August is the Sun. Me and Mom and Dad are planets orbiting the Sun. The rest of our family and friends are asteroids and comets floating around the planets orbiting the Sun. The only celestial body that doesnโt orbit August the Sun is Daisy the dog, and thatโs only because to her little doggy eyes, Augustโs face doesnโt look very different from any other humanโs face. To Daisy, all our faces look alike, as flat and pale as the moon.
Iโm used to the way this universe works. Iโve never minded it because itโs all Iโve ever known. Iโve always understood that August is special and has special needs. If I was playing too loudly and he was trying to take a nap, I knew I would have to play something else because he needed his rest after some procedure or other had left him weak and in pain. If I wanted Mom and Dad to watch me play soccer, I knew that nine out of ten times theyโd miss it because they were busy shuttling August to speech therapy or physical therapy or a new specialist or a surgery.
Mom and Dad would always say I was the most understanding little girl in the world. I donโt know about that, just that I understood there was no point in complaining. Iโve seen August after his surgeries: his little face bandaged up and swollen, his tiny body full of IVs and tubes to keep him alive. After youโve seen someone else going through that, it feels kind of crazy to complain over not getting the toy you had asked for, or your mom missing a school play. I knew this even when I was six years old. No one ever told it to me. I just knew it.
So Iโve gotten used to not complaining, and Iโve gotten used to not bothering Mom and Dad with little stuff. Iโve gotten used to figuring things out on my own: how to put toys together, how to organize my life so I donโt miss friendsโ birthday parties, how to stay on top of my schoolwork so I never fall behind in class. Iโve never asked for help with my homework. Never needed reminding to finish a project or study for a test. If I was having trouble with a subject in school, Iโd go home and study it until I figured it out on my own. I taught myself
how to convert fractions into decimal points by going online. Iโve done every school project pretty much by myself. When Mom or Dad ask me how things are going in school, Iโve always said โgoodโโeven when it hasnโt always been so good. My worst day, worst fall, worst headache, worst bruise, worst cramp, worst mean thing anyone could say has always been nothing compared to what August has gone through. This isnโt me being noble, by the way: itโs just the way I know it is.
And this is the way itโs always been for me, for the little universe of us. But this year there seems to be a shift in the cosmos. The galaxy is changing. Planets are falling out of alignment.