ar, his framed finger paintings and tiny plaster casts proudly displayed. My
draft swept in with Brenda, my husband' s sis
lloons." The words cut, but the real sting came when she implied my "art" was just a desperate attempt to contribut
then whispered loud enough for me to hear, insulting my post-baby body. My throat tightened, and I fought back tear
h the sweetness: "I wish he grows up to look a little more like Mark. Right now, with that hair, he co
out," I said, my voice shaking wit
oice cold. "You are making a scene. Apologize to my sister right now." Apologize? His words hit me harde
e of security, crumbled into a lie. My pain didn' t matter; my dignity d
washed over me. I couldn't live a life where I always came second. I had to choose myself. I