This article first appeared on Ravishly.com.
In 2005, I was a 31-year-old mother of three. My daughter was ten, my oldest sons five and seven.
On an August afternoon, I found the boys in a hurricane of kicks and slaps, a violent disagreement over something simple, Legos or Hot Wheels. I can’t remember which; it doesn’t matter. I raised my voice, yelling, STOP.
Despite my clenched fists, my volume, the anger in my eyes and in my scowl, their fighting continued.
My rage reached boiling. I don’t know why, of any fight, this fight was the fight that broke me, but it did. I picked up a wooden chair near the door and brought it down on the hardwood floor in a crash, splinters flying, the wooden-plank flooring scratched, marred from the leg of the chair and my rage.
The boys’ expressions were frozen in terror, their bodies frozen in fear. The fighting stopped.
♦♦♦
In the summer of 1983, my best friend ever in the entire universe came to my house for a sleepover. My house was the best house for sleepovers. I had Twinkies and microwave popcorn, Fruit Roll-Ups and A&W Root Beer — all the things nine-year-old dreams are made of.
The cabinets were organized alphabetically; Twinkies by the Triscuits, popcorn by the Pasta-Roni. The punishment for disrupting my mother’s organizational schematic was severe. I didn’t dare disturb the rows.
I had a daisy comforter and three decorative pillows that matched my lime green headboard. I had my own black and white TV and eight Cabbage Patch dolls. My mum would sometimes be gone all night — my friends knew this, their parents did not. This only made my house better.