La vida
09
When Every Penny Pinched Becomes a Prison: The Day Valerie Told Ian She Was Done with a Life of Sacrifice for “Our Future” and Chose to Start Living Now
The kitchen felt stifling as I scrubbed the plates, lost in my thoughts, when Edward strode in and flicked
La vida
01
My Son Has a Great Memory: The Hilariously Disastrous School Christmas Play Where My Five-Year-Old Went from Cucumber to Wonky Gingerbread Man, Three Cheery Surgeons Became Costume Designers, and the Whole Nursery Was in Stitches at His Crooked-Toothed, Wise-Old ‘Bun’—All Topped Off with a Salad-Green Hat and Fatherly Instructions the Night Before
My son has always had a remarkable memory. Even at nursery, he could recite every single line from the
La vida
02
How Could She?! Didn’t Ask! Didn’t Consult! Honestly, Who Walks into Someone Else’s Flat and Acts Like She Owns the Place? No Respect! Goodness, What Did I Do to Deserve This? I Devoted My Life to Her, and This Is the Thanks I Get! She Doesn’t Even See Me as a Person! — Nina Wiped Away Her Tears — She Doesn’t Like the Way I Live! Maybe She Should Focus on Her Own Life! Sits Alone in Her Studio Flat Thinking She’s Grabbed Happiness by the Tail. No Decent Husband, No Proper Job — Just Some Remote Work. How Does She Even Live? Yet She Thinks She Can Teach Me a Thing or Two! I’ve Long Forgotten What She’s Only Just Beginning to Understand!
How could she?! Didnt even ask! Didnt consult me! The nerve, just turning up at someone elses flat and
La vida
08
Looking for a Mistress – When Your Wife Decides It’s Time for You to Find a Lover: A Hilariously Chaotic Day of Spousal Training, Reluctant Makeovers, and Marital Mischief in Suburban England
IN SEARCH OF A MISTRESS Emily, what on earth are you doing? I could hardly believe my eyes as my wife
La vida
05
We’ve Still Got Things to Do at Home… Granny Val opened the garden gate with difficulty, limped her way to the door, fumbled with the old rusty lock, entered her chilly, unused cottage, and sat down on a chair by the cold stove. The air inside smelled abandoned. She had only been gone three months, but the ceilings were already thick with cobwebs, the old chair creaked in protest, wind howled in the chimney—the house greeted her grumpily: Where have you been, mistress? Who did you leave me with? How are we meant to survive the winter?! “I’m coming, my dear one, just let me rest a moment… I’ll get the fire going, we’ll warm up soon…” Only a year ago Granny Val bustled around her old home: whitewashing, touching up paint, fetching water. Her small, sprightly figure bowed before icons, worked at the stove, darted through the garden—planting, weeding, watering. The house thrived with her—floorboards cheerfully squeaked under her light steps, doors and windows flew open to a gentle touch, and the stove diligently baked delicious pies. They were happy together: Val and her old cottage. She buried her husband early, raised three children, educated them all and set them up out in the world. One son became a sea captain, one a colonel in the military—both live far away and rarely visit. Only her youngest, Tamara, stayed on in the village as head agronomist, working from dawn till dusk; she visits on Sundays with a pie and a hug, then disappears again for the week. Val’s comfort is her granddaughter, sweet little Sarah. You could say Sarah was raised by her granny. And what a beauty Sarah turned out to be! Big grey eyes, waist-long hair the colour of ripe wheat, curly, thick and shining—a real glow to it. She puts it up in a ponytail and the lads in the village are left speechless. Lithe and graceful—how did a village girl get such poise, such prettiness? Val herself was charming in her youth, but side by side with Sarah—she’s the shepherdess, Sarah’s the princess… And she’s clever, too. Sarah finished an agricultural degree in the city, returned home to work as an economist. Married the local vet, and thanks to a young families’ government scheme, they landed themselves a brand new home. And what a home! Sturdy, solid, all red brick. By village