I Went Into Labor Alone—And My Ex Walked In Wearing Scrubs-yumihong

I drove myself to the hospital in labor because there was nobody else to call.

That sentence sounds stronger than it felt.

In truth, by the time I pulled into the emergency entrance at Mercy General in Columbus, Ohio, I was one more hard contraction away from crying in front of strangers and asking the parking attendant to please, please not make me do this by myself.

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I had prepared for the baby.

I had not prepared for the loneliness.

There’s a difference.

The bag was packed. The car seat was installed.

The tiny gray onesies were washed in fragrance-free detergent and folded with the kind of careful hope people mistake for confidence.

I had frozen casseroles. I had printed out my insurance forms.

I had written emergency contacts on a yellow sticky note I already knew looked pathetic compared to what most women brought with them when they gave birth.

Mine had three names.

My mother, who lived in Phoenix and had spent my entire pregnancy managing to sound both concerned and disappointed at the same time.

My best friend Dana, who was in Seattle for work and frantically trying to book an earlier flight.

And Ryan, the baby’s father, whose number I had finally deleted after learning that shame can become its own form of self-respect if you let it.

He was never going to show up.

By the time the volunteer pushed me upstairs, I was already breathing through contractions and staring at the ceiling like maybe if I focused hard enough on the fluorescent lights, I could keep the panic from spreading.

I was seven centimeters when they settled me into the room.

A nurse named Beverly hooked me up to monitors, adjusted the blood pressure cuff, and asked practical questions in the soft, efficient voice of someone who had seen every variety of human fear.

“Birth partner?” she asked.

I laughed once.

It came out uglier than I intended.

“No partner tonight,” I said.

She nodded without pity, and I loved her for that.

Then she left to get the attending physician.

A contraction started low in my back and rolled forward with a force so brutal it made the room blur.

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