At Thanksgiving dinner, my mom looked across the table and said, “You’re just a burden, Margaret. At least your brother makes us proud.” Everyone kept eating like they hadn’t heard her. I set down my fork and looked around the house they had been living in so comfortably for years. Then I stood up and whispered, “Okay. But don’t ask me for help when the lights go out.”
The silence in my parents’ dining room was not peaceful. It was heavy, suffocating, and smelled faintly of burnt sage, overcooked turkey, and the cranberry sauce my mother insisted on serving in a crystal bowl even though everyone knew it came from a can. The chandelier above the table cast warm light over polished silverware,…
