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“You’re not you any more.”
The sippy cup spout was still gunky, smeared with the remnants of a half-squished date. I stared at it in disbelief, then shoved it at my husband. ‘How could you miss this?’ I said.
I’d been busy packing the baby bag at that point, in preparation for taking my daughter to Rhyme Time the following morning, and it had been my husband’s job to do the dishes; but his definition of washing dishes involved vaguely waving them under running water at the sink.
He squinted at the spout, then shrugged. ‘You don’t have to be a bitch about it,’ he said.
We’d only recently moved to the city, which was an added layer of stress to the already stressful transition to becoming parents, with its sleep deprivation, zero downtime and chores that never ended. Most nights we fought, and there was a constant tension between us, a tension that felt confusing, because we were working together to raise our baby, but pulling apart in so many other ways.
All I knew about my husband at that moment, when he called me a bitch for overreacting about the sippy cup lid, was that I hated him. Intensely.
Even so, I only meant to yell at him. But my hand, driven by pre-menstrual hormones and a year’s worth of pent-up rage, seemed to have a mind of its own as it rose swiftly in the air and connected squarely with his cheek.
I stood there, stunned. The man with the tired eyes in front of me was the love of my life and I’d just hit him. Immediately I apologised, but he brushed me away. ‘You’re not you any more,’ he said. ‘You’ve become a different person.’