I sat in my car outside that recovery center, listening to my husband pour out the fear he’d been too ashamed to name at home. While I had been healing from surgery and blood loss, he’d been haunted by the image of my body on that table, convinced he might lose me at any second. Our daughter’s tiny face had become tangled with his terror, not his joy. It wasn’t rejection. It was survival.
Calling the center the next morning was my first step toward seeing us as two people carrying the same storm in different ways. In those support groups, I finally understood that trauma after birth doesn’t always look like screaming or panic; sometimes it’s the quiet withdrawal of someone who loves you deeply and is terrified of losing more. Now, when Ryan holds Lily, there’s softness instead of flinching. We still have hard days, but there’s language for our pain and space for both of our scars. We’re not the couple we were before that night in the hospital—but in learning how to heal together, we’re slowly becoming something stronger, more honest, and more tender than we ever imagined.