standards—a manor, not a house. But Granny Val’s house has its orchard—everything grows and blooms. Sarah’s new place—only three lonely sprigs in the garden. Growing things never came naturally to Sarah, gentle as she is, sheltered by her grandmother from every draft and heavy chore. Then little William was born, and there was no time for gardens. Sarah kept urging her granny: Come live with us! The house is big and modern, and you won’t have to light the fire. Val was beginning to feel her age—she turned eighty, and it’s like her body waited for the milestone to give up. Her once lively legs carried her less and less. So she agreed at last—lived with Sarah for a couple of months. Then one day she heard: “Gran, you know I love you—but all you do is sit! You’ve been on your feet all your life! Look at me—I want to set up a home, but I need your help…” “I can’t, darling, my legs have given out… I’m old now…” “Hm… got old as soon as you moved in with me, did you?” Not quite what Sarah hoped for; soon Granny, not much use anymore, was sent home. From then, stung by disappointment, Val’s health declined. Her feet shuffled slower and slower—tired from a lifetime of rushing. Getting from her bed to the table became a struggle, and getting to church—impossible. Father Brian, the parish priest, came to visit his once-most-active helper. He sized up the scene with a caring eye. Val was writing letters for her sons—her usual monthly updates. The cottage was chilly despite the stove being lit; the floor icy cold. She wore an old woolly cardigan, faded headscarf, and worn-out slippers—hardly the neat, proud woman she used to be. Father Brian sighed: she needed help. Maybe Anna, from nearby, still young enough to lend a hand? He brought bread, gingerbread, and half a warm fish pie (a gift from his wife, Alexandra). Rolling up his sleeves, he cleaned the stove, brought in armfuls of firewood, lit the fire, filled up a large blackened teapot. “Dearie me! Oh! I mean, Father—could you help me with these envelope addresses? My handwriting is chicken scratch—they’ll never arrive that way!” He wrote out the addresses neatly, throwing a glance at her letters—big, shaky writing: “I’m doing very well, my dear son. I have all I could want, thank God!” Letter after letter, the tales of Val’s ‘good life’ were all blurred with salty splotches. Anna took over looking after Val, while Father Brian visited regularly, bringing Communion; on big holidays, Anna’s husband would give Val a lift to church on his motorbike. Life settled a little. Sarah didn’t visit, and a few years on—she fell gravely ill. For ages, she’d blamed her stomach aches on ulcers, but it turned out to be lung cancer. Within six months, Sarah was gone. Her husband nearly moved onto the grave—drinking away his misery, sometimes sleeping at the cemetery. Four-year-old Will was left dirty, hungry, unwanted. Tamara took him in, but her job kept her busy, so Will was soon destined for boarding school. The place was decent, with a strong headteacher, good food, and weekend visits allowed. Not a real home, but Tamara couldn’t see any other way. Then, one day, Val came roaring up in Anna’s old motorbike sidecar, driven by their burly neighbour Peter, sailor tattoos and all. Both looked like they meant business. “I’m taking Will in with me,” she said. “Mum, you can barely walk! How will you manage a little boy? He needs feeding, washing—” “As long as I’m alive, Will isn’t going to a home,” Val insisted. Tamara, surprised at her usually gentle mum’s resolve, fell quiet and packed Will’s things. Peter bundled old and young into the sidecar, delivered them home. Neighbours clicked their tongues: “Kind old dear, but losing her wits—she needs caring for herself, and now she’s taken on a child? He’s no puppy! Where does Tamara get off, letting this happen?” After Sunday service, Father Brian visited, half-expecting to find a hungry, neglected Will to have to rescue. Instead, the house was warm, the stove ablaze. Will, clean and happy, listened to “The Gingerbread Boy” from an ancient