By the time I reached my eighth month of pregnancy, my life had narrowed to a series of careful calculations. Standing up required strategy. Sitting down took intention. Even turning over in bed felt like maneuvering a ship in tight waters. My body no longer belonged entirely to me—it stretched, ached, and shifted daily—yet it carried something extraordinary. I was growing a life. That truth filled me with quiet pride, even as exhaustion settled into my bones.
That evening was supposed to be ordinary. My husband and I had stopped by the local market for groceries. Nothing dramatic. Just a routine errand. But by the time we returned home, my lower back throbbed and my ankles were swollen. The weight of the day pressed against my spine.
So I asked him, gently, if he could carry the grocery bags inside.
It wasn’t a complaint. It wasn’t a demand. Just a simple request from a woman eight months pregnant.
Before he could answer, my mother-in-law spoke.
Her voice cut through the driveway like a blade. “The world does not revolve around your belly,” she said sharply. “Pregnancy is not an illness.”
For a moment, I thought I’d misheard her. The words felt so abrupt, so unkind, that they seemed unreal.
I waited for my husband to respond. To say something. Anything. To acknowledge that what she had said was unnecessary. Cruel, even.