THE DAY IÂ withdraw from my residency, I call my parents to give them the news.
They are, understandably, shocked. They want to fly to San Francisco immediately.
âLetâs talk this out,â Dad says.
âWe can help you figure out whatâs going on here,â Mom says.
âDonât make any decisions until we can get there,â Dad says.
They have never once visited me.
The irony of it all strikes me then: working so hard to earn their love and pride, and itâs brought me no closer to them. If anything, I think maybe itâs kept them at a distance.
âI already made the decision,â I tell them. âI withdrew. But Iâm going to pay back the rest of the loans myself. I donât want you to worry about that.â
Mom starts to cry. âI donât understand where this is coming from.â
âItâs out of nowhere,â Dad agrees.
âItâs not,â I say. âItâs taken me years to make this decision. And I already found another job.â
âA job? What job?â Mom asks.
âAt a pottery studio,â I say.
â
â Dad sounds like I just pitched him a multi-level marketing scheme selling methamphetamine for dogs.
âYou donât even make pottery,â Mom says.
âI do,â I say. âBut itâs not good. And I know that wonât look very impressive on the Christmas card, but thatâs what Iâm spending my time doing right now.â
âThen are you wasting your time doing it?â Dad says.
âBecause it makes me happy,â I say. âAnd I donât consider anything that does that a waste of time.â
âMaybe you just need a break,â Mom says.
âI want a ,â I say. âI donât love surgery enough for that to be mine. I want to sleep in sometimes. I want to stay up too late and take vacations with my friends, and I want to have energy to decorate my apartment and to try new things. I canât do any of that when Iâm this worn-out. I know thatâs disappointing, but itâs my choice.â
âHarriet,â Mom says. âThis is a mistake. One youâll regret for the rest of your life.â
âMaybe,â I allow. âBut if I do, thatâs on me. And I swear, I wonât let it affect you.â
âSlow down,â Dad says. âWeâll come out there and figure this out.â
âYou canât come out here,â I say.
âWeâre your parents!â Mom cries.
âI know,â I say. âAnd if you want to visit me in a couple weeks, Iâd love to see you. But Iâm not going to change my mind, and thereâs no point in you coming to San Francisco right now, because Iâm not even there.â
âWhat do you mean youâre not there? Where are you?â
Over the intercoms, an announcement rings out. My gate has been moved. âThe Denver airport,â I say. âI have to go, but Iâll call you when I get in.â
âGet in ?â Mom says, her voice raising in a way it never has, not with me.
âHome,â I say, then clarify, âMontana.â
Another silence.
âI love you both.â It feels unnatural, but that doesnât mean itâs not true, only that Iâve gone too long without saying it. âIâll call you tonight.â
I get off the phone, drag my stuff over to the new gate, stopping for a Cinnabon and an iced coffee. When I slump down in one of the tearing faux-leather chairs, my phone vibrates with a text, and I ready myself for an impassioned lecture or a persuasive letter.
Instead, I find a message from Eloise. Weâve never been a text-for-conversation set of siblings.
Mom called me, freaking out, she writes.
I wince. Iâm sorry, I write. Hope that wasnât too stressful.
I watch her typing, but then she stops. I go back to systematically dismantling my cinnamon roll.
Then her reply buzzes:Â UR not responsible for Momâs feelings. At least thatâs what my therapist says. I just wanted to check in on you bc sheâs convinced UR having some kind of breakdown. R U?
Eloise is the only person I know who texts in complete sentences, complete with punctuation, but still refuses to type out or . But thatâs about the only part of that text message that doesnât come as a shock.
I had no idea Eloise saw a therapist. Then again, I donât know much about Eloise, period. We never speak this openly, and Iâm weirdly touched.
It might be some kind of breakdown, I write. But the truth is I donât think I ever really wanted to be a surgeon. I just liked making people proud. And the idea of the money.
Shit! she writes back, and for a minute nothing else comes through. Maybe thatâs it, the end of our late-in-life sisterly bonding. Ten minutes pass before her next message appears.
Really? I say.
