My Husband’s “Remedy” Sent His Doctor Into Laughter
I knew something was wrong when my husband started to smell strange. Not just bad — aggressive. Sharp. Unmistakable. It followed him everywhere, like a walking Italian restaurant on a hot day. I thought maybe it was a medical issue, something hormonal or urinary, so I did what any responsible wife would do. I booked him an appointment with a urologist and went along for moral support. I was worried. He was embarrassed. Neither of us expected what happened next.
He went into the exam room alone. Five minutes passed. Then the door opened, and the doctor stepped out. The moment he saw me, his face turned red. He tried to stay professional, but I could see it — his shoulders shaking, his lips pressed together, barely holding it in. “You might want to come inside,” he said. That’s when my anxiety spiked. Doctors don’t laugh when things are serious. They also don’t invite spouses in like it’s a sitcom reveal.
Inside, my husband stood there looking absolutely defeated. The doctor finally cracked and said, “I need to ask… why is there garlic involved here?” I froze. Garlic? My husband sighed deeply and confessed. He had read online that garlic was a “natural antibacterial remedy” and decided to… apply it. Directly. He thought it would fix an odor he’d noticed and “clean things naturally.” Instead, it fermented. For days. In places garlic should never, ever be.
The doctor explained — still laughing — that garlic belongs in food, not anatomy. What my husband created wasn’t a cure; it was a biological weapon. The smell wasn’t an infection, disease, or condition. It was self-inflicted stupidity mixed with internet confidence. The solution was simple: remove the garlic, wash properly, never do that again. My husband nodded like a man who had just learned fire is hot.
We walked out in silence. That night, he showered like his dignity depended on it — because it did. The smell disappeared instantly. The lesson stuck forever. To this day, anytime he gives advice, I just smile and say, “Remember the garlic?” He goes quiet. Some mistakes heal fast. Others season your marriage with laughter for life.
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