The Pink Mitten In Her Purse Exposed What Happened In The Nursery-kimochi

My mother-in-law once told me that babies only cry because adults let them.

She said it in my kitchen while standing over a pot of coffee she had not made, looking at my newborn daughter like Lily was a tiny problem to be corrected.

I remember the smell of burnt toast in the air, the cold tile under my bare feet, and the weight of Lily against my chest.

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She was only three weeks old then.

Her fists were curled under her chin.

Her breath smelled like warm milk.

Brenda Evans watched her squirm and said, “You pick her up too fast.”

I tried to smile because that was what I had learned to do around my husband’s mother.

Smile first.

Defend yourself later.

Sometimes not at all.

Mark stood beside the sink, rinsing a bottle, and said, “Mom’s old-school, that’s all.”

Old-school.

That word covered a lot in his family.

It covered sharp comments at Thanksgiving.

It covered Brenda telling me I was too anxious, too sensitive, too attached, too soft.

It covered the way Mark lowered his eyes whenever his mother’s voice changed.

I noticed that before we were married.

I noticed it when she criticized his job, his shirt, the way he parked in our own driveway, and he would go still like a boy waiting for a grade.

But I was young enough then to believe love could loosen old knots.

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