by: | Complete Story | Last updated Apr 18, 2024
After Angela cheats on her husband, she agrees to go to couples therapy with him, but each session with the therapist leaves her feeling less and less like a grown-up.
Angela tapped her foot
impatiently while her husband spoke with the therapist privately, probably whining
about how angry and betrayed he felt. They were both supposed to go in together
in a moment, but for now she was stuck waiting in reception.
Really, she couldn’t understand
why Eric was being so dramatic. It was only sex! It wasn’t as though she didn’t
love him anymore. She just needed to have a little fun sometimes, that was all.
They weren’t even thirty yet! He was twenty-eight and she was twenty-seven. Did
he really expect her to settle down and stick to a single sexual partner when
she was still so young?
But he’d insisted on seeing a marriage
counsellor and she’d eventually agreed, albeit reluctantly. Their therapist was
a man. How was he supposed to understand what it was like for a woman in
her situation? And her first impressions of the office hadn’t been great either.
The receptionist was a total bimbo!
Angela glanced over at her. She
was dressed up like some bizarre fetish fantasy. Her long blonde hair was tied
up in a pair of high pigtails, and her stripper-sized tits were crammed into a
sparkly Disney princess top. Didn’t this place have a uniform? She looked like
an overgrown six-year-old for goodness sake! And she’d been acting like one too
when she’d tried to match their names to their booking. Her husband had been
very patient with her stupid lisping voice and barely passable ability to read,
but Angela had wanted to turn around and leave straight away. What kind of
serious therapist’s office employed a woman like that?
At last the door opened, and the
therapist stood in the doorway. He smiled kindly and gestured her to come
inside.
“He’s weady for you now!” the
bimbo receptionist chirped happily, looking up from what looked like a fashion
magazine for tweens.
Angela rolled her eyes. “Thanks.”
She went into the office and the
therapist closed the door behind her. Eric was lounged on a sofa facing a
hard-backed wooden chair, looking perfectly relaxed. Angela sat down next to
her husband, leaving a few inches of space in between them.
The therapist didn’t take a seat
in the wooden chair, however. He took a tablet from his desk in the corner and
stood in front of Angela.
“Here,” he said, handing it to
her. She looked down at the screen in her lap in confusion. What was this for?
Some sort of presentation?
“I find that girls always get a
bit nervous in my office,” he said, talking to her in a light, overly friendly
tone, as if he was talking to a nursery-schooler. “This will help you relax,
okay sweetie?”
Angela scowled. She was about to
launch into a furious tirade. She couldn’t stand being talked down to! Who the
hell did this man think he was? If he assumed most women were like his ditzy receptionist
then he had another thing coming. But before she could say a word, the tablet
in her lap came to life. Brilliant pastel colours swirled and spiralled on the
screen, sinking into a single spot in the centre, and her complaints died in
her throat. She couldn’t take her eyes off it. It was just so pretty…
“There we go,” said the therapist
in that same sweet tone. “That always takes care of fussy little girls.”
“Is there anything I have to do?”
Eric asked.
Angela felt strange. She was
vaguely aware of the men’s words, but it was as though they were coming to her
from the end of a very long tunnel. Her attention was focused on the dazzling lights
on the screen.
“Not a thing. Let me do all the
talking. Did you hear that, Angela? We’re going to have a little talk, okay
sweetie? Nothing to be nervous about. I’m a trained professional, after all. We
need to have a little talk about how you betrayed your husband. About how he
found out you were cheating on him. Because that wasn’t very clever of you, was
it Angela? Getting caught.”
Angela shook her head, not taking
her eyes off the screen. “Not clever,” she echoed. It was true. She shouldn’t
have been caught. She should have been more careful not to let him find out.
Because even though there was nothing wrong with what she’d done, even though
she was completely in the right, Eric wouldn’t understand.
“That’s right, Angela,” said the
therapist. “You’ve been a very dumb bitch, haven’t you?”
Angela frowned. That didn’t sound
right. Dumb bitch. Was it okay for the therapist to call her that?
