Life changed for a young couple when their newborn cried almost nonstop for three days and nights, barely sleeping at all. Doctors repeatedly reassured them it was ordinary colic and prescribed medication, yet nothing eased the baby’s distress. Exhaustion and fear grew as the cries continued, leaving the parents helpless.
They had prepared carefully for parenthood, planning every detail in advance. Books were read, classes taken, and the apartment secured with outlet covers and padded corners. The baby’s early months were calm and easy, reinforcing their belief that preparation and vigilance had shielded them from serious problems at first entirely.
One night the calm ended abruptly. Soft whining turned into relentless screaming that no rocking, feeding, or warmth could stop. His body stiffened, face reddened, and breathing grew strained. An emergency clinic visit brought the same verdict: colic, massage, patience, and a return home with lingering doubt and rising worry.
Two more days passed without rest. On the third night, the father stayed awake alone, pacing with the baby strapped to his chest. When the crying softened, he noticed something strange: one leg moved freely, while the other remained bent and stiff, raising alarm that would soon change everything forever.
Removing the baby’s sock, he saw swelling, heat, and deep redness. Between tiny toes lay a nearly invisible hair, tightly wrapped and cutting off circulation. It was his wife’s hair, slowly embedding into delicate skin and causing unbearable pain that explained days of agony, terror, confusion, and desperate unanswered crying.
The parents rushed back to the hospital, where doctors immediately recognized the danger. Surgery was performed just in time to prevent irreversible damage. The father now urges parents to check even the smallest details, warning that what seems trivial can save a child’s life through attention, awareness, patience, vigilance, care.