I met my husband in high school. He was my first love—not fireworks, but steady and certain, like finally finding a place to rest your head. We were seniors, wrapped in the idea that love made us untouchable, talking about the future like it was guaranteed: college, careers, a house, a life laid out perfectly.
It was a week before Christmas when everything cracked open. I was on my bedroom floor wrapping presents when my phone rang. His mother’s voice hit me like a siren—screaming, sobbing, barely forming sentences. I caught fragments: “Accident.” “Truck.” “He can’t feel his legs.”
The hospital was harsh—fluorescent lights, beeping machines, the metallic taste of fear in my mouth. He lay there in the bed, rails and wires, neck brace, eyes wide, trying to look brave and failing. I took his hand. “I’m here,” I told him. “I’m not leaving.”
A doctor pulled us aside. “Spinal cord injury,” he said. “Paralysis from the waist down. We don’t expect recovery.” His mother folded into herself. His father stared at the floor, searching for answers that weren’t there. And in that moment, the life we imagined shattered—forever changed.