“Look at the pretty sparkles,
sweetie,” he encouraged, and Angela sank back into the swirling lights. “That’s
right. You’re just a dumb bitch, Angela. All women are, but you especially.
That’s okay though. You don’t know any better – you’re just girls.”
Angela knew vaguely that there
was something she didn’t like about what the man was saying, but she was too
engrossed in the swirling colours to care. His words were like background
noise. She could understand them if she concentrated, but it was so hard to
focus with the wonderful patterns in front of her.
“Yes, you’re just a girl, Angela.
Just a silly little girl. A big child. It doesn’t matter if you do something
wrong, because you can’t be held accountable for your actions, can you? You’re
sweet and innocent.”
Angela nodded eagerly, a dim
smile spreading across her face. She hadn’t done anything wrong. If she wasn’t
so distracted by her tablet, she’d have smirked at Eric. His stupid attempt to guilt-trip
her with marriage counselling was backfiring on him. The therapist was on her
side.
“Besides,” the therapist
continued. “You didn’t cheat on your husband anyway, did you Angela?”
Angela was confused. She had
cheated on Eric. Was the therapist going to help her cover it up? But Eric
already knew, didn’t he? Surely that wouldn’t work! The lights on the screen
grew brighter. They were so, so pretty…
“You didn’t,” the therapist said
again. “In fact, it’s completely impossible for you to have cheated on your
husband. You know why, I’m sure. It’s because of your embarrassing bedwetting habit.”
Angela wrinkled her nose and
started trying to shake her head in disgust. She didn’t wet the bed! The
therapist must be confused. He must be mixing her up with some little girl.
Maybe one of his other clients was some silly little bedwetter who needed to be
reassured that everyone had accidents now and again, but that certainly wasn’t
her.
“Don’t… I don’t wet the bed…” she
mumbled. Her words felt heavy in her mouth. It was hard to think. She just
wanted to watch the pretty swirling lights.
“Look at the colours, sweetie,”
the therapist told her. “That’s a good girl. You are a bedwetter, Angela.
You wet the bed every night. You have done for quite a few weeks now. And what
man would want to sleep with a woman who still pisses herself in her sleep like
a dumb toddler? You’re very lucky your husband puts up with your babyish
behaviour, young lady.”
Angela’s face slackened as the
spirals spun faster and faster. Lucky. She was a lucky girl. She was lucky to
have a husband who put up with her bedwetting. Another man might leave his wife
if she started peeing herself every night. Especially if she’d cheated on him
too. But Eric didn’t know about that. Did he? It was strange. For a while Angela
had been sure he did. And the therapist didn’t seem to know either. In fact, he
thought it was impossible for a bedwetter like her to cheat on her husband! She
blushed even more brightly. How had she done it? Angela frowned
slightly. She didn’t know. She couldn’t remember clearly. But the therapist was
right – who’d want to have sex with some stupid, bedwetting baby-woman? Why
would anyone sleep with her when it meant waking up in piss-soaked sheets, or
next to someone in a sopping wet diaper. Her special protection. Her baby
pants. Was the therapist still talking? She tried to pay attention.
“…because your husband puts up
with you in other ways too, doesn’t he?” he was saying. “It’s not just the
bedwetting. You actually have quite a few silly, childish behaviours that no adult
woman should reasonably be expected to have. You…”
Angela tuned out again. She could
feel his words entering her ears, but her attention was focused entirely on the
lights in her lap. So pretty. Such pretty lights…
When she came to, the tablet was
gone, Eric was standing up and putting his coat on, and the therapist was
looking at her with a satisfied expression on his face. Had she fallen asleep?
“Ready to go home?” Eric asked her
brightly.
Angela smiled back, a little
hesitantly. She’d thought she was in trouble, but maybe she’d just been
confused. She was such a silly girl sometimes. Such a dumb bitch.
Eric held out his hand, and she
took it. It felt nice to be holding onto him. It felt reassuring. He held her
hand all the way back to their house, and while he walked, she couldn’t help
herself from skipping along beside him.
Couples Therapy
by: Anonymous | Complete Story | Last updated Apr 18, 2024
Stories of Age/Time Transformation