record player, and the ‘frail old lady’ was bustling around the kitchen—greasing trays, kneading dough, cracking eggs for a cheese cake, as sprightly as she’d been years ago. “Father dear! I’ve just started cheese buns—wait a bit, there’ll be a treat for Alexandra and young Fraser, too!” Father Brian came home, amazed, and told Alexandra what he’d seen. She thought a moment, then reached for a big blue notebook, found a page, and read: “Old Nora had lived her long life well. All her hopes and dreams had drifted by, now sleeping beneath a snowy grave. One bitter February night, she prayed for ages in front of the icons, then lay down and told the family: ‘Call the priest—I’m dying.’ Her face went as white as the snow outside. The family called the priest, Nora confessed and took Holy Communion. She lay there, not eating or drinking, for a whole day—only the faintest breath showed her soul hadn’t flown. Suddenly, the front door opened—a blast of frosty air, a baby’s cry. ‘Hush—it’s Granny dying in here!’ ‘Well, I can’t silence a newborn, she doesn’t know any better!’ It was Nora’s granddaughter, Maggie, home from the hospital with her red-faced new baby. That morning everyone else had left for work, leaving Nana and the new mum alone. Maggie had barely any milk yet, couldn’t settle her daughter, and the baby screamed, utterly disturbing Nora’s dying. Nora lifted her head, focused her clouded eyes, and with effort, sat up, swung her bare feet onto the icy floor, feeling for her slippers. When the rest of the family rushed home, fearing the worst, they found Nora not only alive but far healthier than usual—walking the room, soothing the contented baby, while her exhausted granddaughter snoozed on the settee.” Alexandra closed the diary, smiled at her husband, and finished, “My great-gran, Vera, loved me so much, she just couldn’t let herself die yet. Like that old song says: ‘It’s far too early for us to leave—there’s still work to be done at home!’ She lived another ten years after that, helping my mum, your mother-in-law, raise me—her cherished great-granddaughter.” Father Brian smiled back at her.
Theres still important work left to do at home Gran Vera managed to unlatch the garden gate, shuffled
La vida
07
A Parent’s Love: Little Blessings, Holiday Traditions, and the Gift That Truly Mattered—How Gratitude, Laughter, and One Scary Taxi Mix-Up Showed the Fierce Heart of Family
Parental Love “Children are the flowers of life,” my mother used to say. And my father, always
La vida
07
“YOU’RE TOO LATE, MARINA! THE PLANE’S GONE! AND WITH IT, YOUR JOB AND YOUR BONUS! YOU’RE FIRED!” — HER BOSS SHOUTED DOWN THE PHONE. MARINA STOOD IN THE MIDDLE OF A TRAFFIC JAM, STARING AT THE OVERTURNED CAR SHE’D JUST PULLED A STRANGER’S CHILD FROM. SHE LOST HER CAREER, BUT FOUND HERSELF. Marina was the model corporate high-flyer—a regional director at 35, tough, efficient, always on call, her life scheduled to the minute in her Google calendar. That morning was the biggest deal of her year—a contract with a Chinese firm. She needed to be at the airport by 10:00. Leaving with time to spare (she was never late), she sped down the motorway in her new SUV, rehearsing her pitch. Suddenly, a battered old Ford ahead skidded, hit the verge, and tumbled into a ditch, landing wheels-up. Marina slammed on the brakes—calculating instantly: “If I stop, I’ll be late. Millions on the line. They’ll destroy me.” Other drivers slowed, took photos, drove on. She checked her watch—8:45. Time slipping away. Foot on the accelerator, she almost swerved round the forming jam, when she saw a child’s gloved hand pressed to the window of the upturned car. Marina cursed, hit the wheel, and pulled onto the shoulder. Running through the snow in stilettos, the smell of petrol filled the air. The driver—a young man—was unconscious, head bloody. In back, a five-year-old girl trapped and sobbing. “Shh, it’s okay, sweetheart!” Marina shouted, yanking at the jammed door. When it wouldn’t budge, she smashed the window with a stone, glass nicking her face, scratching