I’ll Make a Proper Man of Him “My grandson will not be left-handed,” declared Mrs. Thompson in outrage. Dennis turned to his mother-in-law, irritation darkening his gaze. “And what’s wrong with that? Elliot was born left-handed. It’s just who he is.” “Who he is!” Mrs. Thompson sniffed. “It’s not a ‘trait,’ it’s a weakness. It’s just not done. The right hand has always been the proper hand. The left one is from the devil.” Dennis barely managed to stifle a laugh. It was the twenty-first century, and his mother-in-law still thought like a medieval villager. “Mrs. Thompson, science has long since proven—” “That ‘science’ of yours means nothing to me,” she snapped. “I corrected my own son. He turned out normal. You should start retraining Elliot before it’s too late. One day, you’ll thank me.” She turned and swept out of the kitchen, leaving Dennis alone with his unfinished coffee and a bitter aftertaste from the conversation. At first, Dennis thought little of it. It was just old-fashioned Mrs. Thompson with her outdated notions—nothing new there. Every generation brings its own baggage of superstitions. He watched as she gently swapped Elliot’s spoon from left to right hand at the table, and thought nothing much of it. Children are adaptable, and a grandmother’s quirks can’t really cause harm—can they? Elliot had always been a lefty. Dennis remembered Elliot reaching for toys with his left hand as a toddler, drawing, clumsily, yes—but always with the left. It seemed absolutely natural, just another part of who Elliot was—like the colour of his eyes or a freckle on his cheek. But for Mrs. Thompson, it was something else entirely. Left-handedness was a flaw, a mistake of nature to be fixed. Every time Elliot picked up a pencil with his left hand, she pursed her lips as if he’d done something downright improper. “Right hand, Elliot. You must use your right.” “There have never been, and never will be, lefties in this family.” “I retrained George, and I’ll retrain you.” Dennis once overheard her recounting her “achievement” to his wife, Olivia. How little George, “was wrong too, at first,” but she had caught it in time. She’d tied his hand, watched every movement, punished disobedience. Result? A proper, normal adult. Her tale was told with such pride, such certainty of rightness, that Dennis found it hard to listen. He didn’t notice the changes in Elliot straight away. Small things at first—his hand would hover above the table, as if weighing a hard decision. Then a quick glance toward his grandmother, checking: is she watching? “Dad, which hand should I use?” “At dinner, Elliot asked, looking nervously at his fork. “Whichever’s comfortable, son.” “But Grandma says…” “Don’t listen to Grandma. Just do what’s comfortable for you.” But it was no longer comfortable. He hesitated. Things slipped from his grasp. The once confident motions of childhood replaced by an anxious, careful awkwardness. Elliot seemed to lose trust in his own body. Olivia saw it too. Dennis noticed how she bit her lip each time her mother switched Elliot’s spoon, or looked away when Mrs. Thompson launched another lecture about “proper upbringing.” Having grown up under her mother’s iron will, Olivia had learned not to argue—better to stay silent and wait until the storm passed. Dennis tried talking to her. “Ollie, this isn’t normal. Look at him.” “Mum wants the best.” “It’s not about what she ‘wants.’ Can’t you see what’s happening?” Olivia just shrugged and dodged the conversation. Years of obedience proved stronger than motherly instinct. Things grew worse, day by day. Mrs. Thompson grew bolder. Now, she didn’t simply correct her grandson—she commented on everything. Praised when he used his right. Sighed dramatically when it was the left. “See? Elliot, you can do it! You just have to try. I made a proper person out of your Uncle George, and I’ll do the same for you.” Dennis decided it was time to confront her. He waited until Elliot was playing in his room. “Mrs. Thompson, please leave the boy be. He’s left-handed. It’s fine. There’s no need to retrain him.” Mrs. Thompson looked truly affronted. “Are you telling me what to do? I raised three children, and you think you can order me around?” “I’m not trying to teach you. I’m asking you, please