Grandma Cut His Golden Curls, Then Sunday Dinner Exposed the Truth-paupau

Leo’s curls were the first thing strangers noticed about him.

They were not just blond.

They were gold in the way late afternoon light turns honey gold, soft at the ends and springing loose whenever he ran too fast across the yard.

Image

At five years old, he had the kind of hair people smiled at before they even knew his name.

I used to wash it with tear-free shampoo that smelled faintly like apples, wrap him in a towel, and watch him shake his head in the bathroom mirror until the curls bounced around his cheeks.

He would laugh every time.

“Mommy, I look like a lion,” he would say.

“You look like Leo,” I would tell him.

That always made him grin.

To me, his curls were part of him the way his dimples were part of him, the way his little voice was part of him, the way his habit of sleeping with one sock half-off was part of him.

To my mother-in-law, Brenda, they were a problem.

Brenda had always believed that boys should look a certain way, sit a certain way, speak a certain way, and never wear anything she considered too soft.

She said these things as if she were defending civilization instead of criticizing a child.

At first, I tried to answer politely.

“He likes his hair.”

“It doesn’t bother him.”

“He’s five, Brenda.”

But politeness has a shelf life when someone keeps aiming at your child.

Mark was better at stopping her than I was.

He had grown up under that same sharp little system of rules, and he recognized Brenda’s tone before I did.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *