Grandma Walked Into The NICU After Midnight. A Child Saw Why-Tep

My newborn baby was on a respirator, fighting for her life, and my mother still thought a gender reveal deserved my hands more than my child did.

That is the part people always want me to explain gently.

There is no gentle way to say it.

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Rosalie was three days old when it happened, if you count from the emergency C-section and not from the moment my heart started living outside my body.

She was six weeks early.

Four pounds, two ounces.

The first time I saw her, she was inside a clear incubator under a white hospital light, with tubes on her face and wires taped to skin that looked too delicate for the world.

The NICU smelled like sanitizer, warm plastic, and stale coffee.

It sounded like breath that did not belong to a person.

Hiss.

Beep.

Pause.

Hiss again.

I learned quickly that you can be surrounded by nurses, doctors, monitors, and charts and still feel completely alone.

Kevin tried not to look scared around me.

He kept bringing me paper cups of coffee I could barely drink and little sandwiches from the cafeteria I could not taste.

He kept saying, “She’s fighting.”

I kept nodding because if I opened my mouth too much, I was afraid something in me would fall out.

Brooklyn, my six-year-old, stayed close to the incubator whenever the nurses let her.

She would stand on the little step stool with both hands tucked under her chin and watch Rosalie through the clear plastic like she was memorizing every breath.

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