
Mom’s Punching BagI was born with an intellectual disability and congenital analgesia, the inability to feel pain. Since I was a child, I had been the human punching bag who took beatings meant for my younger sister.
Whenever my sister was caught sneaking snacks, Mom would grab me by the hair and slam my head against the wall.
Blood would run down my face from my head, yet I never made a sound.
When my sister was caught cheating in an exam, Mom whipped me with a belt the entire afternoon.
My skin split and my flesh torn, yet I could still manage a smile.
Every time she saw me covered in injuries, my sister would throw her arms around me tightly and cry her eyes out. She would say she was wrong and promise never to misbehave again.
Mom would be pleased at that, convinced she had disciplined us well.
And so, for sixteen years, I had endured every punishment meant for my sister.
Until the latest monthly exam, when my sister dropped a place in the rankings.
Mom called her over as usual and, out of habit, she raised her hand toward me.
The slap sent the back of my head crashing into the corner of a cabinet, and blood spilled across the floor.
Through my fading consciousness, I saw Mom nodding in satisfaction and pulling my sister, who was wailing her heart out, to her feet.
“There, there. Stop crying. You’ve had your punishment. Let’s go eat something nice and calm yourself.”
Watching their retreating figures, my eyelids grew heavier by the second.
It seemed to hurt a little this time.
I’d better get well soon…
After all, they’d need me again the next time my sister made another mistake.