З життя
How to Spread Your Legs with Ease, Yet Shirk Responsibility Like a Child

“If you can spread your legs, you can take responsibilityor else youre better off giving the child up.”
Emma and her husband had longed for their first child. For nine months, he doted on her, walking her to and from university, especially forbidding her to go out during icy weather. But just before the birth, he was sent away on business. He could have refusedhed planned to quit his job once the baby arrived, tired of being away from home while Emma raised their child alone.
The contractions started the moment James left. The pain was unbearable, and worse, he wasnt there. This wasnt how shed imagined welcoming their firstborn.
Though the baby was healthy, Emma couldnt bring herself to tell James. Let him hear it from strangers, she thought bitterly.
She glanced around the ward. Across from her lay a woman in her forties. Nearby, a younger girl chatted on her phone, while by the door, another woman wept silently, facing the wall.
Exhausted, Emma sank into the sterile hospital pillow and fell into a deep sleep, as if the world outside had vanished.
“Will you be breastfeeding?” a nurses voice cut through her drowsiness. Emma turned eagerlybut the nurse stood by the weeping woman instead.
“Why stay silent? At least hold her. Look how beautiful she is,” the nurse urged. The woman didnt move.
“If you can spread your legs, you can take responsibilityor else youre better off giving the child up.” With that, the nurse left.
The older woman, Margaret, spoke first, her voice sharp with emotion: “You think I wanted this? Im forty-three! My sons marriedIll soon be a grandmother. And now this But whats done is done. The childs innocent. If you didnt want her, why wait till now? Condemn her to foster homes? Have you thought how shell feel, betrayed the moment shes born?”
Sophie sobbed harder, no longer hiding her tears.
“Crying wont help,” Margaret snapped. “Take your baby, feed her, and stop being a fool.”
“Maybe she was assaulted?” piped up Lily, finally setting aside her phone. “Or the fathers someone closea stepdad, perhaps?”
Emmas heart ached as if Sophies pain were her own. Here she was, loved by her husband and parents, yet prone to petty grievanceswhile this woman and her newborn were utterly alone.
That child would grow up hardened. Maybe her parents were drunkards. Maybe the man whod promised to marry Sophie had abandoned them. No balloons to celebrate her birth, no flowers for her mother. Nowhere to go, and with a baby in tow.
Shame and pity stirred Emma. “If you had somewhere to go would you keep her?”
Sophie stared as if shed gone mad. “Of coursebut thatll never happen.” She turned back to the wall, silent.
Hours later, Emma announced, “Youll stay in my mums dormitory. Shes the warden. Youll clean floors, and theyll give you a room.”
“Oh!” Lily chimed in. “Ive a spare going-home outfit. Let me call my husbandweve two, no need for both.”
“Ill bring clothes,” Margaret said. “My daughters old thingswashed and pressed. Theyre good as new. My son wont need them; his kids get everything fresh.”
By the next day, women from other wards came offering prams, cribs, blankets.
“Ive nothing to give,” admitted a young mother, “but Ill buy formula. In case your milk runs short.”
Sophie wept openly nownot from despair, but overwhelmed by kindness. “Ill pay you back,” she muttered. The others patted her shoulder: “Just help someone else when you can.”
That night, drifting off, Emma smiled. Sophie would be alright. Shed find her way. And her daughter? Shed have her mother. What more did a child need?
*Sometimes, the kindness of strangers is enough to turn despair into hopeand remind us that no one is truly alone.*
