Saturday, March 21, 2026

...her whole world

 



I am 42 years old. And last month, my mother apologized to me for something she should never have had to apologize for.

It was a Tuesday—one of those Tuesdays when you feel like the day is rushing downhill and you just can’t keep up. Work emails kept pouring in, the kids’ notebooks were scattered all over the table, and something in the oven had already started to smell like it was burning.

My mom called me twice. I pressed “decline” both times. I told myself, *“I’ll call her later. I can’t right now.”*

But that “later” kept stretching further and further awaway.

When I finally called her back that night, she answered on the first ring, as if she had been holding the phone in her hand, waiting.

“Oh, hello, my dear! I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to bother you.”

I sighed. I was completely exhausted.

“What’s up, Mom?”

“Oh, nothing… I just couldn’t open a jar. But don’t worry, I managed. Sorry for calling you so much.”

Something in her voice made my chest tighten.

“Mom, why are you apologizing?”

She paused. Then, with her voice slightly breaking, she said:

“It’s just that… I don’t want to be a burden. You have your life, your things, and I… I’m getting old.”

She even let out a nervous little laugh, the kind people use to keep themselves from crying.

“I shouldn’t have bothered you with something as silly as a jar…”

I froze. The noise of the house seemed to suddenly fade away. Her words fell into my stomach like cold stones.

My mother—the woman who worked two shifts to raise me, the one who stayed up whole nights by my bed when I had a fever—was apologizing because she needed help. Because of a jar.

I grabbed my keys and said:

“Mom, I’m coming over right now.”

She got worried.

“No, son! Don’t trouble yourself. Don’t worry about me.”

But I was already in the car.

When I walked into her kitchen, she was sitting at the table with the jar in front of her. There were traces of tears she had tried to wipe away quickly before I could notice.

“Mom,” I said softly, “you never bother me. Never.”

She wiped her eyes and said:

“I just didn’t want to take time away from your work, from your life…”

That sentence completely broke my heart. Because between schedules, deadlines, and commitments, I had forgotten the most important thing:

I forgot that she built her whole life around mine.

I forgot that while my life kept getting louder, hers was becoming quieter.

I forgot that time—the thing I always say I *don’t have*—is the most valuable thing I can give her.

I opened the jar. Easily.

We sat and talked for an hour. Then another. Not about big things, just about the neighbors, about when I was a kid, about a funny commercial she saw on TV. It felt like something inside both of us had thawed.

When I was leaving, she hugged me. Her hands trembled a little.

“Thank you for coming,” she whispered. “I missed you so much.”

At that moment, I made a decision: I will never again let her apologize for growing old.

Now I go see her every week. Without fail. Without needing a “reason.” Sometimes I bring groceries, sometimes a coffee, and sometimes I just go to sit in the kitchen and listen to her.

And every time I leave, she stands at the door waving goodbye until I turn the corner—just like she used to do when I was seventeen and leaving for school.

Because no matter how old we become, for our parents, we are still their whole world.

Source: I'm glad the sky is painted blue on Facebook

Friday, March 20, 2026

Invite them into the mess.

 


