La vida
06
We Truly Need Your Help! You Simply Must Assist Us!” – My Mother-in-Law Insisted.
4May2025 Im writing this while the kettle is whistling, trying to make sense of the chaos that erupted
La vida
06
My Ex-Wife… It happened two years ago. My business trip was coming to an end and I was due to return home, to Alperton. After buying my ticket, I decided to wander around the city, since I still had three hours left before my journey. As I was walking, a woman approached me—and I recognised her instantly. She was my first wife, whom I’d divorced twelve years earlier. Zina hadn’t changed at all, except her face seemed almost ghostly pale. I could see the meeting unsettled her as much as it did me. I’d loved her deeply—painfully so—and that had been our undoing. I was jealous of everyone, even her own mother. If she was late, my heart would race and I’d imagine terrible things. Eventually, Zina left, unable to bear my daily interrogations—where she’d been, who with, why. One day, I came home with a little puppy tucked in my coat, wanting to surprise her with a silly present. She wasn’t there. On the table was a note. She wrote that she was leaving, that she still loved me, but my suspicion had drained her. She begged my forgiveness and pleaded that I never try to find her… And now, after twelve years apart, I’d run into her by chance in the city where work had brought me. We talked for a long time, until I suddenly remembered I might miss my coach home. Finally, I said, “Sorry, but I have to go now, I’m already late for my bus.” Then Zina said, “Alex, could you do me a favour, please? I know you’re in a hurry, but for the sake of the good times between us, don’t refuse. Come with me to an office—it’s really important to me, and I can’t go alone.” Of course, I agreed, but said, “As long as it’s quick!” We entered a large building and wandered from wing to wing, up and down staircases. I thought it took maybe fifteen minutes. People of all ages passed us—children, pensioners, everyone in between. I didn’t wonder why kids or old folks would be in an admin building; all my thoughts were with Zina. At some point, she slipped into a room and closed the door behind her. Before shutting it, she gave me a look—as if saying goodbye—and murmured, “How strange, I couldn’t be with you… but I couldn’t be without you, either.” I stood outside, waiting for her to return. I wanted to ask what she’d meant by those words. But she didn’t come back. Suddenly, I snapped out of it. I realised I absolutely had to catch my bus, and here I was, running late! Looking around nervously, I was terrified. The building was derelict—gaping holes where windows once were. There weren’t even stairs anymore, just scattered floorboards, down which I carefully picked my way. I missed my bus by a whole hour and had to buy a ticket for a later one. When I bought my new ticket, I was told that the earlier coach I’d missed had crashed into the river. No one survived. Two weeks later, I was standing at my former mother-in-law’s doorstep, having tracked her down. Mrs. Allen told me that Zina had died eleven years ago, a year after our divorce. I didn’t believe her—thought maybe she was just protecting her daughter from my jealous obsession all over again. But when I asked to be shown Zina’s grave, she surprised me by agreeing. A few hours later, I stood by a headstone, looking at the photo of the woman I’d loved my whole life—the woman who, in some impossible way, had just saved it. (Adapted Original Title:) My First Wife: A Spooky Encounter in London that Saved My Life Twelve Years After Our Divorce
So, this all happened a couple of years back. Id been away for work for a whilethe project was just about
La vida
0164
Handing Over the Cottage Keys: When Hosting Friends Backfires—How Emma and John’s Generous Holiday Offer to Friends Became a Comedy of Errors, Unexpected Bills, and Strained Friendships
Lend us the keys to your cottage, well stay there for a bit, thats what our friends asked, blissfully
La vida
07
That Morning, Michael’s Condition Worsened—He Struggled to Breathe. “Nick, I Don’t Want Anything—No More Medicines, Nothing. But Please, Let Me Say Goodbye to My Friend. I Beg You, Unhook All This…” Men from the Ward Gathered. “Nick, Surely There’s Something You Can Do? No One Should Go This Way.” Nick Knew What He Had to Do—Consequences Be Damned. With the Nurse’s Blessing, He Rushed Out to Fetch Michael’s Beloved Dog. The Tearful Goodbye Left the Room in Silence, the Dog Crying Beside His Owner. Afterwards, Nick Sat in the Hospital Courtyard, Ready to Quit His Job—But Anna, Eyes Red from Grief, Called Him the Best of Men. Three Years Later, Nick and Anna, Now a Family, Stroll Down to the River: Their Child in a Pram, Their Loyal Dog at Their Side—Love, Loss, and Loyalty Endure.
