Growing Sideways

Submitted into Contest #139 in response to: Start your story with the words: “Grow up.”... view prompt

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Coming of Age Middle School Contemporary

“Grow up.”

“Get out of my room.”

I cross my arms. We stare at each other.

“$275,” I say. “It’s going to cost $275 to replace your retainer.”

“So?” 

“So? So—do you have $275 to replace your retainer?” I ask my son, exasperated at his indifference.

“No,” he replies, dismissing me. He begins to shove his earbuds back into his skull. 

I slap them out of his hands.

“HEY,” he protests, snatching them off the floor. His fingernails are painted black, the nail polish chipped around the tips. 

“I’m talking to you,” I explain, growing more infuriated because I have to talk to him in his filthy room. “Tell me, son. How many more times are you going to throw away your retainer? It just sits on your lunch tray. When you’re done eating, pick it up. Put it back in your mouth.”

He glowers at me.

“And if you accidentally throw it away,” I pause for dramatic effect, “then fish it out of the trash.”

“I’m not going through the trash!” He’s offended at my suggestion.

“You need your retainer to keep your charming smile, big and straight and white.”

“That’s how you like your men,” he mutters. 

I pretend I don’t hear him. If I process that last remark, it might be his last. “I don’t wear my retainer anyway. Who gives a shit.”

“I do,” I say as evenly as possible. “I give a massive hairy shit. And so does the bank that loaned us $4,000 to pay off the orthodontist.”

“I didn’t even want braces.” 

I walk out of his bedroom. I slam the door. I stand outside of it.

I have no words for this gangly wreckage of a person—this middle schooler—this pile of lanky bones, his mouth set in a perpetual sneer, his eyes baleful, rolling in disgust. What happened to my sunny baby, my precocious toddler, my delightful little boy who brought me dandelions? 

I feel his closed bedroom door with my hands, a door now pulsating with a jackhammering technobeat. He’s playing the latest video game. Headphones on. Hunched over his controller. Room dimmed around a ridiculously large monitor. In moments, he will be screaming at friends he’s never met in person. This passes for a social life: to creatively curse while murdering make-believe zombies in digital alliances.

I lean against the wall outside his closed bedroom door and listen to his invective. 

The words coming out of his mouth are shocking. Did he pick up that language on the bus? If not the bus, then most likely at middle school. Its hallways were full of Dr. Seuss characters, necks and legs too long, odd clothing on the fringe of fashion, round faces poxed with acne, voices shrill and crackly. 

At drop off, I had seen the packs of 7th grade boys bray with laughter over idiocy. Someone stepped on a ketchup packet! Someone crushed up Smarties and snorted them! The 8th grade girls look as feral as Floridian divorcées, filing their nails, searching for someone to verbally eviscerate. 

No wonder my son preferred spending his time with faceless friends in an online apocalypse. 

I slide down the wall and sit on my heels.

I don’t know what to do with him.

I hear my father’s voice in my head. Teach the boy consequences. Teach him to take responsibility for himself. Teach him how to be a man.

“Sure, dad.” I say out loud. “I can’t even get him to use deodorant.” 

🜋 🜋 🜋

Fighting. 

I’m embarrassed at having to leave work early. 

“I have to pick up my son,” I say. 

My boss understands. Kids, what can you do? 

In elementary school, I picked him up when he had pink eye or head lice or threw up after eating too much Play Doh. 

But now—fighting

“The principal will see you now,” an administrative assistant says, in a gentle voice that I feel I do not deserve. I am a mother of a brawler. A son who has no self-control. A son who cannot verbalize his thoughts, choosing brute force instead of using. his. words. 

We walk into an office. The principal stands, greets me, shakes my hand. 

My son is there, slinking further into his plastic chair.

“So what’s this about?” I ask gamely, hoping I come across conciliatory and respectable. 

“There was an incident at lunch,” the principal says, not wasting time in formalities. There are a lot of parents waiting in the lobby.

“Oh?”

