The Lion's Pride vol. 1 (Fall 2013) | Page 4

1 Liberation Natasha Mercado I am currently in the medical assisting program. My essay documents the first time I felt a sense of liberation after cutting off all of my hair in grade school. My eyes were fixated to the ground, studying the immaculately swept cement stairs leading to grandmother’s house. My father held on tightly to my hand as he struggled to balance my sister’s and my overnight bags. My sister Chanel stood in front of us, her arms rebelliously crossed on her chest and her eyes seemingly stuck in the rolling position. As all three of us approached the big, white, seemingly menacing house that retained my grandmother, I felt my pulse quicken and my heart race. As my father rang the doorbell I didn’t take my eyes of the floor. I heard the latch unhook and the door creak open slowly. “Well there they are!” my grandmother exclaimed. I raised my head to meet her gaze. I immediately noticed the way her mouth turned upward and her lips twitched when she saw my appearance. I was only seven at the time, but even at that age I knew how my mother’s side of the family had revulsion for my father.