don’t interfere with my son.” “My son? Aren’t Olivia’s genes there as well? He’s my grandson! And I won’t have him grow up… like that.” She said “like that” with such disgust, Dennis felt it in his bones. He realised—this would never be resolved quietly. The next few days devolved into a standoff. Mrs. Thompson pointedly ignored Dennis, communicating through Olivia. Dennis followed suit. An awkward, tense silence settled between them, punctuated by the occasional flare-up. “Ollie, tell your husband the soup is on the stove.” “Ollie, please tell your mother I’ll handle it myself.” Olivia was caught in the middle, pale and exhausted. Meanwhile, Elliot retreated ever further into his little world, curling up with his tablet on the sofa, trying to make himself invisible. Dennis had an idea one Saturday morning while Mrs. Thompson was in the kitchen, slicing cabbage for her beloved borscht—her movements quick, confident, the product of thirty years of practice. He moved to stand behind her. “You’re cutting it wrong.” Mrs. Thompson didn’t even turn around. “Excuse me?” “The cabbage—you should cut it thinner. And with the grain, not across.” She grunted and went on cutting. “I’m serious,” Dennis went on. “No one does it that way. It’s wrong.” “Dennis, I’ve been making borscht for thirty years.” “And you’ve been doing it wrong for thirty years. Here, let me show you.” He reached for the knife; she snatched it away. “Are you mad?” “No. I just want you to do it properly. Here—see, too much water. The heat’s too high. And you’re not doing the beetroot right.” “I’ve always done it this way!” “That’s not an argument. You should relearn. Let’s start all over, from scratch.” Mrs. Thompson froze, knife mid-air, a look of utter disbelief on her face. “What are you talking about?” “The same thing you say to Elliot every day,” Dennis leaned in. “Relearn. You’re doing it wrong. It’s not done that way. Use the other hand.” “That’s completely different,” she spat. “Is it? To me, it’s exactly the same.” Mrs. Thompson put the knife down, cheeks flushed with indignation. “You’re comparing my cooking to… I’ve always done it this way! It’s what I’m comfortable with!” “And Elliot’s comfortable using his left hand. Yet that doesn’t stop you.” “It’s not the same! He’s a child, he can still change!” “And you’re an adult, set in your ways. You can’t be changed, right? So what gives you the right to break him?” Mrs. Thompson’s lips tightened, her eyes shining with fury. “How dare you? I raised three children! I retrained George, and nothing happened to him!” “And how is he now? Is he happy? Confident in himself?” Silence. Dennis knew he’d hit a nerve. George—Olivia’s older brother—lived far away and called their mother twice a year. “I only ever wanted what’s best,” Mrs. Thompson’s voice trembled. “That’s all I wanted.” “I don’t doubt it. But ‘what’s best’ doesn’t mean ‘what you decide.’ Elliot is his own person—small, but his own. With his own ways. And I won’t let you squash them out of him.” “You’re giving me lectures, now?” “I will, if you won’t stop. I’ll point out every single thing you do—every gesture, every habit. Let’s see how you like it.” They stood staring, both tense, on edge. “That’s petty and vindictive,” Mrs. Thompson hissed. “You left me no choice.” He saw something break inside her—a crack in that pillar of certainty she’d always relied on. Mrs. Thompson suddenly looked older, smaller, more vulnerable. “I only meant to help—” she didn’t finish. “I know. But you need to stop helping like this. Otherwise, you won’t see your grandson again.” The borscht on the stove began to boil over, but no one moved to rescue it. That evening, after Mrs. Thompson had retreated to her room, Olivia slipped onto the sofa next to Dennis, silent for a long time with her head on his shoulder. “No one ever protected me like that as a child,” she whispered. “Mum always knew best. Always. I just… accepted it.” Dennis wrapped his arm around her. “But in our family, your mother doesn’t get to decide for anyone else. Not anymore.” Olivia nodded, squeezing his hand in thanks. From the children’s room, the faint scratch of pencil on paper could be heard. Elliot was drawing—with his left hand. And no one told him he was doing it wrong ever again.