My son told me to come after the presents were opened, after breakfast was done, after the family part of Christmas was over.
I was standing in my kitchen with my reading glasses halfway down my nose when the text came in.
Morning will just be us and the boys this year. Come by around three for pie if you’d like.
If you’d like.
Three little words.
I am seventy-eight years old, and I have buried a husband, signed papers to sell the house we built together, and sat through more hard days than I can count.
None of that cut me like that message did.
My name is Ruth.
For forty-two years, Christmas happened at my table.
Not because I was rich. Not because my house was fancy. It wasn’t.
It was loud and crowded and smelled like ham, burnt rolls, coffee, and wrapping paper warmed by the heater vent.
My husband, Walter, always put the tree lights on wrong. My daughter used too much tape. My son, Daniel, always stole pieces of bacon off the breakfast tray and acted innocent when I caught him.
That house was never peaceful on Christmas morning.
It was alive.
Then Walter died.
Then my knees got bad.
Then the old farmhouse became too much for one woman with a cane and a pill organizer.
Now I live in a one-bedroom apartment in a senior complex outside Columbus, with beige walls, quiet neighbors, and a little fake fireplace that clicks when I turn it on.
I tell people it’s cozy.
The truth is, it’s clean because nobody comes by often enough to mess it up.
The week before Christmas, I kept waiting for Daniel to call and say the usual thing.
Mom, what time can you get here?
He never did.
So on Christmas Eve, I sent the text myself.
What should I bring tomorrow? I can still make the sweet potato casserole if the boys want it.
He answered ten minutes later.
Don’t wear yourself out. Kara wants to keep the morning simple. Just us in pajamas. But come by later for dessert. No pressure.
No pressure.
That’s how people talk when they’re trying to be kind without making room for you.
I wrote back, Sounds good, honey. See you then.
Because mothers from my generation know how to swallow pain and put a happy face on it.
We were trained to make ourselves smaller so nobody had to feel guilty.
Christmas morning, I woke up at 5:47 like I always do.
For one foolish second, my body forgot my life had changed.
I almost swung my legs out of bed thinking I needed to get the coffee going and check the oven.
Then the silence hit me.
No footsteps.
No cartoon voices from the television.
No husband muttering because he couldn’t find the scissors.
Just the hum of the refrigerator and that little fake fireplace clicking in the corner.
I made one scrambled egg.
One piece of toast.
One cup of coffee.
I put the casserole dish on the counter anyway.
I had made the sweet potatoes the night before, even though he told me not to bother.
I told myself I made them because I wanted to.
That was a lie too.
I made them because I wanted to be expected.
Around nine, I sat in my recliner and stared at my phone like it had insulted me.
Pictures started showing up online.
Friends from church with grandchildren in matching pajamas.
Neighbors with crowded tables.
A photo from Daniel’s wife, posted for everyone to see.
The boys were on the living room floor surrounded by wrapping paper. Daniel was wearing reindeer antlers. Kara had on flannel pants and a mug in her hand.
The caption said: Perfect little Christmas with my whole world.
My whole world.
I looked at that sentence so long the screen went dark.
That was the moment I understood something I wish more people would admit.
You can be deeply loved and still be slowly pushed to the edges.
It happens politely.
It happens with soft voices, careful words, and smiling photos.
Nobody has to slam a door in your face.
Sometimes they just stop opening it wide enough for you to walk in.
By noon I couldn’t stand the apartment another minute.
I put on my coat, picked up the casserole, and drove with both hands tight on the wheel.
I wasn’t due there until three, but I left early because sitting alone had started to feel like I was disappearing in real time.
I stopped at a diner off the highway just to be around other voices.
The waitress was maybe twenty-two, with tired eyes and a red holiday headband slipping off her hair.
She topped off my coffee and said, “You heading to family?”
I smiled so fast it hurt.
“Yes,” I said. “My grandsons.”
She grinned and said, “Lucky boys.”
I nearly cried into the cream pitcher.
By the time I got to Daniel’s house, there were bicycles in the driveway and a new basketball hoop over the garage.
I sat in the car for a minute, holding that warm casserole in my lap like it was proof I still belonged there.
When I finally went up to the door, I could hear football on the television and everybody laughing.
Daniel opened it with a plate in his hand.
“Mom. Hey. You’re early.”
Not Merry Christmas.
Not Come in.
Just You’re early.
I said, “Traffic was light.”
It was such a sad little thing to say that I have hated it ever since.
Inside, the boys yelled, “Hi, Grandma,” without looking up from their devices.
Kara kissed my cheek and said, “Oh, you brought that casserole anyway. You shouldn’t have.”
Shouldn’t have.
Not thank you.
Not we were hoping you would.
Just one more gentle reminder that I had brought too much of myself.
I set the dish on the counter beside half-eaten pie and paper plates.
The sink was full.
The gifts were already opened.
The morning had happened.
The real Christmas had already lived and died before I got there.
I sat on the corner of the couch while the game played and everybody talked around me.
I was in the room.
I was not part of it.
And I thought, this is what people don’t understand about getting old in America.
It isn’t always sickness that breaks you.
It isn’t money.
It isn’t even losing the people you love.
Sometimes it’s becoming a person your own family schedules around.
On the drive home, the casserole dish was empty beside me because they told me to just leave it there.
That hurt more than it should have.
Because leaving it there felt like leaving my hands, my history, my place at their table.
I got home, sat in my dark apartment, and cried harder than I cried at Walter’s funeral.
At least when he died, the grief was honest.
This was quieter.
This was grief with manners.
So I am saying this for every grown son, every busy daughter, every tired family trying to protect their “peace.”
One day, your children will learn how to love by watching how you treat the people who loved you first.
And one day, if you’re lucky enough to grow old, you will understand the difference between being cared for and being welcomed.
Please don’t wait for the funeral to say your mother mattered.
Don’t save your father a slice of pie and call it inclusion.
Invite them into the mess.
Let them see the unmade beds, the loud kitchen, the torn wrapping paper, the real life.
Because there will come a Christmas when the chair is empty for good.
And the quiet you protected so carefully will be the very thing that breaks your heart.

Source: The Story Maximalist on Facebook

Thursday, March 19, 2026

love can grow on gentle wings ...

 


In a world that's turning hard,
Keep softness in your heart,
It's not a flaw to show kindness,
It's time we all made a start.

A harsh word or insensitive joke,
can hurt more than you know.
Choose a gentler way to be,
Let positive emotions flow.

With every smile we build a bridge,
A held hand, can help to heal,
With a simple act of compassion,
A better world we can reveal.