Well, she never acknowledged it outright, Eloise replies, but she DID stop looking at my stomach and sighing. This will go better than that. Iâve got UR back.
I lean back against the counter as that washes over me. Thanks, I tell her. Iâm sorry I didnât have yours more. I wish I had.
Donât worry about it, she says. U were just a kid. Neither of us had much say over our lives but now we do. UR doing whatâs right for U. Thatâs all U can do.
Iâve never cried over a message with so many abbreviations in it, but Iâm considering printing this text out and sticking it on the Connor family refrigerator for safekeeping. We may not have pictures of us in matching sistersâ Halloween costumes, but we love each other. Thereâs hope. If I want to be close to her, I can work at it.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
DAD COMES AROUNDÂ first. He starts sending me articles about the mental benefits of making pottery, and texts about a new TV competition between ceramists.
Mom is a harder sell.
When she and Dad finally fly out to visit us in Montana, sheâs virtually silent the whole first day.
I take them antiquing, and on a beginner horseback ride. We hit up happy hour at a bar whose theme seems to be Hunting But Fancy, one of those new spots catering to the summer crowd by pretending to be folksy.
âHank hated this place!â Gloria says happily as the server leaves with our order. âWouldnât ever come with me, so Iâd have to bring our neighbor Beth Anne.â
Mom and Dad tag along to the beginner classes Iâve started helping with at Gallatin Clay Co. Dad does his best to seem interested, while Mom settles for simply ânot crying.â
Afterward, I show them my last few projects. Mom holds a bowl glazed in every shade of blue, scrutinizing it for a long time before saying, âThis oneâs nice.â
âThanks,â I say. âI made that for Sabrina and Parth.â
âYour friends who just got married?â Dad says.
âRight,â Mom tells him, âthe lawyers.â
Again, I wonder if my friends werenât the only ones I pushed away. If every time I turned the focus back to the thing about me I my parents loved, I missed the chance for them to know the rest.
We have fun at times. Itâs incredibly awkward at others. Then itâs over, and a yellow cab is pulling up the Connorsâ driveway, and Wyn excuses himself so Mom, Dad, and I can say our goodbyes in private.
I go in for hugs before it even occurs to me that my familyâs never done much hugging. Itâs too awkward to take back, so Dad and I stiffly hold on to each other for a beat. Then Mom and I do the same.
Dad gets in the car, and Mom starts to follow, then turns back, crunching across the gravel. âItâs never been about the Christmas card, Harriet,â she says. âYou have to understand.â
The back of my nose stings. Some latent instinct in me believes this surge of emotion represents danger. My nervous system tells my glottis to stay open to let more oxygen in so I can sprint away. But I donât.
âI gave everything up,â she says weakly.
âI know,â I say. âYou gave everything up for us, and I understand what that cost you, and Iâm sorryââ
â
. No.â She grabs my elbow. âThatâs not what I mean. I gave up everything for your . He wanted to keep working. He wanted to move to Indiana. And I thought if he was happy, that would be enough. Itâs not that Iâm not proud of you. Iâm for you, honey. That youâre going to wake up one day and realize you built your life around someone else and thereâs no room for you. It was never about the Christmas card. I want to be happy.â
âI happy,â I promise her. âI didnât come here for Wyn. I came here for me. And I donât know how this will all end up, but I know what I want.â
Tears rush her eyes. She forces a smile as she pushes my hair behind my ear. âIâm never not going to worry about you.â
âMaybe you could limit it,â I say. âLike twenty minutes a day of worrying. Because Iâm okay. And if Iâm not, Iâll tell you.â
She touches my hair. âWill you?â
âIf you want me to,â I say.
She nods. âI love you.â
âI know,â I say. âI love you too.â
She nods once more, then joins my dad in the cabâs back seat.
As I wave them off, the screen door creaks open. Wynâs piney scent wraps around me before his arms do, and I sink back into him. Heâs cut his hair short and shaved his beard, and his five-oâclock shadow scratches against my temple, followed by the softness of his mouth.
We stand, listening to the hoot of some distant owl, watching the taillights shrink.
âHungry?â he says finally.
âVoracious,â I say.