Ill make a proper boy of him yet!

My grandson will not be left-handed. Mrs. Edith Hadleys indignation echoed around the kitchen.

Philip glanced at his mother-in-law, irritation clouding his eyes.

And why is that a problem? Oliver was born that way. Its part of who he is.

Part of who he is! Edith sniffed dismissively. Its not a feature, its a flaw. Its simply not done. For centuries, the right hand has always been the leading hand. The left? Well, thats the work of Old Nick himself.

It was all Philip could do not to chuckle. The world had changed so, yet his mother-in-law still spoke as if it were the days of Henry VIII.

Mrs. Hadley, science has shown

I dont care a fig about your modern science, she interjected. I retrained my James and he turned out as a proper gentleman. Retrain Oliver before its too late. Youll thank me, mark my words.

She swept out of the kitchen, leaving Philip alone with his cooling tea and an uncomfortable knot in his chest.

At first, Philip dismissed the whole affair. Just old-fashioned views from an older generation, surely harmless. He saw Edith gently correcting Oliver at the table, moving his spoon from his left to his right hand, and thought nothing of it. Children are malleable, he supposed; what harm could the odd grandmotherly quirk do?

Oliver had always been left-handed. Philip remembered him at just eighteen months, reaching for rattles with his left hand. Later, when he took to drawing, it was always that same hand. It seemed as natural to Oliver as the colour of his eyes or the dimple in his cheek.

But not to Edith Hadley. To her, left-handedness was an error, a relic of poor breeding to be stamped out. Each time Oliver gripped his crayon in his left hand, his grandmother would purse her lips as though hed made an unforgivable faux pas.

Right hand, Oliver. Use your right, shed intone. At it again? Weve never had a left-hander in the family. Never will. I retrained your uncle, and by heaven, Ill retrain you!

Once, Philip overheard her recounting to his wife, Margaret, her triumph with Jameshow as a boy hed held his fork wrong, how shed tied back his left hand, watched over every movement, disciplined every error. Now, she declared, he was a proper Englishman.

There was such pride and conviction in her voice that Philip felt a chill.

He didnt notice the change in Oliver immediately. First it was pauseshis son hesitated before reaching for anything at the table. His hand hung uncertainly mid-air, as though contemplating the answer to some great conundrum. Then came the sideways glancesa furtive look to see if Grandmother was watching.

Dad, which hand do I use? Oliver asked at supper, anxiety plain in his eyes as he picked up his fork.

Whichever you find easier, son.

But Grandmother says

Dont listen to her, do whats comfortable for you.

But what was comfortable had been stolen from Oliver. He faltered, fumbled, dropped things. The confidence in his movements was replaced by a kind of wary hesitance, as if he no longer trusted his own hands.

Margaret saw it, too. Philip watched her bite her lip when Edith corrected Oliver again, watched her look away as her mother embarked on another monologue about raising children the right way. Margaret, who grew up under the same stern thumb, had learnt long ago that it was safer not to arguejust to endure the storm and wait for it to pass.

Philip tried to speak with her.

Margaret, this isnt right. Look at him.

Mother means well.

Its not about meaning well. Cant you see what its doing to him?

She merely shrugged, retreating from the conversation. Habit, bred by years under Ediths command, was too strong.

It only grew worse. Edith grew bolder, now commenting on Olivers every move, praising when he accidentally used his right hand, sighing dramatically when he reverted to his natural left.

See, Oliver, thats better! All it takes is effort. I made a man of your uncle, and Ill make a man of you, too.

Philip resolved finally to confront his mother-in-law. He waited until Oliver was tucked away, absorbed with his toys in his room.

Mrs. Hadley, let Oliver be. Hes left-handed, and thats perfectly ordinary. Lets not try to undo it.

