She fed me, brought me to the toilet and bath, and taught me minimal information.
She taught me things like âdonât trouble other peopleâ and âgreetings are importantâ.
Suddenly I thought.
What are parents?
A mother is someone who teaches me common sense.
She feeds me.
At that time the only adults I knew were my parents and my teacher.
Then what is a teacher?
A person who teaches me things.
That means that there is no difference between parents and teachers.
If there was a difference, itâd be whether or not they used money for my sake. Thatâs it.
Then, the one who uses money for the child is the parent?
⊠I donât really get it.
But, to me that was what a parent was.
Once per month I might meet them during a meal, around that much.
Something is wrong, I thought.
When I first thought that was triggered when I talked to her.
When I truly believed it was triggered by attending a public middle school.
Since I committed violence I was kicked out of the so called âelite pathâ and enrolled in a public middle school. At that school there were those guys who I doubted were even the same âhumanâ as me.
Being rowdy in the middle of class.
As if they were beasts with no reason, they lived on pure instinct.
Of course there were good people too.
Thatâs where I realized, she wasnât special, it was me that was strange.
Sometimes the subject of family would come out. They werenât talks about pedigree, it was about what they did together, curfew, things like that.
Once I asked a question.
Do you speak with your mom everyday?
Well, if a greeting counts then yeah.
I see, they see their parents everyday.
That seems to be common.
The 2nd year of middle school we were made to write a composition.
The theme was about our families.
I didnât write anything.
I only submitted a paper with my name on it.
âThere must be somethingâ, the teacher said.
Something like what you talked about, whoâs in your family⊠the words came smoothly out of the teacherâs mouth.
I see, itâs alright if I just write about that, huh.
Â
The Tendou house has 3 people: father, mother, and me.
âWhy did you do something like this?â My mom asked.
My mother persistently asked but since I really didnât know I didnât say anything else.
âYouâre the worst, really. As I thought it would have been better if you were never born.â
Â
As a result, I presented my paper that seemed as if it was written by a elementary schooler.
I donât know what my teacher thought after reading it, but after that he never touched the subject of my family again.
This paper held a small significance.
When someone asks me about my family I can say âAfter âIt would have been better if you were never bornâ we havenât talkedâ and they wouldnât be able to respond. And if I answered like that once they would never ask a second time.
Come to think of it, there was a guy who got angry.
âHorribleâ, âunforgiveableâ, âsaying whatever they wantâ, there was a person like that.
I feel like I gave a suitable response.
Giving birth to a child and thinking they wish they never did, thatâs their choice.
I feel like I answered like that.
But I felt like it was unfair.
Since they donât know anything they can only desperately memorize things.
Thankfully I was taught how to study.
But I shiver every time I think about if I wasnât taught that.
Well now.
From common sense I know of âsplendid parentâ but I donât know anything about it.
For example, it felt like reading a description of something Iâve never seen.
What should I do?
But I donât know anything about âsplendid parentâ and âhappyâ.
How exactly do you implement something you donât know?
I thought as I looked at Misaki.
Frowning and moving her hand, she glares at the notebook, smiles, then looks disappointedâŠ
âHey, Misaki.â
âYou havinâ fun?â
ââŠn.â
When was the last time I used the word âfunâ?
âŠsânot like me at all.
Jeez, I give up.
Why am I worrying over stupid stuff.
Iâm gonna live as I like. Didnât I already decide that?
I ainât bound by anythinâ. Iâm free.
Â
Free?
I got it, for now, how about this?
A parent has the freedom to say âI wish you were never bornâ. Then the child also has to have the freedom to say âIâm glad I was bornâ.
Yeah thatâs right, thatâs good.
Splendid parent, letâs put such an ambiguous thing on hold.
Letâs make Misaki think âIâm glad I was bornâ.
Yosh, if itâs this then itâs easy to understand.
I hope I can do something to make her happy.
âŠFor that, Iâll need more money, huh.
Aah shit, whatâs with this?
Now that I have a goal Iâm all excited. If itâs was gonna be like this I shoulda done something earlier.
âMisaki.â
ââŠNo, itâs nothing.â
âThank youâ, saying those words was a little too embarrassing.
I look at Misaki whoâs tilting her head in curiosity; my cheeks loosen slightly.\n