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My five-year-old daughter wrk always bathed with my husband. -yilux

articleUseronApril 21, 2026

My therapist didn’t offer me pretty phrases.
She asked me why the doubt of others still held so much authority over my own perception of danger.

I thought about my mother, the church, the neighborhood, the years of marriage.
I thought about how often calling a woman an exaggerator is just another way of silencing her.

Sophie began to regain small gestures.
She started asking for stories again.
She started singing half-heartedly in the car again.
She even started protesting about eating vegetables again.

But water was still a minefield.
She didn’t want bathtubs.
She didn’t want closed doors.
She didn’t want anyone measuring time near her.

So I bathed her for months with a plastic pitcher, sitting beside her, letting her decide every step.
It seemed minimal.
It was a complete reconstruction.

One night he asked me if he could ever like water again.
I didn’t know what to answer without promising too much.

“Maybe so,” I finally said. “
But you don’t have to force yourself quickly.
Things come back when they feel safe.”

She nodded with a seriousness beyond her years.
Then she rested her head on my shoulder and said something that still wakes me up sometimes:

—I thought you didn’t see because you didn’t want to.

I didn’t defend myself.
I didn’t explain broken adults, manipulation, fear, shame, denial.
It was true in the way that mattered: it took me a while to see.

“I’m sorry,” I told her. “
I should have listened to you sooner, even when you didn’t know how to explain it.
Now I see you.
I won’t look away again.”

The legal proceedings progressed far enough for the lawyers to begin exploring settlements, expert opinions, versions of events, and potential loopholes.
Mark maintained his absolute innocence.

His strategy was painfully predictable.
He presented scattered medical records, tried to justify the substances as supplements, and suggested that my memories had been tainted by panic.

She also wanted to paint a portrait of me that would be useful in her defense: exhausted mother, resentful wife, impressionable woman.
It was an old story.

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