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The Rhythm of Return
Each return to the farm required recalibration.
I arrived taller, quieter, carrying habits that did not translate well. I had learned to speak without interruption, to finish sentences without fear. The stammer softened in winter and threatened to return in summer, as if my body remembered where it had learned to fracture.
Mother watched me closely when I came back.
She touched my hair more than
necessary. Asked small questions. Studied my face when she thought I wasn’t
looking. There was love there - real, immediate - and also something else,
harder to name.
Regret, perhaps.
Relief that someone else had stepped
in.
Fear that I might not stay.
She never said any of it out loud.
The boys treated me like a visitor at first. They circled me, tested me, measured how much authority I still carried. The youngest was the quickest to close the distance. The burned brother took longer, watching from the edges, cautious with his trust.
Orren behaved as if nothing had changed.
That, too, was information.
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Learning to Split
By necessity, I became two versions of myself.
One version knew how to exist quietly, how to anticipate moods, how to move through the farm without attracting attention. That version learned quickly each summer and shed the habits again in autumn.
The other version lived with my grandparents. He spoke more freely. He slept deeply. He forgot to listen for footsteps.
Neither version was false, both were incomplete.
Switching between them took energy I did not know how to measure at the time. I only knew that returning anywhere came with a cost. Leaving always hurt someone — often me.
I stopped expecting wholeness, adaptation felt safer.
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What Choice Looks Like When There Is
None
There was no alternative summer. No other place prepared to take me. No conversation about permanence or preference. There was only logistics, habit, and the quiet assumption that children absorb whatever they are given.
So I went., each time.
And each time, I learned something new about loss - not the dramatic kind, but the ordinary, repetitive kind that teaches you to expect absence as a feature of love.
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Love That Pulls in Opposite Directions
I loved my mother fiercely.
I loved my grandparents deeply.
Those loves did not compete — but they did not align either. They pulled me in opposite directions, stretched me thin, taught me early that affection can divide as easily as it binds.
In winter, I dreamed of the farm — of open space, of my brothers’ voices, of my mother’s presence like a gravity I could not escape even at a distance.
In summer, I counted days until autumn — until the quiet certainty of my grandparents’ house returned, until I could unclench again.
I never told any of them this.
Each side believed it held all of me.
I let them.
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What That Did to Time