In the morning, Michael George was worse. He was struggling to breathe. Nick, I dont want anything.
La vida
07
My Wife Was Sleeping Beside Me… and Suddenly I Received a Facebook Notification from a Woman Asking to Be Added.
My wife, Emily, lay beside me, the nights hush wrapping the little cottage wed made our own in the Cotswolds.
La vida
055
Yesterday, I Quit My Job—No Resignation Letter, No Two Weeks’ Notice: I Set a Cake on the Table, Grabbed My Bag, and Walked Out of My Daughter’s House My “boss” was my own daughter—Caroline. For years, I thought my pay was love. But yesterday, I realized in our family’s economy, my love meant nothing next to a brand new tablet. My name is Anne, I’m 64. On paper I’m a retired nurse living on a modest pension in the suburbs, but in reality I’m a driver, cook, cleaner, home tutor, therapist, and on-call “paramedic” for my two grandsons: Max (9) and Daniel (7). I’m what they call “village”: Remember, “it takes a village to raise a child”? In modern Britain, that “village” is usually one tired granny fueled by tea, painkillers, and paracetamol. Caroline works in marketing, her husband Andrew in finance—nice people, or so I told myself. Always stressed, always rushing. Nursery’s pricey, after-school clubs are tricky. When Max was born, they looked at me like drowning people. “Mum, we can’t afford a nanny,” Caroline sobbed. “We trust only you.” So I agreed—I didn’t want to be a burden; I became the support. My day began at 5:45am—off to their house, making actual porridge (not instant, because Daniel won’t eat quick oats), packing the kids, driving to school, cleaning floors and loos I never used, back for pickups, clubs, homework, football, English lessons. I’m the “no” granny, the rule granny. And then there’s Linda—Andrew’s mum: sea-view flat, face-lifts, new car, holidays. She sees the boys twice a year. Doesn’t know Max’s allergies, can’t calm Daniel’s maths tantrums, never wiped sick off a car seat. She’s the “fun” granny. Yesterday was Max’s ninth birthday. With little money, I wanted a real gift—I spent three months knitting a weighted blanket in his favourite colours, baked a proper cake. At 4:15 the door rang—Linda breezed in: perfume, styling, shopping bags—”Where are my boys?!” My grandsons pushed past me to get to her. “Gran!” She pulled out branded bags—”Didn’t know what you liked, so I got the newest thing.” Two deluxe gaming tablets—no limits, she winked, “Today my rules!” Chaos. Cake forgotten. Guests ignored. Caroline and Andrew beamed. “Linda, you spoil them,” Andrew said, pouring wine. I stood with my blanket. “Max, I’ve a gift, and the cake…” He didn’t look up. “Not now, Gran—I’m levelling up.” “I spend all winter—” He sighed, “Gran, no one wants blankets. Linda got tablets. Why are you always boring? All you bring is food or clothes.” I looked to Caroline, hoping she’d step in. She laughed awkwardly. “Mum, don’t be upset. He’s a kid. Tablets are more fun. Linda’s the ‘fun granny.’ You’re our everyday granny.” Everyday granny—like everyday dishes, everyday traffic. Needed, but invisible. “I wish Linda lived here,” Daniel piped up. “She doesn’t force us to do homework.” Something snapped inside me. I folded the blanket, put it on the table, took off my apron. “Caroline, I’m done.” “Done with what? Slicing cake?” “No. Done.” I took my bag. “I’m not your home appliance. I’m your mother.” “Mum, where are you going?” she cried. “My big presentation tomorrow—who’ll take the kids?” “No idea. Sell a tablet, maybe. Or let ‘fun gran’ stay.” “Mum, we need you!” I stopped. “That’s the point. You need me—but you don’t see me.” I walked out. Today I woke at nine, made coffee, sat outside. For the first time in years, my back didn’t ache. I love my grandchildren. But I won’t live as unpaid help disguised as ‘family’ anymore. Love isn’t self-destruction—and Grandma isn’t a resource. If you want a rule granny, you respect the rules. For now…maybe I’ll take up dancing. They say that’s what ‘fun grannies’ do.
