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The Wretched Womb

Friday 20th September, Story #264/366

By L.C. SchäferPublished about a year ago Updated about a year ago 3 min read
Top Story - September 2024
The Wretched Womb
Photo by Olga Zakharchenko on Unsplash

At the door, I hesitate.

No, I want this. I’m done being doubled over in agony every month. No more blood and mess and embarrassment. Fool-proof birth control.

I sign the consent forms, confirming where I want it installed (abdomen; lower). This will allow me to take the wretched thing out whenever I need to.

The procedure is quick. The nurses wave me off with cheery smiles. I’m bandaged up, armed with painkiller prescriptions and aftercare leaflets.

Days later, when the symptoms begin, I open the nifty little door with a soft squelch and take out the offending article. Ahhhh! Relief! Liberation!

I hide the nasty, gooey thing away in a cupboard, telling myself to check on it in a few days.

That night, I can’t sleep. I toss and turn for hours, then decide to get a snack and some water, maybe read my book awhile. I walk past that cupboard. It’s wood, not glass, but I don’t need to see the bloody thing to know it’s there. I can feel it. Throbbing and twisting. Ugh. I could happily leave it there, or bury it miles away, or drop it into the ocean. How did I ever tolerate it inside me?

A week later, it lies limp and pale on a soggy towel. I pick it up, almost tender, as if forgiving it for its transgression and retrieving it from a time-out. I pop it back into its squishy red cave. I feel its relief, like a gasp and a sigh.

Oh! The convenience of it! The freedom! The choice! Isn’t that what all independent women want?

Then came the news: I couldn’t bear children. Angrier with her than ever, convinced she was to blame for the pain in my heart, I locked her in a drawer, determined to never again give her the privilege of being inside me.

It doesn’t help.

It took a while, but eventually I realise my mistake. My organs shift and tilt, re-filling the space, like they’re searching for their missing sister. At last, I retrieve Her, restore Her. Ahh, I am whole!

Accepting all parts of my Self, even when they’re mucky, painful or inconvenient, remains an ongoing project.

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Word count - 366

(NB. This excludes the title, subtitle, and authors note. I was having trouble saving the story on here, so I wrote it on Google Docs instead, and I think their word count is a little different.)

Submitted on Friday 20th September at 11:39AM

The story behind the story: I think the Poe-spiration is clear here! This stems from my stream of consciousness that I posted yesterday:

A Year of Stories: I'm writing (and submitting, here) a story every day this year. This continues my 264 daily microfiction story streak since 1st January.

Please consider lending your support to the other creators on this madcap "a story every day" adventure. They're putting out excellent content every day!

Rachel Deeming

Gerard DiLeo

Thank you

Especially if you are one of the wonderful people who has been staunchly reading these daily scribbles since the start of the year. I see you, and appreciate you very much indeed! Thank you to those who leave feedback/comments. I will do my best to respond to each one and reciprocate the reads.

If you enjoyed this one, the very best compliment you can give me is to share it, or read another!

Here are a few more pieces, unconnected to this one, but on a similar theme:

And now for something completely different: another cracking poem from Brenton F!

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Thank you again!



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About the Creator

L.C. Schäfer

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Comments (20)

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  • Testabout a year ago

    This is so heartfelt and raw. It's written in such a candid (and kind of funny) way and I really enjoyed it.

  • Rachel Robbinsabout a year ago

    Outstanding. Heartfelt and raw. I’ve no idea how you keep up this pace.

  • Jason “Jay” Benskinabout a year ago

    🎉 Congratulations on your Top Story! 🎉

  • Lamar Wigginsabout a year ago

    I don’t even have to be female to understand what the MC was going through. You’ve painted it clear enough to understand the contemplation and decision to go forward with the procedure just to realize the emptiness it left. Don’t let Donald Trump read this one. He’ll find a way to take the right away, lol.

  • Kenny Pennabout a year ago

    This was fantastic, L.C.! Just all around great! Loved the imagery, the subtlety, and the message. Congrats on a well-deserved top story!

  • Paul Stewartabout a year ago

    I saw what you said to Sian after reading it and have to say I think it's remarkable (and telling of your skills) that you manage to pull this off with the right amount of Poe-ish macarbeness, desperation that many women undoubtedly feel and sensitivity that comes from parts of our bodies (in this case females) that may need to be removed and the consequences from any actions taken. It's a sublime bit of writing, LC. How you managed all that in 366 words I'll always remain amazed at! Congrats on this getting the little Top Story badge - it's deserved. Also, yeeeeeah for work work I use Word mainly, unless I get a pain in the arse client (or my regular client who has switched) who wants me to use Docs. And Docs and Word have different counting systems. I am not quite sure where the change is...but I'll have one word count in Word and then in Docs a bit different, and it's been the same when transferring Docs things to Vocal too! :)

  • Karan w. about a year ago

    That's a amazing story! Congratulations on the top story! Keep it up

  • Back to say congratulations on your Top Story! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Amanda Starksabout a year ago

    Oh man, the imagery in this is incredible. Not referring to the womb directly and instead describing it really carries this piece. I think so many women can relate. I know I can!

  • Testabout a year ago

    I love this LC!! Such a great story with the moral of self acceptance and what it means to be a woman!! Great work and congrats on Top Story!!

  • Stephen A. Roddewigabout a year ago

    Ooh, nearly T-minus 100 days to liftoff 🚀 And speaking of Poe, that ended far more benign than I thought it would at the start 😅

  • The Dani Writerabout a year ago

    Oh wow! That's some depth-discussion there! A powerful one to write and share LC! Top story congratulations!

  • Denise E Lindquistabout a year ago

    Wow! Thank you!💕💗

  • I wish I could remove it. I never wanna have children, so I'll just throw it away, lol

  • Cathy holmesabout a year ago

    You did it!

  • Cindy Calderabout a year ago

    This was an conceptually creative premise, complete with symbolism and underlying, hellbent emotions. Well done.

  • Really well written, I think that there's some gold in here.

  • Gerard DiLeoabout a year ago

    Whether pro-life or pro-choice, there's angst here. The whole controversy, because of what it is, is too important to be settled politically. It never will. Today, a baby simply isn't a baby until it's wanted. That's the definition of a baby, and everyone who takes a side is trying to come up with a better definition. They won't, although the current definition sucks. This was an awesome write. I think it's my favorite of all! No kidding. And what a poem it would make! Wait! It already is. I think.

  • Sian N. Cluttonabout a year ago

    As a sufferer of Endometriosis and Adenomyosis, I read this in awe. Wouldn't that be the day! They are bastardly beautiful things.

  • Rachel Deemingabout a year ago

    I thought this was so many things: macabre; cartoonish; sad; relatable. Will have to read your stream of consciousness to get the thread.

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