After The Cake Hit The Patio, Maya Sent One Text That Ended The Joke-hihehu

My brother smashed my graduation cake into the patio and shoved my face toward it while my parents laughed like it was the funniest moment of the party.

My name is Maya Collins, and I was twenty-four the afternoon I graduated from college.

For six years, I had imagined that day in small, careful ways.

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Not the kind of fantasy with balloons filling a room or my parents sobbing into napkins.

Nothing that dramatic.

I imagined my mother touching my shoulder and saying she was proud.

I imagined my father looking at my diploma folder like it meant something.

I imagined walking into their backyard and feeling, for once, like the hard parts had been seen.

The double shifts.

The late-night classes.

The cheap noodles eaten over an open textbook.

The aching feet from restaurant work.

The mornings when I showed up to class with a paper coffee cup in one hand and three hours of sleep sitting heavy behind my eyes.

I never needed my family to throw me a perfect celebration.

I only needed them to understand that getting there had cost me something.

By the time I parked outside my parents’ house in Bend, Oregon, the sun had dropped low enough to turn the driveway gold.

Their mailbox leaned a little like it always had.

A small American flag hung from the back porch railing, stirring in a warm breeze.

I could smell cut grass before I opened the side gate, and under it, the familiar smoke from my father’s grill.

Music crackled from a speaker near the sliding glass door.

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