“A scuffle by the trash cans. A few of the kids were pushing each other. But your son won’t tell me what happened.” The principal frowns.

“Son, what happened?” I ask.

Silence.

“We’re going to have to suspend your son for three days. As fighting is a serious infraction, the altercation will be noted on his permanent record.”

“I understand,” I nod. “Three days is the school district’s zero tolerance policy. I get that. But let’s be clear here. There is no such thing as a permanent record. Don’t make my son think his future is in jeopardy.”

I stand up as the meeting is over. My son looks at me, then the principal, then back at me. 

“Let’s go,” I say. 

He picks up his backpack and follows me closely out of the building. 

🜋 🜋 🜋

“Burgers or chicken tenders?”

“Chicken tenders,” he replies.

I queue up in the drive-thru. 

“It wasn’t my fault, Mom.”

“It’s okay,” I say. “It wouldn’t be middle school without a little pushing and shoving. Try to stay above the fray. There’s a lot of hormones percolating in the hallways.” 

“Yeah,” he agrees. 

“You want a milkshake, too?”

“Yes!” he says, authentically smiling, wide enough for me to see he’s wearing his retainer.

“You still have your retainer,” I remark, paying the cashier, handing him a bag of hot greasy food.

“I almost lost it again,” he says, eating a long french fry. “I threw it out with my lunch tray, and when I reached into the trashcan to get it, Ronny Anderson dumped his tray on me.”

“Did he do it on purpose?”

“Yeah, Ronny’s an asshole.”

“Indeed.”

“Why do they call it a retainer, anyways?” He takes a long pull from his milkshake. I resist the urge to warn him about brain freeze.

“Well, a retainer is a thing that holds something in place.”

“Like you. You’re a retainer.”

“I hope I’m not an overpriced piece of plastic.”

He laughs, downing a chicken tender in one bite. 

“Besides,” I continue. “I’m not supposed to hold you in place. I’m supposed to help you grow. So grow. Grow up.”

“I’m trying to,” he says. “It’s not like I’m growing down. Hey, you could buy us another milkshake and we can grow sideways…”

I laugh. Then to his delight, I circle back around to the drive-thru.


March 30, 2022 21:01

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78 comments

20:03 Apr 04, 2022

Oh wowww!! What a story. Could feel the mom's pain in the beginning. But what an end!! Growing sideways ...now that's something I can relate to😁😁😁.

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20:04 Apr 04, 2022

Same. Menopause is no joke :)

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Davie McGuinn
00:16 Apr 04, 2022

Thank you for this story. As a 7th grade teacher, I can totally see, hear, and smell the hallways of this school; all the piles of lanky bones and perpetual sneers. I even had a kid crush up a smartie and snort it once. I'm glad you brought the human element back at the end showing that the kid did, in fact, love his mother and vice-versa.

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00:24 Apr 04, 2022

Middle schoolers are very fragile creatures! So hard to come of age...they break my heart. I teach 12th graders who are very J A D E D (but awesome.) You are doing some great humanitarian work there amongst the ketchup-packet stompers. These are all great kids who occasionally (or regularly) make poor choices. But they deserve lots of chances and lots of grace. So impressed with you and your efforts. I'm sure your students adore you!

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Davie McGuinn
00:59 Apr 04, 2022

Thanks! Never a dull moment in the world of middle school!

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David Mac Mahon
09:59 Apr 03, 2022

Loved this story. Very well written and the dynamics between parent and child are shown brilliantly. Your line, "There is no such thing as a permanent record....." sums up the whole story and relationship. Great work.

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15:23 Apr 03, 2022

Holy cow, David. I hadn't thought of that...and your comment is about 100x more insightful than I accidentally made it out to be. Thanks for making me look like a better writer than I am -- lol.

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Kelsey H
07:47 Apr 03, 2022

Great portrayal of a parent-teenager relationship. I love the mix of frustration and support and love between them. Your descriptions of school and the students were so good. Nice ending too, taking a teenage boy out for food never fails!

