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Lost within a choice

Running on empty: An emotional puzzle.

By Lamar WigginsPublished 6 months ago Updated 6 months ago 6 min read
Top Story - July 2025
Lost within a choice
Photo by Ömürden Cengiz on Unsplash

The imaginary hole grew larger every day. Expanding outward and downward, as if an invisible worker used an invisible shovel to slowly remove layers of dirt from the walls inside...

I had planted myself in the center like a seed, hoping answers would grow and that growth would lead to understanding... or for someone to simply tell me why I belonged there.

I did belong there.

Like any person under arrest without knowledge of the charges against them, I sat waiting to be formally notified of something...

Being in that mental trench was the only way to deal with the familiar pain of loss. But as strong as that feeling cycled through layers of emotion, I hadn't lost anyone lately. Yet, it visited me several times a week, shackling my attention to an unknown source.

Our family physician, Dane Russo, strongly felt I was going through a bout of postpartum depression. But this feeling, this new, dreadful sensation, didn't begin until my newborn was almost eight months old. I was stuck wondering why the condition would wait that long to settle in.

Brittany wasn't my first child. Even after previously bringing two sons into this world, I never once experienced depression; happiness was my general way of life.

After a dozen minutes of skimming through a list of symptoms and causes, I crossed the assumption off. I wasn't depressed. But something was amiss, returning me to that place too often, wondering what landed me there every time...

***

In the middle of putting the final touches on a painting yet to be named, I received a call from Dane. His voice was distant, informal, making me feel like I was only a client of his and had not grown into a friend. He asked how soon I could visit his office. Whatever the issue or concern was, he shied away from discussing it over the phone. Mystified, I drove the ten miles to see him two days later...

"Ella, so glad you could make it. Please have a seat. Coffee? Water? Soda?"

"Oh, no thank you. I'm fine."

I really wasn't fine, being caught between several daydreams involving scenarios of why I was there to begin with; my place of mystery followed closely behind.

"How's Brittany doing? I bet she's keeping you busy."

"She's good... And you're absolutely correct. She's busy all the time. She still can't say her name correctly and calls herself, Beebee. It's cute and hilarious." I said while settling in a red, leather chair, placing my purse beside it.

"She must be a bundle of joy to wake up to... She's actually who I want to talk to you about."

"What? Is she okay? Did you find something wrong from her last visit?"

"No no no... She's fine! In fact, her tests came back with flying colors... You sure you don't want anything to drink?"

"Okay, now you're scaring me, Dane. If you know something about my little girl, then please just tell me."

"Well... Ella...to put things bluntly... you did not give birth to her."

"Come again? Trust me, I was there pushing and screaming and swearing the whole time until she was born."

"Yes... You gave birth to a child, but not Brittany. There was a mix up and two mothers received the wrong baby from the nursery. As much as it hurts me to say, you were one of them."

A blank stare solidified across my face before fainting right there in his office chair...

Immediately, I found myself falling backwards in a dark hole. I landed softly on my back, noticing daylight and bare, tree branches towering over the opening above...

No longer confined to the realms of figurative speech, I was literally there, in that hole I built! Faint laughter of a child could be heard echoing off the dirt walls, prompting a scan of the area while pressing my hands against the soft soil readying to stand up. But any movement I made sank me deeper into the soil. I panicked, causing my legs, torso and elbows to go under. I kept sinking until my eyes were the last thing left to watch dirt folding in over them, canceling the last rays of light.

I'd fallen through layers of earth into a different scene...

Wherever I went, the view was hazy and fragmented. Rather quickly it focused into swing sets, slides and seesaws on a beautiful sunny day. Brittany and another little girl were the only two there playing in a sandbox. I quietly sat on the wooden edge and watched with smiling eyes, never questioning if this was real. Slowly, their interaction became rambunctious. They began throwing sand at each other! Before I could tell them to play nice, they turned to look at me, and at the same time said, You're not my mommy. The immediate shock of those words sprung me out of the persuasive illusion.

Awakening in the office chair, a nurse was fanning me with a large, manilla envelope while Dane tightened the cap on a bottle of smelling salts. I shooed her away, flared my nose and began shooting daggers at him with squinting eyes. I clenched my jaws tightly. My mind jumbled and couldn't arrange words to speak. With a look full of concern, Dane pulled up a chair and sat close to me...

Every word flowing out his mouth may as well have been in a foreign language because none of them registered meaning. I looked straight through Dane and all I could see was Brittany looking at me with those brown eyes the way she does.

How could this have happened?

I entered an entirely different hole right after closing the previous one—finally discovering what had been wrong with me. Whether it was maternal instincts or intuition, the undisclosed reality kept my emotion detector on high alert...

But it was only the beginning...

Dread followed me like a clingy cat, knowing I had to share the disturbing news with Ethan, my husband. He could tell something new was wrong with me. Spouses always know.

Avoiding it for more than two days because of worrying how he would react, I finally told Ethan that Brittany wasn't ours, biologically. That a deranged nurse had switched our child with another. He dropped a plastic container full of paint supplies to the floor, experiencing the same shock as I did without fainting himself. Instead, Ethan demanded answers! Immediate answers and claimed malpractice all day! I convinced him to calm down. We needed to have a serious talk, requiring committed attention.

Evidently, our minds didn't come equipped with a rational solution. We loved Brittany with every cell in our bodies, but on a different slope of consideration, what about our own flesh and blood? The child living only in our thoughts?... Living with other parents who hopefully loved her dearly.

A child who I only held in my arms once...

All of this created a devastating conundrum. A headache that showed no signs of going away. A choice unhappily wedged between a mass of polarized emotion...

