I was suddenly woken up by my husband humming and giggling in bed. I turn on the light and he doesn’t flinch, but begins flapping his arms. I call 911 and they take him to the hospital. To my horror, they informed me that he had suffered a mild seizure, possibly brought on by intense emotional stress or sleep deprivation.
I sat there numb, staring at his motionless body in the emergency room, heart thudding in my ears. He was hooked to machines, a plastic mask over his mouth, chest rising and falling slowly. The nurse asked me, “Has your husband had any unusual behaviors lately?”
I wanted to say no. But something stopped me.
The last few months had been weird. Not alarming, just… off. He’d started staying up later than usual, always saying he had work stuff to finish. I’m not nosy by nature, but I’d catch him shutting his laptop as I walked into the room. Once, I heard a name I didn’t recognize—“Nadia”—when he was on a call, and when I asked who she was, he said it was just someone from procurement.