extended family
All about how to stay connected, strengthen ties and talk politics with your big, happy extended family.
The Chase
Laney stepped from the bus, shoulders square, chin jutting defiantly. Jeers burned her ears as the bus whooshed into motion. She marched forward until the bus was out of sight then, drug her feet rhythmically, kicking bits of gravel while her shoulders rose and fell as if conducting a concert punctuated by gasping sobs. The sobs subsided to sniffles as she crested the rise where woods gave way to a swath of dark earth Pawpaw cleared when he was young to harvest lumber for their home, and grow crops.
By Lynn Lopez5 years ago in Families
The Ledger
“This is the last one”. She averted her eyes; wouldn’t look at me. I didn’t blame her, really. The only time she had met Danny was when he showed up, unannounced, on our wedding date. Mom was livid, and it provided a rare moment of bonding between the two of them, the start of the thawing of my mother’s perpetual layer of permafrost.
By Joshua Berwald5 years ago in Families
Grandma Dottie's Secret Coconut Pie
Zoe let out a breath as she climbed the front porch steps of her cousin’s house. While Alyssa was her closest living relative, she didn’t have much in common with the young woman. She couldn’t imagine what had possessed her cousin to invite her over.
By Margarite Stever5 years ago in Families
Mrs C and the little black books
Sitting sipping her coffee, she gets a text from her youngest daughter with a code for the pick-up box next to the mailboxes. She thinks I did not order anything, and puts the code out of her mind. The next day when checking the mail she inputs the code and pulls the legal size envelope from the box noticing the Address Evans, Taylor, & Merrick law firm.
By Rachelle Evans5 years ago in Families
A Different Kind of "We"
#vanlife Not a hashtag I thought I'd ever be using. Some days it was sunsets, coastlines, and beautiful mountain views. Some days not so much. I woke up this morning when the sun started peeking through the gap in the window curtain. My little mini-me was still snuggled in my armpit, snoozing away. I gazed around the "room". Really, the inside of our van, sort of renovated into a quasi-camper situation, but not really. My mind started to drift off into that tangled web of memories I lately have been trying to avoid.
By KayCee Cooper5 years ago in Families
I'll See You Again
Daphne walks quickly towards the twenty four floor tower of doom as the February wind picks up a bit. She pulls her hat down and adjust the scarf around her neck. She looks up at the Water Fall Retirement Home and smiles. Maybe not smile. Sneer. Daphne sneers at the the place she has worked for the past seventeen years. Its been bittersweet and that was okay because that is life. Some days are good and some days are bad. Some shifts are great and some shifts are just horrible. Either way, you live to work another shift. And Daphne's shift was the second shift. She loved the second shift. She wasn't a morning person. She would probably be late everyday ( she barely made it to work by 3:00). There is not a whole lot of doctors and 'big wigs' in her way while she is trying to provide care for the patients. By 5:30, the heads are gone and now she can work relaxed and at her own pace. Daphne actually loved her job. Being a healthcare provider was very rewarding to her. Yes, the job could be overwhelming, exhausting and sometimes messy. Very messy. But Daphne loved her job. She loved taking care of the patients. She loved talking to them, learning about their lives and their families. And as much as Daphne loved her residents they loved here in return. On Daphne's days off, they would miss her. And Daphne knew this because she would hear it from the patients. And some of the other workers. One or two of the coworkers always had an envious tone. Hey, that is some of the bitterness in the bittersweet.
By Lisa Woodlyn5 years ago in Families
Real Family
Family does not have to be defined by blood, at least, that was and is the opinion of Eileen O’Shaughnessy, a mother of five children, two which were on the autism spectrum. Having been adopted herself, she never met her biological parents, and was woman that was always down on her luck financially, with her husband John never being around. He was addicted to his job and never around to help raised the five kids, leaving Eileen to bear the burden of parenthood as a solo act.
By Patrick Coleman5 years ago in Families
Tell Every One, Tell No One
Monday the 7th of December 2079 6:30 AM - My Apartment The sound of an alarm hurls me out of my own bed. Today’s the big day ! Today’s such a big day that I haven’t been able to sleep a wink. Speaking at a funeral can be a daunting task for a first timer. Especially when the task at hand implies that I need to speak of the most amazing man I knew in front of a couple hundred of his closest friends and family. My grandfather was many things, a good man, a father of three and a wonderful husband.
By Olivia Plante5 years ago in Families