Ethan's temper was unstable at first. He definitely wanted to get to the bottom of this, hoping to find our 'real' daughter. I wanted the same. But I did not want to be faced with a child swap. The very idea broke me to tears every time.

Legally, we were obligated to meet the parents and come to a mutual agreement. The problem, which thankfully bought precious time, was the parents had moved to Barcelona and could not be reached by the Oakland Medical Center; I needed as much time as I possibly could to contemplate giving Brittany up. Selfishly, I wanted both kids but knew that wasn't fair or going to happen.

We were told we could pursue tracking the parents on our own time or hire a private detective to find them. We sat on the possibilities indefinitely, giving all our children more attention than they were used to.

***

In August of 97’, we drove our little Brittany to college. Although we wondered at first why she had wavy, black hair and the rest of us were blond, she was ours. Our family unit would have collapsed without her. Human attachment to our children happens quick. Once attached, there's no way of turning off the love. We had to keep her. Ethan and I couldn't see any other way.

I do still wonder what our other little girl's name is and who she turned out to be. And if she's having a good life with loving parents. Most importantly, if any of them know of their family secret...

Dall E

familyLoveMystery

About the Creator

Lamar Wiggins

Creative writer in the Northeast US who loves the paranormal, mystery, true crime, horror, humor, fantasy and poetry.

"Life is Love Experienced" -LW

LDubs

Reader insights

Nice work

Very well written. Keep up the good work!

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    Creative use of language & vocab

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    Arguments were carefully researched and presented

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    Niche topic & fresh perspectives

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Comments (37)

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  • Ella Bogdanova3 months ago

    As an "Ella" who also survived PPD, I approve this message.

  • Tiffany Gordon5 months ago

    Stellar work Lamar! So beautifully told! I loved it! 🩷☺️🌸

  • This is similar to a family situation...I get the angst of the family in your story. This was heartfelt and empathetic.

  • Akhtar Gul5 months ago

    "Your story truly touched me. It's not just words—it's a reflection of strength, truth, and human experience. Keep writing, the world needs more voices like yours."

  • The Hope6 months ago

    I really enjoyed your story! i am also new to vocal and just published a few stories... would love your feedback if you have a minute. if you enjoy my work, a subscription would mean a lot! if you give me any advice i will be thankful to you.

  • Test6 months ago

    Breathtaking, Lamar!! From the build-up, to the twist and conclusion, you left me on the edge of my seat and I loved it!! Belated congrats on honourable mention on the leaderboard a few weeks ago!!

  • This story really hits. What a conundrum hmm? Hard to imagine really.

  • Denise E Lindquist6 months ago

    Congratulations on top story and leaderboard pick!! 🎉🎉🎉

  • Thank you for sharing, Lamar, an incredible piece. A well-deserved Top Story and a no-brainer for the leaderboard, your work is inspiring and very powerful.

  • Raymond G. Taylor6 months ago

    Powerful story Lamar. So well thought through. Congratulations on the TS

  • Bilal Muhammad6 months ago

    Wow Lamar such a great story 👏

  • Joe O’Connor6 months ago

    Great story Lamar👏 I liked the visual of the spreading hole, and her in the middle of it, displaced in a way. What an awful position to be in that would be! Having already formed a proper bond with Brittany, I can't imagine how I'd feel getting news like that...

  • Marilyn Glover6 months ago

    Wow, Lamar, this story surely gave me a moment for pause, making me think what I would have done if this had happened to me. I cannot even begin to wrap my head around such a scenario. Many congratulations on your astounding top story and leadership board placement!!!

  • Wooohooooo congratulations on your Top Story and Leaderboard placement! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Kamran khan6 months ago

    hi dear give me same tips how to improve own stories traffic i mean how i can do more reader come and like me my story

  • Gerard DiLeo6 months ago

    A powerful story that had me shouting at the characters...to do this or do that...and in the end, they "let it go..." What a task that would be!

  • Bilal Mohammadi6 months ago

    nice

  • This was haunting and deeply moving. The emotional weight of love, identity, and impossible choices was beautifully told. I felt every word.

  • I can only imagine how heartbreaking it is to have to make a choice like this. This is beautiful writing.

  • Mahmood Afridi6 months ago

    This story lingered long after I finished reading — a silent maze of decisions, regrets, and hidden truths. You’ve woven a hesitant heartbeat into every scene, reminding us how fragile clarity can be when choices weigh heavy. Thank you for giving voice to the ache of doubt.

  • Matthew J. Fromm6 months ago

    Ayyy great story buddy. Complex and all so very human

  • A. J. Schoenfeld6 months ago

    How could a mother ever make that choice? Give up the baby you've loved or go without ever holding the child you have birth to? Nope. That isn't a choice I could make. Dane should have just kept his mouth shut and let Ella and Ethan live in ignorance since the other family couldn't be found. More importantly, I loved your vivid descriptions in this piece, particularly the section of Ella falling into a hole and being buried by the soil. It was masterfully written.

  • Umar Faiz6 months ago

    Wow, this story digs so deep—literally and emotionally! That twist hit harder than a toddler’s toy to the shin. My heart aches for Ella, stuck between love, biology, and the messiest "lost and found" ever imaginable.

  • D.K. Shepard6 months ago

    Well done, Lamar!! I could actually feel the tension building in me as they considered what to do, knowing there was no perfect solution, either way everyone is going to grieve the loss of someone. This is fantastic storytelling!

  • Kenny Penn6 months ago

    Damn, Lamar this is a heartbreaking story. That would be an impossible choice for me

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