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16:06 Apr 03, 2022

"Mix" is a great way to put it. 99% frustration + 1% support on some days :) And agreed -- for teenagers, food is magic. Always.

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Michał Przywara
15:46 Apr 02, 2022

Ha, great story! It's both touching and hilarious, and I think you capture that bizarre warzone that communication can be. I particularly like when the mother expends serious effort not responding, not rising to the bait. In any case, you convey the sense that the conversation isn't only about what was said, but also about what wasn't said, particularly after the brawl. There's lots of fun lines here. I liked "gangly wreckage of a person." It's simple, it's evocative, and it tells us lots about both child and parent. Thanks for the fun ...

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16:08 Apr 03, 2022

I've raised three little "warzones." And I definitely worked through some PTSD with this story (haha) "Choose your battles" is not just a mantra, but the only way to survive the puberty forest.

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Lavonne H.
01:56 Apr 02, 2022

Oh, how I laughed throughout your story. Identifying with the mom, with the son and all the trials and tribulations! Our sons were given the choice of having braces (so they would have "[a] charming smile, big and straight and white") One chose not to and later blamed us for not making him wear them...tough luck, kid. I am a terrible mother ;) The younger son made the effort, wore them up to graduation, and now has a lovely smile as an adult. So, I guess the conflict over the retainer was a non-starter. You have such a fluid way of writing. ...

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15:05 Apr 03, 2022

I've personally refinanced a few orthodontists homes. I don't write for comedians per se, but as a high school English teacher, I write for tough crowd.

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Lavonne H.
15:12 Apr 03, 2022

LOL! I hear ya. My daughter-in-law teaches English to grade 7 and 8 students. She loves finding those special moments when 'the tough crowd' is enthused with literature! As much as I appreciate a good orthodontist, where would we be without dental coverage that helped with 1/2 the costs???

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15:20 Apr 03, 2022

In a first world country that actually cares about the health of its citizens? A girl can dream :)

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Riel Rosehill
20:22 Apr 01, 2022

Hey! This cracked me up (among many other lines!) “You need your retainer to keep your charming smile, big and straight and white.” “That’s how you like your men,” he mutters. You really nailed that teenage snark, haha. Such a lovely story, and both characters are just so likeable. It was a joy to read <3

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01:00 Apr 02, 2022

O puberty. Sheer evil...

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Calm Shark
21:36 Mar 30, 2022

Wow, at first it was a bit dark and then at the end, it was heartwarming. I was happy to see you wrote a story, and my heart pained when the mother said "What happened to my sunny baby, my precious toddler. . ." At least the son changed. Anyways, good job as always, Deidra!

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21:38 Mar 30, 2022

It's just the age. Everyone should get a pass from ages 12-112.

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Calm Shark
22:07 Mar 30, 2022

True.

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Neala S
17:07 Apr 12, 2022

aweeeee i love this

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18:42 Apr 12, 2022

It loves you back :)

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Cindy Strube
20:33 Apr 01, 2022

(Flashback to August 2011) My daughter, telling me about various things going on among 7th grade classmates, bursts into tears and tells me, “I’m so worried about how some of them will turn out!” She has, from a very young age, been called “an old soul”. Never had the classic teenage attitude, but observed it from the outside. She commented to me more than once, “I feel like I’m a tourist, visiting a foreign country.” She never wanted to be involved with those alien beings, other than a small friend group - but had tremendous compassion for...

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01:03 Apr 02, 2022

Sorry for the PTSD. Middle school is best forgotten...oy vey! My frizzy hair, new glasses, last chair clarinet, clogs, and tallest girl in the school. And the boob fairy came early. A W F U L

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Cindy Strube
01:11 Apr 02, 2022

No you’re not! It was fully intentional!😛 Yup, similar - except I could have done with a little of your frizz. Had the glasses, mouthful of braces (never lost a retainer), and the lost feeling of coming from a lovely, small rural elementary school to 😱!

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01:19 Apr 02, 2022

Those were humble days, and we survived. Look at the goddesses we are now! Woo hoo!! :)

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