Her response was volcanic. She drew herself up, affronted.

Who are you to tell me? Ive brought up three children and now you presume to lecture me?

Im simply asking you not to interfere with my son.

Your son? Margarets blood runs in his veins too, you know. Hes my grandson as well as yours. And Ill not have him turn out like that.

The way she lingered on that, as though it were some unforgivable affliction, made Philips stomach turn.

He realised then that peace was impossible.

Days became fraught with silent rivalry. Edith addressed Philip only through Margaret. He did the same. The air grew thick with an unspoken truce that shattered whenever the tension rose.

Margaret, tell your husband that the soups on.

Margaret, tell your mother I can see to myself.

Margaret, pale and exhausted, flitted between the two, while Oliver hid for longer with his books and drawing pad, hunched in his corner, hoping to be invisible.

The idea came to Philip one crisp Saturday morning, as Edith bent over her prized beef stew. She chopped carrots with the brisk air of a woman who had ruled her kitchen for decades.

He sidled up behind her.

Youre not cutting those properly.

She didnt even look round. Sorry?

The carrots should be thinner. And cut lengthwise, not across.

She kept chopping, undeterred.

Im seriousno one does it that way. Its wrong.

Philip, Ive cooked stew for thirty years.

And for thirty years youve been doing it wrong. Let me show you.

He reached for the knife. She pulled away, scandalised.

Are you quite mad?

Not at all. Just want you to do things properly. See, youve too much water there, and the heat’s too high. Youre adding the onions before the beef

Ive always done it this way!

Thats not reason enough. Now, lets start again. From scratch.

She froze, knife poised mid-air. Her look was one of utter bewilderment.

What are you going on about?

Only what youve been telling Oliver each day. You must relearnyoure doing it wrong. Should use your other hand.

Thats absolutely different!

Is it? Seems much the same to me.

Edith slammed the knife down, her cheeks flushed with indignation.

You dare compare my cooking to Thats how I do things because it suits me! Its convenient!

And its convenient for Oliver to use his left hand. That hasnt stopped you.

Thats different! Hes a childhe can change.

And youre a grown woman with old habits. Are you to be shaped anew? No? Then why demand it of him?

Her lips tightened. There was a glint of turmoil in her eyes.

How dare you! I raised three children. James was retrainedhes fine!

And is he truly content? Self-assured?

A heavy silence fell.

Philip knew he had struck home. James, Margarets elder brother, had long since moved away, calling his mother only at Christmas.

I meant only the best, Ediths voice trembled. Always did.

I dont doubt that. But in your world, the best means my way. Oliver is his own little person, with his own ways. I wont let you drum them out of him.

Youll lecture me?

I will, and Ill start harping on about your every habit, every time you slice a carrot or stir a pot, if you dont cease meddling. Lets see how you like that.

The standoff was silent, charged. Son-in-law and mother-in-law, both at the brink.

Its petty and mean, she spat.

Its the language you understand.

She seemed to sag then. Some inner scaffold collapsed; she looked old and fragile at last.

Its because I love she tailed off.

I know. But this isnt loveits control. And if you cant stop, you wont see your grandson again.

The stew was left to burn, forgotten.

That evening, after Edith retired to her room, Margaret joined Philip on the settee. She sat close, silent for a long while.

No one ever defended me, growing up, she murmured at last. Mother was always right. I just bore it.

He put his arm round her.

She wont force her way on this family. Not anymore.

Margaret nodded, squeezing his hand in quiet gratitude.

From the nursery came the soft scrape of a crayon on paper. Oliver was drawingleft-handedand no one would ever tell him it was wrong again.

