After my wife and I lost our baby, our marriage began to fall apart under the weight of grief. Every conversation seemed to end in another painful argument, and the distance between us grew larger each day. I started staying late at work, not because I had to, but because going home felt harder than facing another lonely evening at the office.
During that difficult time, I became close to a coworker named Ann. She was one of the few people who noticed how much I was struggling and took the time to check on me. One day during lunch, she briefly took my hand, and for a moment I feared the situation was heading somewhere it shouldn’t. Instead, she shared a story about her brother and his wife, who had gone through a similar loss and nearly divorced because of it.
Ann told me that therapy had helped them rebuild their relationship, then wrote down the name of the therapist they had seen. That simple act of kindness gave me something I hadn’t felt in a long time—hope. I took the number home and left it on the kitchen counter, never expecting my wife to agree to go. To my surprise, she did.
Therapy didn’t erase our pain overnight, but it helped us understand that we were grieving alongside each other, not against each other. Over time, we learned how to communicate, heal, and reconnect. Today, our marriage is stronger than it has been in years, and we’re expecting another baby. Looking back, I still can’t believe that one compassionate coworker cared enough to gently step in and help put us on the path that ultimately saved our marriage.