They Laughed While My Daughter Watched Her Christmas Disappear-heuh

I can still smell that Christmas morning whenever somebody tears wrapping paper too fast.

It comes back before the music, before the lights, before the picture of my parents’ living room with its fake tree pushed into the corner and its pine candle burning hard enough to pretend the tree was real.

The smell was cinnamon frosting burned at the edge of the pan, black coffee sitting too long in my father’s mug, carpet cleaner my mother always sprayed before company came, and the cold wooly dampness of my daughter Emma’s purple winter coat.

Image

Under all of it was the dusty, scratchy smell of torn gift wrap.

That was the smell that stayed.

Emma was seven years old that year, small for her age but observant in the way quiet children often are.

She noticed when grown-ups lowered their voices.

She noticed when people smiled without kindness in their eyes.

She noticed when the family rule changed depending on which child was standing in the room.

I had tried hard to keep that from becoming her burden.

After my divorce, I promised myself Emma would not grow up feeling like she had to earn a place in every room she entered.

I wanted her to know that love was not supposed to feel like waiting for scraps at somebody else’s table.

My parents made that difficult.

They were not monsters in the loud, obvious way people can point to from a mile away.

They were the quieter kind of unfair.

They called Kyle busy when he forgot birthdays.

They called me sensitive when I remembered.

They called Lucas energetic when he grabbed, hit, shouted, or took.

They called Emma dramatic when she cried.

Kyle was my younger brother, though you would never know it by the way my parents treated him like the family heir and me like the spare adult in charge of keeping the peace.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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