I vividly remember the facts of that day — in sharp, clear detail — but I don’t remember feeling anything. My lack of any emotion might be the most noteworthy thing about the day my mother tried to kill my father.
The day was just like any other Sunday afternoon for my family. We had gone to church and had dinner at home in our dining room. We lived on Holly Hill Drive in Atlanta. I was 5. My sisters were 3 and 1.
Sunday dinner was finished. My father went to lie down on the living room couch to read the Sunday paper. Mother was in the kitchen cleaning up the dishes. I was standing in the open entryway at the edge of the living room, just at the place where the room met the hall. The dining room was between the kitchen and the living room. The hall next to which I was standing was another way to the kitchen.
Without warning, my mother came running through the dining room from the kitchen. She had a knife raised in her hand as she ran. I cried out and my father looked up in time to reach out and grab her arm as she tried to stab him.

Why have I kept dreaming about baby in need for last two weeks?
Pearl Harbor: Simple sneak attack or culmination of FDR’s plan for war?
I feel hope for future, because truth is real and love is possible
Free tires for a stranger? We forget all the people doing good
I’d forgotten what I said about her necklace, but she hadn’t forgotten
Goodbye, Molly (2008-2021)
Political systems built on coercion will always produce cheats, liars
Being alone allows us to indulge our worst flaws and avoid change