The Woman in the Mirror

She doesn’t recognize herself anymore.
Not in the bathroom mirror at 6 a.m., dark circles carved beneath her eyes. Not in the reflection of the microwave door while she heats up chicken nuggets for the third time this week. Not in the photos on the wall from their wedding day, where she’s laughing with her whole body, certain she’d found her person.
Ten years. A decade of loving someone who comes home smelling like hotel soap and highway rest stops, who kisses the kids hello and looks through her like she’s furniture.
She remembers the first time he said it. They were lying in bed, his phone casting blue light across the ceiling. “You know you’re not really my type, right?” He’d said it casually, like commenting on the weather. She’d laughed because she thought he was joking.
He wasn’t joking.
The comments came slowly after that, spaced out just enough that she’d start to heal before the next one landed. A drip, drip, drip wearing a groove into stone.
Last week, Lily was coloring at the kitchen table when he said it. “Daddy’s gonna find a girlfriend to help Mommy around the house.” Their four-year-old had looked up with wide eyes, confused. She’d felt something crack inside her chest—not break, just crack. One more fracture in a foundation already riddled with them.
She told him. She always tells him. And he stops, for a while, the way you pause a movie. But it always starts playing again.

The first message was an accident. A bored click into a chatroom while the kids napped and the house pressed in on her like a held breath. Someone asked her about her day. Just that. How’s your day going?
She cried.
When was the last time anyone had asked?
The conversations grew like vines through the cracks he’d made. Innocent at first—just words, just attention, just someone calling her beautiful and meaning it. Then photos. Then more. A secret garden she tends in the dark hours, something that belongs only to her.
Most days she feels nothing about it. No guilt, no shame. Just the quiet satisfaction of being wanted by someone, even a stranger, even through a screen.
But today.
Today Lily drew a picture of their family—four stick figures holding hands under a yellow sun. “That’s Daddy,” she said, pointing. “He’s smiling because he came home.”
And the guilt arrived like a wave she didn’t see coming, pulling her under.

She sits on the bathroom floor now, phone in her hand, the house finally quiet. She knows what she is. She doesn’t need anyone to tell her.
But she also knows what she was before. Before the comments. Before the loneliness. Before she started searching for pieces of herself in strangers’ words because her husband had taken them all.
She’s not asking for forgiveness. She’s not asking for anything.
She just needed someone to know that the woman in the mirror—the tired one, the broken one, the one making choices she never thought she’d make—she’s still in there somewhere.
Waiting to be found.

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