immediate family
Blood makes you related, loyalty makes you family.
The Leap
I was making breakfast when there was a knock at my door. My boyfriend, Travis jogged to get it as I took the steaks out of the cast iron skillet. While I waited for him to return, I fixed our plates and listened out for anything interesting. I didn’t hear a word; not a casual greeting or the surprised reaction of my mother finding Travis in my apartment.
By Maya Bibby5 years ago in Families
Nine of Cups
Vikki Coffey is thirteen years old. She will be fourteen on August 12, 1995. Her siblings are all showered and in bed. All school uniforms for tomorrow are ironed and ready to go. Lunches are packed in brown paper bags complete with crust-less prosciutto cotto and sliced artichoke sandwiches. She can go to sleep now. It’s 9:45 pm. Today’s her favorite day of the week: Sunday! Every Sunday she takes all her siblings with her to a gathering at her school. It is a peaceful routine compared to the chaotic and unstable household she lives in. Vikki takes them to the park behind the school afterwards too. She attends a non-denominational school in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. At the weekly gatherings they learn about manifesting, affirmations, astrology, chakras, growing your own food, grounding techniques, herbs, and how to meditate. Learning these tools for life gives her strength and hope. She sits on her bed to meditate. She opens her well-worn journal. Vikki reads a passage out loud that she learned at school: “Whatever you visualize during meditation, believe that you have already received it, and it will be yours.” Vikki starts to purposefully write out her manifestation statements just like they do in homeroom every morning. After meditating, she writes a new affirmation: “Thank you love energy for this, for me, that you financially provide a way for my mother, siblings, and I to all live together without our father in a new home in the best way for me and all involved or something better and thank you love energy for this, for me.” She meditates carefully visualizing her affirmation and opens her eyes to write about her day in her journal:
By Nikki Torres5 years ago in Families
Footlocker of Fortune
As he burst through the courthouse door, Cody jumped for joy as an immense sense of relief flooded over him. It had been 6 months since his great-uncle died and finally all the legalities were done. Cody Lightfeather is now the proud owner of his own home- his first! Which is perfect since just a month before he asked Mariah to marry him. He was sad to lose his uncle, Rod RedElk, but sometimes misfortunes can lead to good fortune. Passing on at the ripe old age of 96, his Uncle Rod had lived a good long life.
By Janet Freedland5 years ago in Families
The Back Room
When I was growing up, I spent a lot of time at my grandma’s house. All of the decorations there were floral patterned and smelled like an old book and cigarettes. Scattered throughout the living room and hallways were pictures of my grandma with my mom, dad, and myself. It was as if nobody existed outside of us four. Her life was a simple bundle of four, but she was always alone. The house didn’t change as the years went by, and I can even now picture the layout so perfectly that I could walk it blindfolded. It’s strange how much you understand a person by the rooms they inhabit and those they ignore. Her house had a long hallway that ran away from the living room. Next to the living room was the pale-yellow kitchen with the wood cabinets that would creak when you would walk by them. Down the hallway was a series of four alternating wooden doors with hardware of gold and handles made of yellowing plastic that was meant to look like glass. The doors barely fit into their places and would scrape the carpet with a semicircle when opened. The first room on the left was the laundry room that stunk like soap and stale water, even from the outside. The two doors on the right were her bedroom and her bathroom with the green toilet, green tiles, and green sink. At the far back of the house, down the long hallway was a door that I never saw a soul go into, not even my grandma. A phantom room with no occupant and no apparent purpose.
By Dalton Frizzell5 years ago in Families
Old Movies
Ernie sat cross-legged on the tattered powder blue carpet, a VHS copy of "Some Like it Hot" in one hand, and a can of warm, flat Mr. Pibb in the other. Her dad hoarded Mr. Pibb like some folks hoard cats. Speaking of which, she noticed a glob of dried cat puke near her right ankle, and absent-mindedly began to pick at it. How long had THAT been there, she wondered?
By Margaret Anich5 years ago in Families
LUCKY
The screams coming from the second floor window are blood-curdling, accusatory, and unmistakably my mother’s. From where Eric and I are sitting on the asphalt, we hear every word as we brace ourselves for the counter-point of angry, masculine barks. Now here comes Daddy, agitated, making his way out the front door and toward us. He’s got his keys in hand and is jerking his head toward the Toyota, so we know we are in this for the long haul. The last argument had ended with a call to the police when Daddy took us out of the house and did not return until close to midnight. On these impromptu outings, we endured hours in the car as our father jabbered on about going into business. He never mentioned the fights, but we knew that the culprit was always money. More specifically, the lack of money caused by our father’s reckless spending. But it was his dreams of big business that drove our mother insane.
By Nola Browning5 years ago in Families
A Day in the Life of an Octopus
The smell of semi burnt waffles fills my nostrils. I can hear my mother loudly whisper to the girls to open a window. Just 5 more minutes is all I need as I pull the blanket over my head. Too late. The smoke detector is blaring. I rush to open the door to find Cadence frantically waving a magazine towards the ceiling to clear the air. "Hey, Mommy! We're almost done with breakfast!" she excitedly squeals as she hops down from a stool. I look over at the DIY breakfast creations and crafts that cover the kitchen counter and give the nod of approval while displaying my best-tired smile. "Let me know when you're ready and I'll freshen up while I wait," I replied. I figured why not slip back into the bed for 10 more minutes.
By Brittany Fells5 years ago in Families
Savior in the Shadows
I hold the note out from my body like it’s a rattler getting ready to strike. This decision has to be a quick one. Torch it or don’t torch it? If I torch it, Sienna will never hear her father’s last words. If I don’t torch it, she could lose the innocence that’s shrouded her life since she was six years old. Life ain’t easy, huh?
By Donna Sparks5 years ago in Families
Gone before gone
She knew suddenly that it was over. Her father was gone. Well, not gone entirely as he was in the room on the bed next to her chair. Though the four grey walls contained them, there was a certain endless emptiness lingering in the room like an infinite moan. She breathed in the hospital air, salty and pungent in her nose. It was nothing like the cool Autumn air that loitered outside just beyond the plain hospital window. The rude smell forced the obvious into the reality she had tried to deny. Her father was sleeping now, his face pallid and his hands clammy. The doctors had said there was no end to the spiral of death so slow yet certain. She looked at the time piece on her left wrist, half past eleven. She grabbed his left hand and held it in both of hers. She kissed it gently and sealed her eyes for a split second. “Time, take me back to when he knew who I was,”she begged. “Daddy, I miss you. It’s your little girl, please” she yearned, “say my name.” She opened her eyes, gently lowering his hand back down.
By Jade Robey5 years ago in Families