her designer coat. She pulled the girl free, then—with help—got the driver out just before the car ignited. Shaken, tights torn, hands trembling and face covered in soot, she sat in the snow, clutching the girl. Her boss’s number flashed again. “Where are you?! Check-in closes in minutes!” “I can’t make it, Mr. Harrison. There’s been an accident. I was helping survivors.” “I don’t care! You’ve blown the deal! You’re finished! Out of the industry, do you hear!” She hung up. The ambulance arrived. The paramedic said, “They’ll live. You’re their guardian angel—without you, they’d have burned.” The next day, Marina woke up jobless. Her boss had kept his word—besides firing her, he blacklisted her in their tight-knit field. Doors kept slamming. She slid into depression, financial pressure mounting. “Why did I stop?” she wondered each night. “If I’d just driven on, I’d be in Shanghai sipping champagne. Now I have nothing.” A month later her phone rang—an unknown number. “Marina? It’s Andrew—the man from the Ford. You saved us. Please, we’d like to see you.” Visiting their council flat, Andrew (in a back brace), his teary wife, and their daughter Dasha (with a crooked angel drawing for Marina, black hair just like hers) offered her all they had: tea and gratitude. “I don’t know how to thank you,” Andrew said. “We’ve no money… but if you ever need anything…” “I need a job,” Marina admitted ruefully. Andrew had an idea—his mate, a quirky Yorkshire farmer, was looking for a manager—not mucking out barns, but sorting paperwork, grants, logistics. Modest wages, room included. Desperate, Marina went to see. Gone were the marble desks and Armani suits—just a battered desk, jeans, and wellies. She got to work—streamlining systems, securing subsidies, finding new markets. Within a year, the farm turned a profit. And she discovered a new peace—fresh bread, a loyal dog, no more layers of fake makeup or backstabbing games. For the first time, she felt alive. One day, a city delegation came to source farm produce for top restaurants—her former boss among them. He barely concealed his scorn, sneering at her weathered face and old jeans. “Well, Marina? Queen of muck, are we? You could have stayed on the board. Regret playing the hero?” She smiled, feeling nothing but indifference. “No, Victor. I saved two lives that day—and a third: my own. I saved myself from ever becoming you.” He harrumphed and left. She headed to the barn to greet a newborn calf, its nose nuzzling her palm. That evening—barbeque with Andrew, Lena, and Dasha—now close friends. Under vast stars invisible in the city, Marina knew she was finally where she belonged. Moral: Sometimes, losing everything is how you find what really matters. Career, money, status—they can all go up in smoke in an instant. But compassion, a life saved, and a clear conscience stay with you forever. Don’t be afraid to change course when your heart says “stop”—it might just be your true turning point.
Youre too late, Susan! The flights gone! And with it, your promotion and your bonus! Youre fired!
La vida
00
Excuse Me, Sir, Please Don’t Push—Oh, Is That Smell Coming from You? A Chance Encounter at the Shop Leads Rita to a Down-on-His-Luck Stranger with Sapphire Eyes, a Hidden Past, and Handy Skills, Sparking an Unexpected Romance, Family Drama, and a New Beginning in Middle Age
Sir, do you mind not pushing? Goodness, is that smell coming from you? Sorry, the man mumbled, shuffling aside.
La vida
07
Excuse Me, Sir, Please Don’t Push—Oh, Is That Smell Coming from You? A Chance Encounter at the Shop Leads Rita to a Down-on-His-Luck Stranger with Sapphire Eyes, a Hidden Past, and Handy Skills, Sparking an Unexpected Romance, Family Drama, and a New Beginning in Middle Age
Sir, do you mind not pushing? Goodness, is that smell coming from you? Sorry, the man mumbled, shuffling aside.
La vida
09
Oksana, Are You Busy? A Mother’s Request, a Midwinter Mishap, and a New Year’s Night That Changed Everything
Annie, are you busy? her mum asks, poking her head around her daughters door. One minute, Mum!