30 Days With My School-refusing Sister -final-

She laid out a plan that shocked me. Not because it was grandiose, but because it was brutally realistic.

The silence that follows isn’t empty. It’s the kind that holds things. Forgiveness, maybe. Or the beginning of it.

We treated the school as a partner, not an adversary. We established an Individualized Education Program (IEP) framework that prioritized her emotional stability over strict assignment deadlines. Moving Forward: The Journey Continues 30 Days With My School-Refusing Sister -Final-

We called a family meeting. No parents this time—just me, Mika, and her favorite stuffed animal, a battered axolotl named Professor Gloop.

If you are navigating a similar journey with a loved one, I can share the specific tools we used. Let me know: The of the student involved How long the school absence has been ongoing The school's current level of flexibility and support Share public link She laid out a plan that shocked me

I didn't reach for her. I didn't pull her into the living room. I just stood there, bridging the gap between the hallway and her sanctuary.

I don’t say I understand . I don’t say it gets better . I’ve learned that those are just nicer ways of saying you’re inconvenient . It’s the kind that holds things

"Too much pepper," she muttered as I set the bowl down on the coffee table.

: You play as an artist living alone who suddenly has to take care of your younger sister after she starts refusing to go to school.

Based on the title and common tropes (slice of life, emotional healing, sibling bond), here is a for a hypothetical final volume or arc—structured like a light novel or webtoon season finale.