Six weeks after my emergency C-section, my husband ignored my doctor’s orders and forced me to run every morning while he crawled behind me in his BMW, honking whenever I slowed down. I thought no one knew—until one Friday, his mother stepped into the road and changed everything.
Six weeks after my emergency C-section, my life became a nightmare.
My stitches throbbed every time I bent to lift our son.
The bathroom mirror showed me a woman I barely recognized.
I told myself that was okay.
I had just made a person.
My husband was less understanding.
My life became a nightmare.
The OB had been very specific at my follow-up that morning.
“No lifting heavier than the baby. No strenuous exercise for at least eight weeks. Your incision needs time to heal.”
“I understand,” I said.
Ryan sat beside me, nodding along.
“We hear you, Doc,” he said, flashing a smile. “Don’t worry, I’ll take good care of her.”
That smile disappeared before we even made it home.
“No strenuous exercise.”
“She’s being overly cautious,” he muttered in the car on the way home. “What you need now is to get back into shape.”
“Ryan, she said eight weeks—”
“You’ve already gained enough weight, honey. The sooner you lose it, the sooner you’ll look like yourself again.”
I laughed, because I thought it was a joke.
Ryan wouldn’t really go against the doctor’s advice, would he?
“What you need now is to get back into shape.”
He didn’t laugh back.
“I bet you don’t want our friends’ wives discussing your chubby body at the barbecue next month,” he said. “Come on, you look like you’re still pregnant.”
I stared at the side of his face.
The man I married was somewhere underneath that profile.
I waited for that man to surface, but he never did.
Instead, I met a side of Ryan I’d never seen before.
“Come on, you look like you’re still pregnant.”
Ryan came into the bedroom that night with two pairs of sneakers in his hand.
He set mine on the floor beside the bed like a verdict.
“Five thirty,” he said. “Be ready. We’re going running.”
“Ryan, the doctor literally said—”
“The doctor doesn’t have to look at you across the dinner table.”
He climbed under the covers and turned his back to me.
“Be ready. We’re going running.”
Just like that.
As if he had not driven a knife clean through the center of my chest.
***
At five thirty, the alarm blared.
Ryan handed me the baby for a quick feeding, then took him back the second he was full.
“Get dressed. Five minutes,” he said. “I’ll wake Lily to babysit.”
And that was when it hit me that he fully expected me to go running, and wasn’t going to take no for an answer.
“Get dressed. Five minutes,”
When I entered the hall, he was waiting at the front door with the car keys.
“Go.” He pointed at the door.
“Aren’t you running, too?”
“I’m not the one who needs to lose weight. I’ll be following you in the car.”
I stepped out onto the porch.
I thought that once Ryan saw me struggling, he’d come to his senses.
I was wrong.
“I’ll be following you in the car.”
Every instinct screamed that I should be back inside, curled around my newborn.
I took one tentative step, then another.
Pain shot through my belly so sharply that I sucked in a breath.
Behind me, Ryan started the BMW.
The engine settled into a low purr as he pulled to the curb behind me.
The horn blared.
Pain shot through my belly
“Keep moving,” Ryan yelled out the window.
I stumbled into a slow jog.
Tears sprang to my eyes as pain carved across my belly.
When I reached the corner, I stopped.
I turned around.
“What are you doing?” Ryan called from the car.
“Keep moving,”
“I’m done,” I said, my voice trembling from the pain.
“You’ve just started! Keep going.”
I stared at him, sitting in his car.
It was bad enough that he was forcing me to go against my doctor’s orders.
But how far was he going to take this?
“Ryan, I can’t—”
How far was he going to take this?
“You can and you will!” He slammed his hand against the steering wheel.
His face was red, and his lips were pulled back into something almost like a snarl.
For the first time in my life, my husband scared me.
So, I kept running.
And I kept crying.
***
That night, my teen daughter, Lily, padded into the nursery in her oversized hoodie.
For the first time in my life, my husband scared me.
Her phone was glued to her hand like always.
“Mom,” she whispered, tracing a finger over the baby’s tiny foot. “You okay?”
“I’m fine, sweetheart. Just tired.”
She clenched her jaw. “You shouldn’t be running like that.”
I didn’t know how to answer her, so I said nothing.
“You should tell Grandma Diane what he did,” she continued.
“You shouldn’t be running like that.”
I blinked at her, surprised.
Ryan’s mother was a steely but silent woman.
She’d listen if I told her what her son was doing, but she was more likely to judge him silently than confront him.
At least, that’s what I thought.
“Why would I need to tell Grandma anything?” I asked.
Lily shrugged. “She’s his mom… maybe he’ll listen to her if she tells him to stop.”
Ryan’s mother was a steely but silent woman.
I tucked a strand of hair behind her ear and tried to smile.
“Go to bed, baby. I love you. And try not to worry. Everything’s going to be okay.”
She lingered in the doorway a second longer than usual.
I could tell she didn’t believe me.
I wasn’t sure that I believed me.
Then she was gone.
She didn’t believe me.
The first morning set the pattern, and every morning afterward carved it deeper into my bones.
Ryan would shake me awake at 5:30 sharp.
“Sneakers. Now.”
I learned not to argue.
Arguing meant a longer lecture, and a longer lecture meant less time to nurse before he pulled the baby out of my arms and pushed him toward Lily’s sleepy hands.
I learned not to argue.
I was already learning to shrink into smaller and smaller corners of my own life.
“Mom, you’re bleeding through your shirt,” Lily said one morning, her eyes wide as she took her baby brother.
“It’s fine, sweetheart. Go back to bed after his bottle.”
“Stop coddling her,” Ryan snapped from the doorway. “She’s a teenager. It’s time she learned to toughen up.”
He jangled his keys.
“Mom, you’re bleeding.”
Mrs. Alvarez from across the street was taking her trash out when I stepped outside.
She smiled at me at first.
Then she noticed Ryan climbing into the BMW behind me.
She frowned when I started my limping jog.
“No manches,” she exclaimed.
I lowered my eyes before she could ask if I was okay.
“No manches,”
Ryan rolled the SUV behind me, hazards blinking, engine purring at a slow crawl that matched my limping pace.
When I slowed, the horn cut through the quiet street.
When I stopped, the window slid down.
“Did I tell you to stop?”
When we got back home, I saw the curtain twitch in Mrs. Alvarez’s front window.
The horn cut through the quiet street.
The next morning Ryan made me run an extra block.