It started on the drive home. The new car wash in town was having a grand opening. Laughing people eating sloppy Joe while matching faces in red t-shirts beamed, their hands full of sopping sponges. I turned and the words spilled out after one soft spoken drip. I wish my family owned a car wash together. Or a stand at the farmers market together. I imagined barefooted children helping old women carry watermelons. I wish we were the type of family to own a diner together, and I'd serve on roller skates. The flood from eyes and mouth began. Or own a roller rink, with theme nights on Tuesdays. Or a gas station, or a drive in movie theater. I couldn't stop. I wish we owned a family farm and took silly photos in muddy overalls after five AM breakfasts together. Or ran a summer camp, or an antique shop. I wish we were the kind of family that walked 5k's for a cure. Each confession slammed shut with together. Each dissolved into the air like a child's dream to walk on stars.