Grandma Shaved His Golden Curls. Sunday Dinner Revealed Why.-felicia

Leo was five years old when his curls became the center of a fight none of us knew we were already losing.

They were not ordinary curls to me.

They were soft, golden rings that caught the sun when he ran across the yard, bouncing around his cheeks with the same wild joy he carried everywhere.

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On school mornings, I would bend down in the kindergarten hallway and kiss the top of his head before he slipped into class.

His hair always smelled faintly of strawberry shampoo, warm sleep, and the crayons he kept somehow getting on everything.

My mother-in-law, Brenda, saw something very different.

She saw a boy who did not look the way she believed boys were supposed to look.

Brenda was the sort of woman who could make a compliment sound like a warning.

She hosted dinners with polished silverware and a smile so tight it never quite reached her eyes.

She believed little girls wore soft things, little boys looked sharp, and grandmothers had the right to correct whatever young parents were too modern to understand.

For months, Leo’s curls had been her favorite subject.

“He looks like a little girl,” she said one afternoon while he built a block tower on our living room rug.

I was washing bottles in the kitchen, and Mark was sitting on the floor beside Leo.

Mark did not raise his voice.

“Leo’s hair is not up for discussion, Mom.”

Brenda looked at him, smiled, and changed the subject.

That should have comforted me.

It did not.

I had been married to Mark long enough to understand that his mother rarely surrendered an opinion.

She simply folded it carefully and put it away until she found a better time to unfold it.

The hardest part was that Brenda had not always felt dangerous to me.

She had been there after Lily was born.

She had brought casseroles when I was too exhausted to cook.

She had rocked Lily through one awful night when the fever would not break and Mark and I were both shaking from fear.

When Lily’s hospital visits began, Brenda even drove us once when our car would not start.

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