People say that hearing is the last sense to leave you before you die. They say it like it’s a comfort, a final tether to the world you’re leaving behind.
They are wrong. It is not a comfort. It is a curse.
My name is Lucía Hernández, and for thirty days, I was a ghost haunting my own body. I was a statue of flesh and bone, frozen in a hospital bed, while the people I loved most in the world planned to erase me. This is the story of how I died, how I listened, and how I came back to burn their world to the ground.
It started in a delivery room at the Santa Maria Medical Center in Mexico City. The room was aggressive in its whiteness—blinding tiles, stainless steel that gleamed like teeth, and lights that left no shadow where a fear could hide. I had been in labor for fourteen hours. The pain wasn’t a wave anymore; it was an ocean, dark and crushing, pulling me under every time I tried to gasp for air.
“Breathe, Lucía. Stay with the rhythm,” Dr. Rivas said. Her voice was firm, professional, the voice of a woman who had seen life enter the world a thousand times. “You are doing perfectly.”
I wasn’t doing perfectly. I was disintegrating.
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