When Sasha gets home from work one day, she finds a Photoshopped image of herself stuck to the fridge. Trying to understand why her husband wants her to be someone she’s not, Sasha goes through the motions of self-doubt. But then she decides that she won’t let Ryan get away with it that easily…
Picture this: you’re coming home after a long day of working, parenting, and just trying to keep everyone going. You’re bone-tired, dreaming of nothing more than a cup of tea and maybe ten minutes of peace before the chaos starts all over again tomorrow.
A close-up of a tired woman | Source: Midjourney
You head to the kitchen, and there it is. The ultimate slap in the face.
It’s a picture of you, but not really you.
Instead, it’s your face Photoshopped onto a model’s body. Like a Victoria’s Secret-level, airbrushed-to-perfection body. And right next to it, a note in your husband’s handwriting.
A Photoshopped image of a woman | Source: Midjourney
You have a month to become her.
For a second, I just stared, my brain unable to comprehend what I was seeing on the fridge. I felt… upset and embarrassed, and honestly a bit sick. But then came the slow, seething rage bubbling up from somewhere deep.
Ryan had done this.
A smiling man sitting on a couch | Source: Midjourney
My husband, who had seen me through pregnancy, through late-night feedings and cravings, and years of juggling a full-time IT job and motherhood, had decided it was his place to “fix” me.
When I called him into the kitchen, my voice shook.
“Ryan, what the hell?” I asked.
A woman holding her head | Source: Midjourney
He strolled in casually, looking so damn pleased with himself while he held a donut in his hand.
“It’s motivation, Sasha,” he said, smiling. “I just want you to be your best self, to look like someone I can be proud of again. You’ve let your body go, and honestly, it’s hard to even feel attracted to you anymore. I thought this might remind you what I need from you.”
“What you need from me?” I asked.
A man holding a donut | Source: Midjourney
“Yeah,” he said. “What I need from you as a wife.”
It was like every part of me, every single stretch mark, every curve, every scar, shrank under the weight of his words.
But I refused to let him see me break. He had lost the privilege of being someone I trusted.
A close up of a woman’s stretch marks | Source: Midjourney
“Interesting,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady. “You think this will help?”
“Oh, honey, I know it will!” he said, as smug as ever. “I just want you to take care of yourself, for your own sake, and for mine. You’ve got potential, Sash, but you’ve been neglecting it. This can be your wake-up call.”
I could feel the sharp sting of tears threatening to well up, but I swallowed them back. He thought he could shame me into some crash diet, into throwing myself into a frantic pursuit of his so-called ideal woman.
An upset woman | Source: Midjourney
Well, Ryan was about to learn exactly who he had married.
As I turned to leave the kitchen, he added another thought.
“My office’s Christmas party is coming up,” he said. “You have to be snatched and beautiful by then. I’m counting on you to be perfect.”
I could have slapped him.
People at an office Christmas party | Source: Midjourney
The next morning, I put on my best poker face. Over breakfast, I put my mug down on the table.
“You’re right, Ryan,” I said. “I could be doing more. I’ll take your challenge seriously.”
His face lit up like it was already Christmas morning.
“That’s the spirit, babe,” he said. “I know you’ll thank me for this when it’s done.”
A woman sitting at a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney
Oh, Ryan, you idiot.
For the next few days, I played my part perfectly. I made a vision board filled with images of gym equipment, sleek designer clothing, and ads for luxurious spa treatments. I left it out in plain sight, casually flipping through fitness magazines and “accidentally” letting Ryan overhear some of my random comments.
“To really become her, I’ll need a few key investments…”
A woman creating a vision board | Source: Midjourney
“Oh, this is going to be expensive. But you know what, Sasha? It will be worth it, girl!”
“Damn, this food looks delicious. Maybe that diet won’t be so bad after all.”
Ryan didn’t even blink.
“Whatever you need, honey,” he said, smug confidence dripping from every word. “I know that it’s going to take a lot, but you can put in the hard work. I’ll give you whatever you need from me.”
A man sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney
Meanwhile, I kept him distracted. I started to make simple dishes—lots of salads and wraps. Fresh fruit and vegetables. Plenty of chicken and turkey. If I was being honest, the change in food was actually welcome, and it allowed me to give the kids better meals, too.
But I wasn’t going to give in to everything else so easily.
Healthy meals in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney
So, I started showing Ryan fake “progress pics” from the gym (thank you, Google!). It was easy—crop an image at the right angle and you’d never be able to tell who it was. I sipped green smoothies in front of him for breakfast, and I raved about made-up workouts.
Ryan never questioned it.
I had him exactly where I wanted him.
A green smoothie on a counter | Source: Midjourney
The first step in my transformation was convincing Ryan that becoming this new person truly wasn’t cheap. I put together a detailed “transformation plan,” complete with an Excel spreadsheet outlining all the costs.
- Personal trainer: $200/session
- Nutritionist: $1,500/month
- Wardrobe upgrades: $10,000 (a new body meant new clothing)
- Spa and beauty treatments to look younger: $5,000/month
- Premium gym membership: $300/month
A woman using her laptop | Source: Midjourney
When I presented it to my husband, he looked a little shocked but he recovered quickly.
“Okay, Sasha,” he said, eating a bowl of trail mix. “If that’s what it takes, then by all means. You have my banking details, transfer as you see fit.”
Little did he know, every penny of that money was going into a secret account under my name.
A man sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney
By the end of the month, I had a neat stack of receipts totaling close to $20,000. I called my husband into the living room for a “progress check.”
He sat on the couch, looking at me expectantly, like I was about to undress and let him see what his money had gone toward.