grandparents
Becoming a grandparent makes getting older something to look forward to - all the fun of parenting, without the hassle.
Tell Me About the Olden Days
Kara watched her grandfather surveying the field. He carefully pulled his tattered black notebook from the chest pocket of his work shirt. It was held together by a blue elastic, that stretched around the coupons and bits of paper that he had collected in his travels. He retrieved the stubby pencil that was behind his ear, licked the tip and opened the book to a blank page. He began making scratchy marks, quickly, as if he were trying to write something down quickly before he forgot.
By Reta Saborowski5 years ago in Families
What She Made Possible.
Cleaning out her grandmother’s attic wasn’t a task Solveigh felt cut out for. Losing a pillar of her family during a year where loss felt so ubiquitous – like it was always at her heels – was overwhelming, and this concrete task associated with the loss felt insurmountable.
By Murphy Barney5 years ago in Families
An Unimaginable Gift
“Are you ever going to open this thing? It’s been sitting here for months.” “I don’t know. I don’t know what’s in it, I might not want to know.” Carissa took the black leather-bound Moleskine from its spot on the desk, where it had been since her mother brought the small collection of her grandfather’s belongings that were marked for her. That had been nearly 8 months ago now, and almost a year had gone by since his passing. “Besides, what if Grampa didn’t want me to see it? It looks like some kind of journal. Maybe it’s private.”
By Erin Sitler5 years ago in Families
The Truth About Grandpa Eddie
The only thing that shocked Clare more when she learned about the passing of her beloved grandfather was being informed that he chose to leave her his Toronto bungalow. Along with the house came an abundance of accumulated boxes occupying nearly the entirety of the basement floor. Despite some hostility from his four other grandchildren, the legality of the situation deemed any objections futile, while Clare’s frequent phone calls and visits with one of her favourite people was proof that she had occupied a special place in his heart.
By Lauren Malton5 years ago in Families
Best left in the past
It was raining the day of the funeral. A huge blanket of swollen gray clouds was smeared across the sky, pelting fat drops onto my neon rainbow umbrella. This was my very first funeral, and it seemed every bit like it did in the movies. Everything was there; everyone was dressed in black, holding their matching black umbrellas, and it was raining.
By Sasha Beres5 years ago in Families
The Paper Thief
I crouched at the edge of the property. In front of me was a vast swath of land that led up to a large traditional brick manor. It's peaks disappearing into the grey clouded sky. I thought of the irony of the pathetic fallacy before me. My clothes felt damp on my skin from the drizzle of rain around me. I sat in silence, as I waited.
By Rachel McKenna5 years ago in Families
The Things We Inherit
"I wasn't even that fat. I remember feeling like I was morbidly obese or something. I was so cute. Right?” She flipped the photo around towards me with the motion of turning a car key. A radiant little girl with a bowl cut. She wore a striped tank top. I had already looked through the stack of photos before she got there. The thought of fat or skinny hadn’t crossed my mind. Just the compassion you feel when you see someone as an innocent child, and whose faults you experience on a daily basis as an adult.
By Rigo Bonilla5 years ago in Families
The Stories We Do Not Tell
She dies on a Tuesday. Quietly; inconspicuously; just as she lived. Her husband calls their children to tell them. He never understood this strange woman who shared his bed, his home, who wore his wedding band for fifty-seven years. But he loved her. As much as he could. As much as anyone can love a person they don’t understand.
By Alexandra Kelter5 years ago in Families
When Seeking Adventure
Loraine Bonny’s physical pain had finally pulled at the threads of her emotional procrastination, as she sat outside of the chiropractor’s office with her head in her hands. The weight of her grandfather Edwin’s recent death, until today, was the most enveloping feeling she could ever remember experiencing. Loraine made her way through the foreign Sierra Vista chiropractor’s office still trying to wrap her head around the encounter she had just experienced at the Food Co-Op, which she was certain had changed her life for forever. She wondered how much longer she would have gone on living complacently if the office in her home town hadn’t closed permanently due to Covid-19 restrictions. For the first time in a week, she allowed herself to relax as the heating pads weighed heavily on her back, sending floods of pain and anguish throughout her body and psyche. She was scared of her aging body, she was upset with her granddad for dying, but mostly, she was mad at him for allowing her to live so plentiful, in ignorant bliss, while so many were starved, impoverished and without basic needs.
By Kamo Youngblood5 years ago in Families











