She Pushed Me Away After The Baby Was Born—But Then She Begged Me Not To Leave Again

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After my daughter-in-law gave birth, I didn’t leave her side. I thought I was being supportive, but one day, she blew up. “Stop getting in my way!

I know what to do!” she yelled. Her words stung, but I respected her wishes and left for home. An hour later, my phone rang.

My son’s voice was shaky. Frantic. “Mom, it’s an emergency!

The baby—”

I didn’t even let him finish. I grabbed my purse, keys, and was out the door before the call ended. My heart was hammering against my ribs.

I didn’t know what was wrong, just that it was urgent. That kind of panic in your child’s voice? You never forget it.

The hospital was only fifteen minutes away, but it felt like hours. Every red light was a personal attack. When I finally parked and rushed into the emergency wing, I found my son, Mateo, pacing the hallway, face pale and eyes red.

“She couldn’t get him to latch properly. He hasn’t been eating. He was just… limp.

We brought him in. They’re running tests now.”

My knees buckled slightly, but I steadied myself against the wall. “Where’s Soraya?”

“In the room.

Crying. She blames herself.”

I didn’t say a word. Just nodded and walked in.

Soraya looked up, startled to see me. Her cheeks were soaked, and she was holding her arms tightly across her chest like she was trying to hold herself together. “I didn’t mean what I said,” she whispered.

“I was just… tired. And scared. I wanted to prove I could do it.”

I sat next to her, gently placed my hand over hers.

“You don’t have to prove anything. You just had a baby. It’s okay to need help.”

She broke down again, and this time, I held her.

No judgment, no told-you-so. Just a tired new mother, and a woman who once had been one too. We stayed at the hospital for two days.

Baby Elias was slightly dehydrated, nothing life-threatening, but serious enough to scare all of us. They helped Soraya learn how to use a nipple shield and eventually introduced some formula supplementation. By the time we went home, she was calmer.

A little more confident. I didn’t move back in, but I visited daily. Kept my mouth shut unless asked.

Just helped. Cooked. Did laundry.

Changed diapers. Gave them a chance to sleep. Three weeks passed.

Then one day, Soraya sat down across from me at the kitchen table, hands wrapped around a mug of cold tea. “Can I ask you something?” she said, not meeting my eyes. “Of course.”

“Why didn’t your daughter ever have kids?”

It caught me off guard.

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