the same two pairs of loose sweatpants because nothing else fit. My hair lived in a perpetual messy bun because washing it required time I didn’t have.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
