My husband was in the hospital with a broken leg, and in the room next door there was an elderly woman with the same injury. I felt sorry for her and began bringing her food three times a day
Before her discharge, the old woman suddenly grabbed my hand and whispered something in my ear that left me truly shocked
The call from the hospital came on a completely ordinary Thursday and turned everything upside down in just a few seconds. They told me that my husband had been in an accident and was urgently taken to the trauma ward. I dropped everything, grabbed my jacket, and went, not even remembering how I got there.
As I was on my way, my heart was pounding so hard it felt like everyone around could hear it. Only one thought was spinning in my head — that he was alive, that the life we had built over five years wouldn’t collapse.
In the room, I saw my husband lying on the bed. His leg was in a cast, and there was a bruise under his eye. He was alive, but irritated. He immediately started demanding water and food, complaining about the pain, without even looking at me with gratitude. I kept telling myself it was because of the shock and pain, that he was just feeling unwell.
When I stepped out into the corridor to get some water, my eyes accidentally fell on an elderly woman sitting on a bench by the wall. She sat quietly, her head lowered, with the same leg bandaged. No one came to visit her. She was completely alone.
I learned that her son worked far away and couldn’t come. That same day, I bought her some broth and a boiled egg and brought them to her room.
The old woman looked at me as if I hadn’t brought her food, but something much greater. She quietly thanked me and called me her daughter.
From that day on, I began visiting her three times a day. In the morning I brought breakfast, at lunchtime lunch, and in the evening dinner. I helped her get to the bathroom, supported her when she got out of bed. Sometimes I just sat beside her and listened as she remembered her life.
My husband grew more and more angry. He said I was wasting my time on a stranger and that I should be only with him. Every reproach hurt me deeper and deeper, but I kept going to see the old woman. With her, I felt calm. She thanked me for every small thing and looked at me as if I were her only support.
The days passed all the same. My husband demanded and grew irritated. The old woman thanked me and smiled quietly.
Then her son came to the hospital. On the day of her discharge, the old woman took my hand. Her fingers were cold, but they squeezed my palm with unexpected strength. She leaned closer and whispered something that sent chills down my spine and made my hair stand on end… Continued in the first comment
She said that all this time she had been watching us. She saw how I ran between rooms, how I tried and cared for my husband, forgetting myself.
And she saw how, in my absence, my husband flirted with young nurses, joked with them, and smiled. And how, when I appeared, he immediately became angry and rude, as if my care irritated him.
She said that someone who loves does not allow the other to be strong alone. And that if a man takes care for granted while humiliating, over time he destroys the life of the one who is beside him.
Vasilina squeezed my hand and quietly advised me to leave. She said I was too good to live a life of constant guilt and exhaustion. And that sometimes a stranger sees the truth more clearly than the one who stands next to you every day.
When I left the room, I realized that day two people were discharged from the hospital. Only one left with a cast — and the other with eyes finally open.


