I watched the white-haired man walk slowly into the bank. He used a cane to steady himself. He moved slowly. He looked very frail.
I knew the face, but I didn’t really know that face anymore. I had known this man when he was young and strong and vibrant, not when he seemed more like the men from my grandparents’ generation.
But though I hadn’t seen him for years — and though he had changed a lot — this man was still my father.
Until today, I hadn’t seen anyone in my family for roughly eight years. Although I never would have called us this when I was a child, the truth is that we were a seriously dysfunctional family. We didn’t know that phrase then — and even if we had known it, we would have been in denial.
Once the dream of millions, is U.S. citizenship becoming a burden?
I am angry that life doesn’t work the way I once learned it should
If you’re sure what’s important, everything else seems trivial
Relationships he couldn’t mend were tragedy of my father’s death
I want to live a life my kids will want to emulate as they grow up
Idiots in Congress haven’t heard of ‘law of unintended consequences’
FRIDAY FUNNIES