Yesterday, I quit. No resignation letter. No two weeks notice. I simply placed the platter holding the
La vida
03
Night Express: When a Rowdy Gang of Partygoers Takes Over London’s Last Trolleybus, Only to Discover the Chilling Price for Their Wild Ride—A Harrowing Midnight Journey with a Silent Conductor, a Desperate Plea for Escape, and an Unexpected Lesson Waiting at the End of the Line
Night Bus The doors of the night bus folded together with a clatter, letting a burst of warmth and murky
La vida
04
Anna Peterson sat on a hospital bench in the garden, crying. Today was her 70th birthday, but neither her son nor her daughter visited or called to wish her well. Only her ward mate, Mrs. Eugenia Smith, remembered her and even gave her a small present, and the orderly, Mary, gifted her an apple for her birthday. The care home was decent, but the staff were mostly indifferent. Everyone knew it was a place where children sent their elderly parents when they became a burden. Anna’s son brought her here, claiming it was just for some rest and treatment, but in reality, she was simply in the way of his wife. The flat had belonged to Anna, but her son convinced her to sign it over to him, promising she’d still live at home. In fact, the whole family then moved in, and the arguments with her daughter-in-law began. At first, her son defended her, then he stopped and eventually started snapping at her himself. When he and his wife began whispering and fell silent when Anna entered the room, she sensed something was wrong. One morning, her son told her she needed a break and some medical care. Anna, looking him in the eye, bitterly asked, “You’re putting me in a care home, aren’t you?” Embarrassed, he insisted, “No, Mum, it’s just a nursing home for a month, then you’ll come back.” He dropped her off, hastily signed the forms, and left, promising to visit soon. He only came by once, bringing two apples and two oranges, asked how she was, and rushed off without listening. She’s now been here two years. A month after arriving, with no sign of her son, Anna called home, only to hear strangers’ voices—her son had sold the flat and vanished. Anna cried a few nights but resigned herself—she would never go home. The worst part was knowing she had pushed her daughter away in favour of her son. Anna had grown up and married in a village, where life was simple but content. The allure of city life, promised by a city neighbour, led Anna and her husband Peter to sell everything and move. At first things were good, but Peter died in a car accident, leaving Anna alone with two children. She scrubbed stairwells to make ends meet, hoping her children would help her one day. But life led her son astray, and she went into debt to keep him out of trouble. Her daughter, Dasha, married and had a child, but soon her son fell sick and required long hospital visits. Dasha’s husband left, and she later met a widower with a daughter who had the same illness. Anna had saved money for her son to buy a flat, and when Dasha asked for help for her stepdaughter’s operation, Anna refused, thinking her own son needed the money more. Dasha was devastated, told her mother not to come to her in times of need, and they never spoke again. Dasha managed to heal her stepson, and the family moved to the coast, leaving Anna alone for twenty years. If she could, Anna would choose differently, but the past can’t be changed. Rising from the bench, Anna heard, “Mum!” and turned to see Dasha, who caught her as she nearly collapsed from shock. “At last, I found you. Your brother wouldn’t give your address—he only cooperated after I threatened legal action over the flat. I’m sorry I didn’t speak to you for so long. I dreamed of you last week, lost and crying in the forest, and I knew I had to find you. My husband told me to make peace. Our house is by the sea, you’ll love it. Come home with me.” Anna clung to her daughter and cried, but this time they were tears of joy. “Honour your father and your mother, so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you.”
Today is my seventieth birthday and I write this entry sitting alone on a bench beneath the chestnut
La vida
010
Silent Echoes
Dont touch me! Get your hands off! Ah! Someone, help me! a terrified girl shrieked, her voice echoing
La vida
07
The Bride Stood Frozen When She Saw Who Arrived at Her Wedding – “It’s You!” She Cried in Shock as the Grand Ballroom Fell Silent and an Unexpected Guest Changed Her Life Forever
The bride was turned to stone when she saw who drifted through the doors at her wedding. Its you!