They Dumped a New Mom for a Streamer—Then Her Post Exploded

They Dumped a New Mom for a Streamer—Then Her Post Exploded

Two days after my C-section, I was still bleeding when my father stood at the foot of my hospital bed and told me I needed to leave.

He did not say it angrily. That was the part that made it feel even worse. He said it in the same tone he used when discussing utility bills or car maintenance, like this was a practical adjustment everybody sensible would accept.

My son, Bruno, was asleep in the clear plastic bassinet beside me. He was so new that I still could not believe he was real. His fingers were curled into tiny commas. His mouth twitched in his sleep. Every time I looked at him, something inside me softened and broke at the same time.

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I was exhausted, stitched, swollen, and still dizzy from everything my body had just survived. My abdomen felt like it had been cut open because, of course, it had. Sitting up required planning. Standing up felt like being split in two. And my father looked right past all of that and said, with complete certainty, that I had to figure out somewhere else to stay.

I asked him what he meant because I truly believed I must have misunderstood him.

He crossed his arms and finally explained.

Sergio needed my room.

That was the reason.

My little brother, twenty-three years old, self-important, permanently wired to a headset and a screen, had decided his streaming channel was about to become a real career. He needed a larger room, better acoustics, more privacy, cleaner background shots, room for lights, room for a gaming desk, room for the version of himself he wanted strangers online to believe in.

Apparently the room I had used since high school, the room I had returned to late in my pregnancy after Bruno’s father disappeared and my rent became impossible, was now the most valuable asset in the house.

My father said the channel was growing. My father said sponsors were watching. My father said opportunities like this did not come often.

Then he gestured vaguely toward me and the bassinet and added that my situation would be figured out.

My situation.

That was me. Me and my two-day-old son. A situation.

I told him I could not carry boxes. I could barely walk to the bathroom. The doctor had been explicit about rest, recovery, and avoiding stairs. He shrugged in that hard little way he had when somebody else’s pain inconvenienced him.

Doctors exaggerate, he said.

Then he looked at me like I was failing a character test and told me motherhood meant I had to toughen up.

My mother arrived later that afternoon with a gym bag and the same expression she wore when a cashier was taking too long. She kissed the air near my cheek, glanced at Bruno for less than a second, and told me they had already packed my important items.

My important items.

When I asked if they had emptied my room while I was still in the hospital, she sighed so heavily you would have thought I was the cruel one.

Do not start, she said. Do not make this a drama. A C-section is just surgery. Women do this every day.

She said it with that special brand of maternal contempt that manages to sound both dismissive and righteous. Then she added the line that had followed me through most of my life whenever I objected to anything unfair: stop acting like a victim.

I had heard that sentence when I was fourteen and upset that Sergio had sold my bike to buy a newer console. I had heard it when I was seventeen and furious that my parents used my college savings to cover one of my father’s bad loans. I heard it when I moved home pregnant and they treated my return like a moral embarrassment instead of a crisis.

Stop acting like a victim.

It was their favorite spell. They said it every time they wanted pain to become silence.

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