So let us be mindful in our thoughts,
And share the warmth that kindness brings,
For in our hearts, there beats a truth,
That love can grow on gentle wings ...

By C.E. Coombes 

Art: Pixabay

Source: Serendipity Corner on Facebook

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

I miss yesterday.









I miss little sticky hands and little bare feet that stepped on my toes

I miss big rough hands that held mine when we walked.

I miss hugs that said I’m sorry and loved me through the good and bad days.

I miss my mother who showed her love in a million ways but never spoke it

I miss my dad who would pick up where I left off in a book and then ask me how it all began. 

I miss the churches of my childhood but now I live in one, built of stone and plaster and tin ceilings

I miss my friends whose imperfections have long since faded in memory

I miss my young self who could work for hours without rest and who strived every day to become superwoman, never quite achieving it. 

I miss a clear young face that never dreamed of wrinkles

I miss the old world, the one I grew up in,

I miss the old folks of yesterday

I miss roaming through the mountains

I miss going to my grandma’s house and smiling in anticipation long before I got there

I miss the aunts and uncles and siblings and a house full of folks on a Sunday afternoon. 

I miss sitting around a gnat smoke and hearing tall tales told by old men with a chaw of tobacco. 

I miss the slamming of screen doors

I miss unpainted houses that smelled of good country cooking 

I miss yesterday.

Source: Journey of a Mountain Woman on Facebook, May she rest in peace.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

And that may be the loneliest lesson of all.

 


The morning I drove myself to the ER instead of picking up my coworker, he called me selfish and said fake friends always disappear.
I stared at his text in the hospital parking lot with my hand shaking on the steering wheel.
Not, “Are you okay?”
Not, “Do you need anything?”
Just: “You seriously couldn’t tell me sooner? Rides are crazy expensive this early. Now I’m stuck.”
For eleven months, I had picked him up before dawn for our shift at the distribution warehouse.
Every morning.
I left my apartment twenty minutes early, pulled up outside his building, and sat there while he finished his coffee, tied his boots, or “just needed one more minute.”
That one minute was usually ten.
Some days traffic backed up on the interstate and I took side roads to get us there on time.
Some days gas prices climbed so high I stood at the pump doing math in my head before swiping my card.
I never asked him for a dollar.
I told myself it was what decent people do.
The truth is, after my wife died, those quiet drives to work became the only regular conversation I had with another human being.
He joked about sports.
He complained about bills.
He talked about his kids, his ex, his back pain, his boss, the price of eggs, the state of the world.
And I listened.
I thought that meant we were friends.
The night before all this happened, my chest started hurting while I was washing dishes.
Not sharp enough to send me into a panic, but wrong enough to scare me.
At my age, you don’t play games with pain like that.
I sent him a message before bed.
“Hey brother, can’t drive you tomorrow. I need to get to the hospital first thing in the morning. Having a health issue.”
That was the message.
Simple.
Clear.
Human.
His reply came back less than a minute later.
“Man, you should’ve told me earlier. How am I supposed to get there now?”
I read it twice because I honestly thought I had missed the second part.
The part where he asked if I was breathing okay.
The part where he asked if I needed someone to sit with me.
The part where he said, “Forget work. Take care of yourself.”
There was no second part.
Two hours later, while I was sitting in a paper gown waiting for tests, my phone buzzed again.
He had put up a post online.
“Funny how people show their true colors when you need them most.”
I felt something sink inside me that had nothing to do with my chest.
I thought about every cold morning I scraped ice off my windshield before sunrise.
Every time I circled the block because he wasn’t ready.
Every time I skipped breakfast so I could leave early enough to pick him up.
More than two hundred rides.
More than two hundred chances for him to say, “Thanks, man. I appreciate you.”
Now one single morning—one morning when I needed help myself—and suddenly I was the villain.
That was the moment it finally hit me.
I wasn’t his friend.
I was his transportation plan.
I was his convenience.
I was the part of his life that worked so smoothly he forgot it was a gift.
And maybe that’s what happens when you keep showing up for people without ever drawing a line.
Your kindness stops looking like kindness to them.
It starts looking like a duty.
An arrangement.
An invisible contract you never signed.
Then the day you choose yourself, even once, they act like you betrayed them.
A nurse came in and asked if I had anyone to call.
I almost laughed.
I said, “No, ma’am. Not really.”
She touched my shoulder for one second, and somehow that felt more honest than a year of shared morning rides.
My tests came back okay.
Stress, they said. Exhaustion. A warning, not a disaster.
I drove home alone.
No passenger seat full of complaints.
No waiting outside someone’s apartment.
No pretending that being useful is the same thing as being loved.
The next morning, he texted me again.
“Are you picking me up or what?”
I looked at that message for a long time.
Then I deleted his number.
Some people don’t miss you when you’re gone.
They miss what you were doing for them.
And that may be the loneliest lesson of all.

Source: The Story Maximalist on Facebook