At My 35th Birthday Dinner, My Father’s Brass Stopwatch Finally Measured Everything He Had Broken-yumihong

The hinge in the stopwatch lid gave a dry little click under my father’s thumb. Butter had already skinned over on the steak knife. The candle beside the cake bent toward the air vent and threw a wavering stripe of light across the stack of therapy invoices between us.

He looked at the papers, then at me.

“I thought if I eased up on you,” he said, voice low and steady, “the world would eat you alive first.”

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No one spoke. My mother’s water glass stayed halfway to her mouth. Sara had gone very still beside me, one hand flat against the edge of the tablecloth as if she were keeping the whole room from sliding. Outside the frosted glass wall, a server passed carrying a tray of martinis. Somewhere deeper in the restaurant, somebody laughed hard enough to slap the table.

Dad touched the inside of the watch lid with the pad of his thumb. “My father used to say the same thing.”

That made the back of my neck go hot.

The first time I remember loving that watch, I was eight years old, standing on a baseball diamond in Plano with dirt caked around my cleats and orange peel under my fingernails. Dad had crouched in front of me near the chain-link fence, spit on his thumb, and wiped a streak of mustard off my cheek from the hot dog I’d eaten between innings. His tie was off, his white shirt sleeves rolled, and the watch gleamed in his palm while he showed me how fast I’d run from home to first.

“Good,” he’d said that day, and the word had gone through me like sunlight.

There were mornings when he was easy to belong to. Saturday pancakes at 6:30 a.m., the smell of coffee and bacon soaked into his flannel while he cut mine into squares without asking. The way he jogged beside me when he took the training wheels off my bike in our cul-de-sac and didn’t let go until he had to. The year I built a model bridge for the seventh-grade science fair, he sat cross-legged on the garage floor beside me after work, holding balsa wood steady with two thick fingers while the glue dried. When the bridge took first place, he lifted it like it was made of glass.

Then the softness narrowed.

By the time Evan was old enough to play Little League, Dad laughed at his mistakes. When Luke forgot a line in the church Christmas program, Dad ruffled his hair and said he’d done fine. If they brought home a B, he called it a bump in the road. If I brought home a 98, his eyes went to the missing two points. If I hit a double, he asked why I’d slowed rounding first. If I got into a top internship, he wanted to know what the other interns had that I didn’t.

Good memories didn’t disappear. That was the problem. They sat right beside the bad ones and made them harder to name. At ten, he taught me how to knot a tie. At twelve, he asked about the missing two points. At fifteen, he drove forty minutes through rain to make my semifinal game. At seventeen, after I struck out once with two men on base, he drove us home with the radio off and the watch ticking between us in the cup holder like a second pulse.

The first person who noticed what his voice had done to my body was not me. It was Sara.

Early in our marriage, she came up behind me while I was rinsing coffee mugs and kissed the back of my shoulder. “I’m proud of you,” she said, simple as breathing.

The mug slipped from my hand and shattered in the sink.

Her face changed before mine did. She shut off the faucet, turned me toward her, and waited until the water stopped running down my wrists. My chest had gone tight. Sweat lifted along my hairline. Every muscle from my jaw to my stomach locked as if praise were just a door opening to the next correction.

That was five years before the restaurant.

After I made partner-track, the firm sent me to a courthouse in Dallas for a closing that should have been routine. I came out of a conference room at 11:43 p.m. with signatures in a blue folder, walked halfway down the stairwell, and lost the feeling in both hands. My knees hit the concrete landing hard enough to bruise. I could hear my own breathing, thin and fast, bouncing off the cinder block walls. A security guard found me bent over with my forehead nearly touching the rail.

Dr. Lillian Hart, the therapist whose invoices were now spread across white linen, had a narrow office with one lamp, one fern, and a window that looked out over a parking garage. On my third visit, she said, “When someone gives you approval, what does your body expect next?”

My mouth had gone dry. The leather on the armchair stuck to my palms.

“The correction,” I said.

That answer cost me more than the co-pay.

Across the restaurant table, my father stared at the note clipped to the top invoice, the one Dr. Hart had written after six months of sessions because I asked for something I could carry on bad days. Patient associates love with criticism; physical distress when praised.

He swallowed once. Then he looked at my mother.

She set her glass down so carefully it barely touched the table. “Don’t,” she said.

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