My name is Jessica, I’m twenty-seven years old, and this Christmas was supposed to be the first one I spent prioritizing myself instead of quietly saving everyone else from the consequences of their own poor planning. Instead, I ended up watching my mother clutch her phone with trembling hands, her face draining of all color as she whispered into the camera, “What? This cannot be happening right now.”
Behind her on the video call, five children screamed in overlapping frequencies of chaos—toys crashing against furniture, someone wailing because juice had been spilled on a brand-new holiday dress, another child shrieking about a broken tablet, the twins engaged in what sounded like physical combat over a stuffed animal.
The scene looked like a natural disaster had struck a daycare center, and my mother stood in the middle of it all with the dawning realization that she’d built her perfect holiday house of cards on a foundation that had just walked away. On the other end of that frantic video call, I sat peacefully in a beach chair with my sunglasses pushed up on my head, holding my phone at just the right angle so she could see the ocean sparkling behind me and the plane ticket with today’s date prominently displayed on the small table beside my tropical drink. My mother had constructed her entire elaborate Christmas celebration around one fundamental assumption that had governed our family dynamics for as long as I could remember: that I would quietly, uncomplainingly give up whatever plans I might have made to serve as the unpaid, unthanked babysitter for all five grandchildren while everyone else dressed up in their finest clothes and actually enjoyed the holiday they claimed to be celebrating together.
No compensation, no gratitude, no acknowledgment that I was sacrificing anything at all—just the crushing weight of guilt wrapped up in phrases like “but we can’t do this without you” and “you’re the only one we can count on” and the subtle implication that because I was single and childless, my time was somehow less valuable, my plans more negotiable, my life more flexible than everyone else’s carefully constructed schedules. But this year, for the first time in my entire adult life, I did not cancel my own existence to make theirs easier and more convenient. I changed my plans in a way none of them saw coming, and I did it without apology, without explanation, without the endless justifications I’d spent years rehearsing in my mind whenever I dared to imagine putting myself first.
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