Have you even looked at yourself in the mirror?

My husband once sneered at me, *“Have you even looked at yourself in the mirror?”* while I was juggling three kids — but he didn’t expect what came after.

I’m 34, and I thought I knew Marcus. Clearly, I didn’t.

At 27, I married him. He was charming, hilarious, made me feel like the only woman in the world. We started our life in a tiny starter apartment with our lab, Jasper.

Then came the kids. Three in total. The youngest, Noah, only four weeks old.

Life turned into a blur of feedings, diapers, tantrums, and microwaved meals. Showers became rare luxuries. Dry shampoo, baby wipes, and sheer grit were my survival kit.

Marcus? He sipped beer, ignored the chaos, and picked me apart piece by piece.

One night he exploded:

*“HAVE YOU EVEN LOOKED AT YOURSELF IN THE MIRROR? YOU LOOK LIKE A SCARECROW!”*

The next morning, a text popped up on my phone from him:

*“I wish you dressed more like my ex, Vanessa. She always looked amazing — heels, dresses, perfect makeup. You? You look like you just rolled out of bed. I miss being with a woman who put in effort.”*

Vanessa. His ex from the office.

No shower in two days, spit-up on my shoulder, toddler clinging to my hip — and still, the words sliced deep.

Weeks later, his laptop pinged with a message while he was in the shower. I opened it. My stomach dropped.

I didn’t confront him right away. Instead, I waited. I planned.

On his birthday, I set the table for dinner — candles lit, wine poured, silver cloches covering the plates. He sat down, smug, ready to be catered to.

But when he lifted his lid, there wasn’t roast beef. Just an envelope.

His face drained of color as he read the documents inside.

Calmly, I raised my glass and said,

*“Happy Birthday, Marcus. Consider that your gift. I hope you finally had your fill.”*

Because inside wasn’t just divorce papers. It was the proof from his laptop. The photos. The messages. All neatly documented and ready for court.

Marcus’s face turned ghost white as he flipped through the papers. Divorce petition. Screenshots of his late-night chats with Vanessa. Proof of him draining our joint account for “business dinners” that were really hotel stays.

He stammered, “W-where did you—how—”

I sipped my wine. Calm. Cold.

*“From your laptop. You should’ve logged out, Marcus.”*

He slammed the envelope shut, but it was too late. Every detail was already in my lawyer’s hands. His boss had also received a copy — courtesy of an anonymous package that landed on his desk that morning.

The job he bragged about endlessly? Gone within 24 hours. The boss didn’t take kindly to “executive expenses” spent on lingerie and champagne.

And custody? My lawyer shredded him in court. I had evidence of neglect — him leaving the kids home alone while he went drinking, videos of his outbursts caught on the baby monitor. The judge barely looked at him before granting me full custody.

Marcus stood there in the courtroom, sweaty and broken, begging the judge for “just weekends.”

Denied.

Now he lives in a dingy rental, no Jasper, no kids, no job, and no more power over me.

And me? I’m finally free. The house is filled with laughter again — the kids, Jasper, and me. No more insults. No more walking on eggshells.

Marcus wanted a woman who “tried.” Well, I tried. I tried to save a marriage he set on fire.

Now I’m done trying. And he’s the one left in ashes.

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