My Son Could Barely Sit, Then the Doctor Saw the Warning Signs-lbsuong

My eight-year-old son showed up at my apartment shaking with fear and whispered:
“Dad… please don’t make me sit down.”

For a second, I thought I had misheard him.

Ethan had said strange things before when he was tired, hungry, or trying to avoid something unpleasant.

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Eight-year-olds can make a scraped knee sound like the end of the world.

But this was not drama.

This was not tired.

This was fear wearing my son’s face.

He stood in the doorway of my apartment with his backpack hanging crooked from one shoulder and his small fingers pressed against the fabric of his hoodie.

His sneakers did not bounce across the floor the way they usually did on Sundays.

They dragged.

Behind him, the smell of his mother’s SUV exhaust still floated in from the parking lot, mixing with the faint scent of laundry detergent from the hallway carpet.

I looked past him and saw her in the driver’s seat.

She had not even put the vehicle in park.

She rolled the window down, rested one wrist over the steering wheel, and yelled, “Don’t encourage this behavior, Ryan. He just wants attention.”

Then she drove away.

No kiss.

No wave.

No question about whether he had his jacket, his school folder, or the stuffed dinosaur he still pretended not to need.

She left like she was dropping off a backpack instead of her own child.

I watched the SUV turn out of the lot, and something inside me went quiet.

Not calm.

Quiet.

The kind of quiet that comes before you understand your life has split into before and after.

Ethan usually exploded into my apartment with noise.

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