# Piano Proposal Story - A big brothers addition. I’m in grade nine, which means I’m supposed to be too old to care about what my little brother does. But I do. He laughs when he plays that thrift-store keyboard Mom got him. The thing wheezes more than it sings, and two of the keys are permanently silent, but somehow he makes it sound alive. He smiles when he’s banging away on it, and that smile isn’t something I can make with math. I’m good at math. I’ve always been good at math. Dad says I’m “rigorous.” He says I “think in frameworks.” He puts my report cards on the fridge like they’re stock market tickers. But math never makes me laugh. It never makes me want to stay up late, like music does for my brother. Still, I know how to use what I’m good at. So, I wrote a proposal. It wasn’t about piano scales or professional musicianship. Dad would have eaten me alive if I tried that. Instead, I gave him charts about relationships. I pulled data from studies on fathers who supported versus fathers who judged, and what that did to their kids’ self-confidence, resilience, and mental health. I even included a scatter plot comparing “supportive fathering” with “probability of Sunday phone calls when the kid is thirty.” Dad respects a scatter plot. I threw in stories from myth, too, because math alone wasn’t enough. I told him about Zeus, who demanded perfection, and all the gods who cowered under him. And then about Prometheus, who gave fire to humans even though it wasn’t efficient, even though it was reckless, even though it was beautiful. I said trust is like fire: dangerous, but it lights the world. It took me weeks, and by the time I was done, Mom had already bought that clunky little keyboard. My brother was pounding out “Mary Had a Little Lamb” like it was Beethoven. But still, I handed Dad my packet: twelve pages, charts, footnotes, even a cost-benefit analysis that ended with, “Return on Investment: a son who smiles when he sees you.” Dad read it. Twice. And then, for the first time in months, he changed his mind. The next weekend, a moving truck pulled up. Inside: a grand piano. Black, polished, the kind of thing you see in concert halls. My brother stood there wide-eyed, hands sticky from beans, and just stared. Mom didn’t fight it. Dad didn’t gloat. They both looked at each other, and for once, agreed: music is worth pursuing. I don’t really care if my brother becomes a musician. That’s not the point. The point is, for the first time, Dad listened. Not just to me, but to him. And when my brother played his first awkward notes on that giant piano, the house felt, just for a moment, like it wasn’t split in two.