30 Days With My School-refusing Sister -final- |work|
The school-refusing sister is not "fixed." The brother is not a hero. We are two people in a small apartment, learning that love is not a tool for extraction. It is not a lever to pry someone out of their hiding place.
She asks, “What did you tell your friends?” 30 Days With My School-Refusing Sister -Final-
Day 1 She sat cross-legged on the living room floor, knees hugged like a fortress, eyes on the window as if it held an exit strategy. I carried in two mugs of tea—one for me, one untouched—and set them on the coffee table. “You don’t have to go back,” she said before I could ask. It was not a plea; it was fact. I stayed quiet. She had been refusing school for three months now, and our house had learned the silence of it: the muffled arguments, the stilted attempts to coax her into uniform, the empty backpack leaning against the hall closet like a monument to something lost. The school-refusing sister is not "fixed
Day 2 I made pancakes, because that’s what you do when the world has narrowed and you look for rituals. She accepted one recipe card of maple syrup and a grin that didn’t quite meet her eyes. Her name is Ava. She used to collect pressed flowers and catalog them in an old notebook. Now the notebook sat closed on her bedside table. I asked about it. She told me it was fine. That’s the language of refusal—short sentences, smaller and smaller. She asks, “What did you tell your friends
“I’m not going back,” she says. Her voice is raw, like she hasn’t used it in weeks. “Not tomorrow. Maybe not next month. Maybe not ever.”
