Eight Months Pregnant, I Was Thrown Downstairs For Refusing My Seat-heuh

At my grandpa’s birthday, my father threw my 8-month pregnant body down a flight of granite stairs because I didn’t give my seat to my sister who had a cosmetic tummy-tuck. As I lay in a pool of my bl00d, my mother screamed, “Stop faking it! You’re embarrassing us!” Minutes later in the ER, when the doctor stared at the monitor, he whispered one sentence that shattered my world into pieces…

By the time I arrived at my grandfather’s birthday celebration, my body felt as though it had been borrowed from someone much older and then handed back to me without instructions.

I was eight months pregnant, heavy in the hips, sore in the spine, and permanently aware of the small life moving beneath my ribs.

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Every step mattered.

Every chair looked like mercy.

I had spent five years trying to become a mother.

Not five casual years of hoping and waiting, but five years of appointments, injections, blood tests, bruises, phone calls, disappointment, and the kind of silence that sits between husband and wife when both are trying not to cry at the same time.

Patrick had held my hand through every IVF round.

He had learnt the names of medications he could barely pronounce.

He had sat beside me in waiting rooms where nobody looked at anyone for too long because everyone there understood the same private grief.

So when I finally became pregnant, I treated the baby like a miracle I was terrified to startle.

I counted movements.

I saved appointment cards.

I folded tiny clothes and then unfolded them again, half joyful, half afraid.

That evening, I had not wanted to go.

My back had been bad all day, and the rain had left the pavements slick and grey.

Still, it was my grandfather’s birthday, and in my family, not attending something important was treated as a declaration of war.

My mother, Beatrice, had already made it clear that excuses would not be accepted.

She had a way of saying, “Of course, do what you think is best,” that meant exactly the opposite.

So I dressed carefully, chose flat shoes, and let Patrick drive us there.

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