Not long after that, at a postnatal checkup, a kind nutritionist named Dr. Lewis gently took me under her wing.
“Melissa,” she said. “Have you ever thought about working with someone to rebalance your hormones?”
“No,” I said, shaking my head. “I guess I didn’t know I had the option.”
“No pressure,” she said. “But you’ve given so much of your body to others. Maybe it’s time to come back to it.”
“Maybe it is,” I said, feeling something in me soften.
With her help, I began again. It started with slow walks, quiet meals, and clothes that fit instead of hiding. I was instructed not to use a scale. And soon, I started returning to myself.
Then came the call from Victoria — Hazel’s mother.
“You gave me a baby,” she said. “Melissa, let me take care of you, please. It’s not monetary, of course, but let me help. Please.”
Victoria owned a chain of high-end salons and insisted that I come in for a full day — hair, skincare treatments, new clothes, and nails.
“You don’t have to do that,” I said, trying to refuse. “You just enjoy your life with your gorgeous baby girl.”
“I want to,” she said firmly. “You deserve it.”
A week later, standing in that salon, watching the stylist work, I barely recognized the woman staring back at me.
But I liked her. She looked strong. Not just surviving, but rising.
That new confidence began to touch everything in my life.
At first, I started posting on social media as a kind of personal journal, just small updates about recovery, motherhood, body image, and what it really felt like to reclaim your body after giving it away so many times.
I thought maybe a few women would read it. But then people started commenting. They shared the posts. They tagged friends.
I wasn’t writing from a place of bitterness. I was writing from truth. I didn’t sugarcoat anything. I talked about surrogacy. And about love that disguises itself as control.
I wrote about what it feels like to give every part of yourself to someone who turns around and says it still wasn’t enough.
Eventually, what I called my “Fit Mom Diary” became a small but powerful community. Podcasts invited me to speak with them; a few wellness brands even reached out to me. I started a support group for mothers who’d been emotionally or financially exploited in the name of family.
And for the first time, I wasn’t Ethan’s wife, Marlene’s daughter-in-law, or Jacob’s mom.
I was Melissa, whole, unapologetic, and unbroken.
Jacob and I live in a bright new apartment now. My support group grows every week. And every time I tell my story, I tell the truth. I don’t regret any of it — I gave two families babies that they desperately wanted.
And because of that, I’ve been able to rebuild. And now, I’m rising.