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How Folding a Towel Wrong Became Grounds for Divorce (and Other Unpaid Therapist Crimes)

How Folding a Towel Wrong Became Grounds for Divorce (and Other Unpaid Therapist Crimes)

By Matt Stoltz | Church of NORMAL


1. The Towel Heard ’Round the World 🧺💔

It didn’t start with infidelity, abandonment, or fraud. It started with a bath towel—creased down the middle (apparently the wrong middle). One sloppy fold later, and my once-holy covenant was hanging by a frayed terrycloth thread.

Modern Marriage Metric #1: Precision Laundry ➡️ Emotional Security

This is the new math of relationship anxiety: if he folds the towel wrong, he’ll definitely forget your birthday, miss your trauma trigger, and ruin your self-care aesthetic. Obviously.


2. Emotional Labor Inflation 📈🧠

Remember when emotional support meant listening, apologizing, and learning? Now it’s a 24-hour concierge service:

Task 2010 Definition 2025 Upgrade
Ask how her day was Genuine care Certified trauma-informed feedback loop
Vacuum the floor Household chore Proof of allyship against patriarchal dust
Fold a towel Help with laundry Character witness in Divorce Court

Like the U.S. dollar, emotional labor keeps inflating—except we’re paying in resentment instead of cash.


3. The Rise of the “Unpaid Therapist” Accusation 🛋️

Influencer advice: “If he makes you manage his feelings, you’re his unpaid therapist.”

Real-world translation: “If he’s human and occasionally struggles, file immediately.”

The problem? Everyone eventually needs emotional triage. Turning reciprocal comfort into a billable offense leaves couples with two options:

  1. ⚔️ Compete for victim points.
  2. 🚪 Pack up and let a Roomba vacuum the pain.

4. Weaponized Self-Care & Covenant Collapse 🔪🧘‍♀️

Self-care used to be bubble baths and journaling. Now it’s a legal strategy:

“Your Honor, I left because the towels were aggressive and I’m protecting my inner child.”

When self-care becomes self-ish-care, anything inconvenient is labeled abuse. Spoiler: real healing still involves hard work, forgiveness, and—yes—bad towel folds.


5. The Church of NORMAL Response ✝️🧺

  1. Grace Audit: If towels trigger rage, the laundry isn’t the issue.
  2. Reciprocity Check: Emotional labor flows both ways—unless one partner shuts off the faucet.
  3. CPTSD Lens: Trauma brain forgets chores; it doesn’t cancel love.
  4. Covenant Debugging: Identify the bug (communication lag), patch it (clear expectations), re-deploy (try again).

6. Practical Re-Fold Challenge 🌀

  1. Grab the next poorly folded towel.
  2. Smooth it, refold it your way.
  3. Say, “This isn’t proof you don’t care; it’s proof we’re different.”
  4. Hug. Repeat.

7. Final Benediction 🙌

May your towels be fluffy, your grace abundant, and your marriage stronger than your linen closet anxiety.

Because love isn’t measured in perfect creases—it’s measured in imperfect perseverance.

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Picture of Pastor Matthew Stoltz

Pastor Matthew Stoltz

Lead Pastor of the Church of NORMAL | Waseca, MN

“To comfort the looped, confuse the proud, and make space for those who still hear God’s voice echoing through broken rituals.”
Matt is a CPTSD survivor, satirical theologian, and father of six who once tried to build a family without a permit and now walks out of the wreckage with sacred blueprints and a smoldering sense of humor. He writes from Wolf Den Zero, also known as Sanctuary 6, in the heart of Waseca, Minnesota.

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