I always believed I knew my wife. After ten years of marriage, I could predict her every move. Lavender-scented shampoo.
The perfume that lingered on pillows. Her immaculately shaved legs, even in winter.
Then, three weeks ago, she stopped.
She stopped showering. She stopped shaving. She stopped changing clothes.
I thought it was depression at first. But she wasn’t withdrawn. She smiled. She cooked. She helped our daughter with school projects and laughed at sitcoms like everything was normal.
Only… she smelled. She didn’t comb her hair. She wore the same baggy sweatshirt for days. And she never explained why.
I asked once, gently, after dinner.
“Are you okay?”
She looked up from her tea and smiled.
“I’m more myself now than I’ve ever been.”
That answer chilled me more than it comforted me.
Because if this was her being herself… who had she been before?
Our daughter, Kalie, didn’t seem to notice. She’s only seven. But the world noticed. At the store. At school pick-up. At the gym. The stares. The whispers.
And my wife? She didn’t flinch.
It was so unlike her that I did something shameful.
I went through her phone.
No messages. No unusual calls. But one note caught my eye.
Title: April 11
The day she stopped showering.
“This is what I would look like if no one ever expected anything from me.”
That line sat in my gut like a punch.
The next morning, I brought her coffee in bed. She didn’t even look surprised.
“I wondered how long it would take you.”
“To notice?” I asked.
“No,” she said. “To ask.”
She sat up, hair messy, blanket tucked under her arms.
“I’ve spent years molding myself. To fit in. To please. To smell, look, act like the version people liked. I just wanted to know what it feels like… to *not* perform.”
I didn’t speak. I let her fill the silence.
“I’m not broken. I just needed a pause. A reset. For me.”
But then came the test.
My sister, Rena, visited. She hugged my wife and recoiled almost instantly. Later, I heard her whisper to her fiancé in the kitchen:
“She smells like a goat. Is she dying or something?”
I should have been embarrassed. But instead, I was furious.
I had watched the world worship my wife for her polish. And the moment she stepped outside their comfort zone, they discarded her like expired perfume.
That night, I watched her reading on the couch. No makeup. Mismatched socks. Hair wild.
And I realized… she was still her.
The woman who made French toast every Sunday. Who cried at documentaries. Who knew the lyrics to every ‘90s song ever made.