My father told me to take cold showers, always saying, โYou smell horrible, go take a cold shower and use the soap I gave you.โ And I didโlike five times a day. It was driving me mad.
My skin felt raw, and I started getting paranoid that somethingย wasย wrong with me. My mom stayed silent, which was strange since we were usually close.
One day, my boyfriend Silas came over, and I asked, โDo I smell bad?โ
He laughed like I was kidding. โYou smell like shampoo and honey. Why?โ
I didnโt even get to answer before he headed to the bathroom to wash his hands. A few seconds later, I heard a loud gasp.
Then nothing.
I found him standing in the doorway, pale, holding the soap Iโd been using. โWho gave you this?โ he asked, his voice shaky. โAre you taking cold showers with this?!โ
I felt my blood freeze. โYeahโฆ why?โ
He looked at meโlike really looked at meโand started crying. Not sobbing, but quiet, panicked tears. โThey didnโt tell you, did they? Babyโฆ this isnโt soap. Itโs formalin. Itโs used in embalming. Like, for dead bodies.โ
I thought he was kidding, but Silas was already pulling out his phone, frantically searching. He showed me imagesโbrown bars with faded labels, chemicals, warnings in tiny print.
I ran to the trash can and fished out the packaging. It didnโt even have a real brand name. Just some label in tiny print that read โPreservative Use Only.โ
I felt sick. All over. Like Iโd been dipped in poison for weeks and didnโt even know it.
I confronted my dad that night. My voice shook the entire time.
โWhy have I been bathing with something thatโs not even SOAP?! What is this?!โ
He didnโt look surprised. Didnโt deny it. Just sat there in the kitchen like Iโd asked what was for dinner.
โYou needed it,โ he said flatly.
โI needed embalming chemicals? Are you listening to yourself?!โ
โYou wouldnโt understand. Thereโs a reason.โ
That was the moment I realized something deeper was going on.
Later that night, Mom came into my room while I was packing a small bag. Just socks, underwear, and the photo of me and Silas at the lake last summer. She closed the door and sat on my bed.
โI wanted to say something,โ she whispered. โSo many times. But your fatherโฆ he said if I told you, heโd make sure you were taken away.โ
โTaken away? What are you talking about?โ
She reached into her purse and pulled out a manila envelope. Inside were a handful of documentsโold medical records, some birth certificate copies, and a single page from a hospital discharge summary.
It said Iโd been declared dead. At birth.
Stillborn.
But clearly, I wasnโt. I was sitting right there.
I stared at her in disbelief.
โI had a complicated delivery,โ she said, her voice trembling. โYou were born early. No one thought youโd make it. They told us you were gone. We signed papers. But then, an hour later, youโฆ you started crying. Theyโd already tagged you. Moved you.โ
โI donโt understand,โ I whispered.
โYour fatherโฆ he took it as a sign. Like God had returned you. But something shifted in him. He became obsessed. Convinced your body needed โmaintenance.โ Like you were stillโฆ I donโt know, half-dead somehow. He thought those cold showers were keeping you alive.โ
I could barely breathe. โSo he was preserving me?โ
Mom nodded. โIn his mind, yes. He thought the formalin helped. Like it stoppedโฆ something.โ
โThatโs insane.โ
โI know.โ
I stayed with Silas for a few days after that. He helped me see things clearer than I ever had before.
With his help, I contacted a counselor, then child protective services. I was legally 18, so no one could remove me from the house, but the authorities still opened an investigation.
My dad was taken in for psychological evaluation.
Turns out, he wasnโt abusive in the classic sense. Just broken. Traumatized by almost losing me and never fully recovering from it. What he did was still wrongโdangerousโbut it didnโt come from hate. It came from fear and a deeply warped sense of protection.
Mom filed for divorce quietly.
As for me? I started over. Cut my hair short. Got a part-time job at the bookstore down the street. I still flinch when I pass cleaning supplies in the store. But the scars on my skin are healing.
So is everything else.
Hereโs what Iโve learned:
Sometimes the people who claim to love us the most are the ones hurting us without realizing it. Love doesnโt excuse damage. And silence isnโt protectionโitโs participation.
If youโve ever questioned something that didnโt feel rightโฆ trust your gut. Ask. Speak. Push back.
Because you deserve truth. And healing. And a clean slateโnot a cold, chemical one.
๐ฌ If this story touched you or made you think of someone who needs to hear it, please share it. You never know who might find strength in your voice.




