Family Cut Girl’s Hair For “Outshining” A Birthday Girl—Then Police Came-ngyen

My family held down my 11-year-old daughter and cut her hair at a party because she was “outshining the birthday girl”… the next day, they were all crying in front of the police.

The first thing my mother said to me was not sorry.

It was not an explanation.

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It was not even the strained, awkward version of regret people offer when they know they have gone too far but are too proud to admit it.

“If your daughter wanted to show off, then she should learn not to outshine the birthday girl,” she told me.

The kettle had just clicked off behind her.

There were paper plates on the kitchen table, crumbs pressed into the cloth, balloons sagging near the ceiling, and one of Sofía’s pearl hair clips lying on the carpet like it had been dropped during a struggle.

I remember that clip more clearly than anything.

It was tiny, cheap-looking to anyone else, but she had chosen it herself from a little rack at the salon, holding it up against her curls and asking if it looked too grown-up.

I had told her it looked perfect.

By the time I stood in my sister Marisol’s kitchen that night, the clip was the only perfect thing left.

I had arrived at the house just after eight.

I was still wearing my hospital uniform, creased from a shift that had seemed to stretch without mercy.

My feet hurt so badly I could feel every bit of pavement through my shoes, and my coat was damp at the shoulders from the light rain that had started on my way over.

All day, I had carried the same small guilt with me.

I had not been able to take Sofía to the party properly.

I had not been able to stay.

I had kissed her forehead at the door, reminded her to say thank you, watched her walk inside with her cousin’s present held carefully in both hands, and then I had gone to work.

It was family, I told myself.

My mother Carmen would be there.

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