family
The Avenue
At 10 am , we stopped for coffee. I knew my mother was getting anxious and rather than smoke a cigarette, meditate , use drugs, or indulge in any other suggested method of relaxation , she chose to drink caffeine, lots of it and as quickly as possible . I watched her worship the paper cup that held her hot salvation.
By Bella Blue5 years ago in Fiction
Pear Farm
As he got older, Pedro realized that every day on Gopez Farm was pretty much the same. It had been like that when he was younger, but he didn't mind it; he actually preferred it that way. There was a lot to love growing up after all; playing with the animals, exploring the woods, and the occasional hunting trips with grandpa. When you were happy, every day being the same wasn't such a bad thing.
By Matthew Puzycki5 years ago in Fiction
"The Lessons of the Pair Tree"
A young Boy wandered away from his home, and his chores, one clear sunny morning. The warming Day whispered to him and implored him, saying, “Come and explore the distant lands with me, and I promise you an adventure worthy of any punishment your Elders might inflict for such a dalliance.”
By David White5 years ago in Fiction
Mama's Pear Tree
The perfect storm had catapulted my parents to the home of their dreams. In one fell swoop, Mama had been diagnosed with MS, Daddy had lost his job, and due to a major misunderstanding that would take years to sort out, Grandpa had disowned Daddy and more or less uninvited him to all family gatherings ad infinitum. As grandkids, we were still invited, but we stood with our Daddy and Mama stood with her man. Then our landlord decided that he would rather have his kids live in our house than us, and in the space of one month, we had no job, no house, and no extended family. And Mama was sick.
By Lydia Stewart5 years ago in Fiction
The Last Days of August
I couldn’t bring myself to climb out of the car. I pulled up to the long, winding black driveway what seems like hours ago, but I couldn’t walk the half-mile to the front door. I sat and tried to steel myself. I tried to breathe. My palms drenched my steering wheel. I took a deep breath and attempted to dislodge the large lump settling in my throat.
By Sarah Paris5 years ago in Fiction
Ripped From The Root
Growing up in a small southern suburb, I was only exposed to a limited idea of femininity, and I didn’t relate to it. Maybe it was the era, but it seemed like “feminine” translated to “useless”; clothes for girls were tight, short, and had insufficient pockets. All of these factors became a burden on the playground. Shoes for girls were painful and narrow. Toys for girls were meant to be looked at or styled, not built for action like the toy vehicles intended to crash through walls, or toy weapons that equipped one for neighborhood dominance.
By Candice Kilpatrick Brathwaite5 years ago in Fiction
A PEAR TREE
A young pear tree, full of promise, grew in a garden of life. Surrounded by rich soil, bird song, blue sky mountains, and new construction noise, it thrived. Dark green leaves, tiny buds, thin branches on a yet unsteady trunk, quake in the soft spring breezes. It stood ready for a young city, a new family, a yard, fruit, and recipes of love in the garden of life.
By Lisa Brasher5 years ago in Fiction
Bosco
The musky dew of the morning mist hadn’t yet evaporated back to its origin in the bluish gray Oregon skies before I was already up and ready for the day. Ready for my beautiful Ann to come waltzing into our new home in a few hours from the night shift and dash me her usual three kiss combo before darting off to shower, inviting me in after the first five minutes! Shower time around here is like our fourplay now that we have a walk-in shower and jacuzzi soak tub that overlooks the garden truly setting the scene for romance. The great thing about my wife is that we could be in an alley next to a dumpster and we still feel connected mentally, spiritually and sexually making any scene or destination just that; a place. As long as I see her face and she sees’ mine, it is the best place that could ever be.
By Diana Angela Chang5 years ago in Fiction
The Green Room
"Minna?" "Minna?" "Minna!" 4-year old Jonathan yelled from behind the door. Minna rolled her eyes, set her book down, and slowly cracked her bedroom door. This was the third time today little Jonathan had come looking for her on Christmas Eve - her day off.
By CK Wetherill 5 years ago in Fiction