Оцініть статтю
Червоний камiнь
I’ll Make a Proper Man of Him “My grandson will not be left-handed,” declared Mrs. Thompson in outrage. Dennis turned to his mother-in-law, irritation darkening his gaze. “And what’s wrong with that? Elliot was born left-handed. It’s just who he is.” “Who he is!” Mrs. Thompson sniffed. “It’s not a ‘trait,’ it’s a weakness. It’s just not done. The right hand has always been the proper hand. The left one is from the devil.” Dennis barely managed to stifle a laugh. It was the twenty-first century, and his mother-in-law still thought like a medieval villager. “Mrs. Thompson, science has long since proven—” “That ‘science’ of yours means nothing to me,” she snapped. “I corrected my own son. He turned out normal. You should start retraining Elliot before it’s too late. One day, you’ll thank me.” She turned and swept out of the kitchen, leaving Dennis alone with his unfinished coffee and a bitter aftertaste from the conversation. At first, Dennis thought little of it. It was just old-fashioned Mrs. Thompson with her outdated notions—nothing new there. Every generation brings its own baggage of superstitions. He watched as she gently swapped Elliot’s spoon from left to right hand at the table, and thought nothing much of it. Children are adaptable, and a grandmother’s quirks can’t really cause harm—can they? Elliot had always been a lefty. Dennis remembered Elliot reaching for toys with his left hand as a toddler, drawing, clumsily, yes—but always with the left. It seemed absolutely natural, just another part of who Elliot was—like the colour of his eyes or a freckle on his cheek. But for Mrs. Thompson, it was something else entirely. Left-handedness was a flaw, a mistake of nature to be fixed. Every time Elliot picked up a pencil with his left hand, she pursed her lips as if he’d done something downright improper. “Right hand, Elliot. You must use your right.” “There have never been, and never will be, lefties in this family.” “I retrained George, and I’ll retrain you.” Dennis once overheard her recounting her “achievement” to his wife, Olivia. How little George, “was wrong too, at first,” but she had caught it in time. She’d tied his hand, watched every movement, punished disobedience. Result? A proper, normal adult. Her tale was told with such pride, such certainty of rightness, that Dennis found it hard to listen. He didn’t notice the changes in Elliot straight away. Small things at first—his hand would hover above the table, as if weighing a hard decision. Then a quick glance toward his grandmother, checking: is she watching? “Dad, which hand should I use?” “At dinner, Elliot asked, looking nervously at his fork. “Whichever’s comfortable, son.” “But Grandma says…” “Don’t listen to Grandma. Just do what’s comfortable for you.” But it was no longer comfortable. He hesitated. Things slipped from his grasp. The once confident motions of childhood replaced by an anxious, careful awkwardness. Elliot seemed to lose trust in his own body. Olivia saw it too. Dennis noticed how she bit her lip each time her mother switched Elliot’s spoon, or looked away when Mrs. Thompson launched another lecture about “proper upbringing.” Having grown up under her mother’s iron will, Olivia had learned not to argue—better to stay silent and wait until the storm passed. Dennis tried talking to her. “Ollie, this isn’t normal. Look at him.” “Mum wants the best.” “It’s not about what she ‘wants.’ Can’t you see what’s happening?” Olivia just shrugged and dodged the conversation. Years of obedience proved stronger than motherly instinct. Things grew worse, day by day. Mrs. Thompson grew bolder. Now, she didn’t simply correct her grandson—she commented on everything. Praised when he used his right. Sighed dramatically when it was the left. “See? Elliot, you can do it! You just have to try. I made a proper person out of your Uncle George, and I’ll do the same for you.” Dennis decided it was time to confront her. He waited until Elliot was playing in his room. “Mrs. Thompson, please leave the boy be. He’s left-handed. It’s fine. There’s no need to retrain him.” Mrs. Thompson looked truly affronted. “Are you telling me what to do? I raised three children, and you think you can order me around?” “I’m not trying to teach you. I’m asking you, please don’t interfere with my son.” “My son? Aren’t Olivia’s genes there as well? He’s my grandson! And I won’t have him grow up… like that.” She said “like that” with such disgust, Dennis felt it in his bones. He realised—this would never be resolved quietly. The next few days devolved into a standoff. Mrs. Thompson pointedly ignored Dennis, communicating through Olivia. Dennis followed suit. An awkward, tense silence settled between them, punctuated by the occasional flare-up. “Ollie, tell your husband the soup is on the stove.” “Ollie, please tell your mother I’ll handle it myself.” Olivia was caught in the middle, pale and exhausted. Meanwhile, Elliot retreated ever further into his little world, curling up with his tablet on the sofa, trying to make himself invisible. Dennis had an idea one Saturday morning while Mrs. Thompson was in the kitchen, slicing cabbage for her beloved borscht—her movements quick, confident, the product of thirty years of practice. He moved to stand behind her. “You’re cutting it wrong.” Mrs. Thompson didn’t even turn around. “Excuse me?” “The cabbage—you should cut it thinner. And with the grain, not across.” She grunted and went on cutting. “I’m serious,” Dennis went on. “No one does it that way. It’s wrong.” “Dennis, I’ve been making borscht for thirty years.” “And you’ve been doing it wrong for thirty years. Here, let me show you.” He reached for the knife; she snatched it away. “Are you mad?” “No. I just want you to do it properly. Here—see, too much water. The heat’s too high. And you’re not doing the beetroot right.” “I’ve always done it this way!” “That’s not an argument. You should relearn. Let’s start all over, from scratch.” Mrs. Thompson froze, knife mid-air, a look of utter disbelief on her face. “What are you talking about?” “The same thing you say to Elliot every day,” Dennis leaned in. “Relearn. You’re doing it wrong. It’s not done that way. Use the other hand.” “That’s completely different,” she spat. “Is it? To me, it’s exactly the same.” Mrs. Thompson put the knife down, cheeks flushed with indignation. “You’re comparing my cooking to… I’ve always done it this way! It’s what I’m comfortable with!” “And Elliot’s comfortable using his left hand. Yet that doesn’t stop you.” “It’s not the same! He’s a child, he can still change!” “And you’re an adult, set in your ways. You can’t be changed, right? So what gives you the right to break him?” Mrs. Thompson’s lips tightened, her eyes shining with fury. “How dare you? I raised three children! I retrained George, and nothing happened to him!” “And how is he now? Is he happy? Confident in himself?” Silence. Dennis knew he’d hit a nerve. George—Olivia’s older brother—lived far away and called their mother twice a year. “I only ever wanted what’s best,” Mrs. Thompson’s voice trembled. “That’s all I wanted.” “I don’t doubt it. But ‘what’s best’ doesn’t mean ‘what you decide.’ Elliot is his own person—small, but his own. With his own ways. And I won’t let you squash them out of him.” “You’re giving me lectures, now?” “I will, if you won’t stop. I’ll point out every single thing you do—every gesture, every habit. Let’s see how you like it.” They stood staring, both tense, on edge. “That’s petty and vindictive,” Mrs. Thompson hissed. “You left me no choice.” He saw something break inside her—a crack in that pillar of certainty she’d always relied on. Mrs. Thompson suddenly looked older, smaller, more vulnerable. “I only meant to help—” she didn’t finish. “I know. But you need to stop helping like this. Otherwise, you won’t see your grandson again.” The borscht on the stove began to boil over, but no one moved to rescue it. That evening, after Mrs. Thompson had retreated to her room, Olivia slipped onto the sofa next to Dennis, silent for a long time with her head on his shoulder. “No one ever protected me like that as a child,” she whispered. “Mum always knew best. Always. I just… accepted it.” Dennis wrapped his arm around her. “But in our family, your mother doesn’t get to decide for anyone else. Not anymore.” Olivia nodded, squeezing his hand in thanks. From the children’s room, the faint scratch of pencil on paper could be heard. Elliot was drawing—with his left hand. And no one told him he was doing it wrong ever again.
Червоний камiнь
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.