La vida
010
I’m 25 and I’ve Been Living with My Nan for Two Months—After Losing My Aunt, It’s Just the Two of Us Left, and This Is Why I’ve Chosen to Stay
Im 25, and for the past couple of months, Ive been living with my gran. My aunther only living daughterpassed
La vida
05
Leonard Refused to Believe Little Emma Was His Daughter—His Wife Sheila Worked at the Local Shop and Was Rumored to Have Secret Meetings with Other Men. Leonard Rejected the Petite Girl, but Only Grandad Helped Her, Leaving His Countryside Cottage as an Inheritance Only Grandad Truly Loved Little Emma In her childhood, frail, tiny Emma often fell ill. “No one so slight in either of our families,” Leonard would scoff. “That child is barely knee-high.” Gradually, even her mother’s love grew cold. But one person adored Emma: Grandad Matthew. His cottage stood at the village’s edge, by the woods. A retired ranger, Matthew knew every trail and herb. People whispered he was odd, but they still came for his healing teas. After losing his wife, Matthew’s greatest solace was Emma. More and more, she stayed with Grandad, learning about nature and cures. She dreamed of becoming a nurse, but her mother claimed she couldn’t afford Emma’s education. “I’m not destitute,” Grandad reassured her. “If need be, I’ll even sell the cow.” He Left Emma a Home and His Blessing Emma’s mother rarely visited, but when her son got into trouble gambling, she turned up begging for money. “You never come unless you want something,” Matthew scolded, refusing to help and insisting his priority was Emma’s future. Furious, Sheila stormed out, declaring she had neither father nor daughter any longer. When Emma got into nursing college, only Grandad supported her. He promised her the house and a happy destiny, urging her to keep the cottage alive, believing her fate awaited her there. Matthew’s Prophecy Came True One autumn, after Matthew passed away, Emma worked as a nurse but spent weekends at the cottage. During a snowstorm, she sheltered a stranded stranger named Sam who came to her door. After helping with his car, she welcomed him inside for tea. Soon, the two became inseparable. Emma never wanted a wedding; only love mattered, and Sam soon agreed. When their first son was born, everyone marvelled at the robust boy. “What’s his name?” they asked. Emma replied with a smile, “He’ll be Matthew, after a truly good man.”
Harold stubbornly refused to believe that Alice was his daughter. Vera, his wife, worked at the village
La vida
06
I’m 38 and for years I thought I was the problem—convinced I was a bad mum, a bad wife, somehow fundamentally flawed because, no matter how much I held everything together, deep down I felt I had nothing left to give. My daily routine started at 5am: cooking breakfasts, sorting uniforms and packed lunches, getting the kids ready for school, tidying the house, and heading to work where I smiled through meetings, hit targets, stayed organised—no one there ever guessed a thing. At home, I juggled lunch, chores, bath time, dinner, homework questions, sibling squabbles, hugs and mending tears, always present, always in control. From the outside, my life looked normal—even good: family, career, health. There was no obvious tragedy to explain the emptiness I felt. But inside, I was hollow. Not constantly sad, but exhausted in a way sleep couldn’t fix. My body ached, noise grated on my nerves, and I started thinking thoughts I was ashamed to admit: maybe my kids would be better off without me; maybe I just wasn’t cut out for motherhood. I never missed a responsibility, never lost control, so no one—not even my husband—noticed. Whenever I mentioned being tired, I’d hear, ‘Every mum gets tired,’ or, ‘You just need more motivation,’ until I stopped talking about it. Some nights I sat alone in the bathroom, not crying, just staring at the wall, counting the minutes before I had to go back and be the one who copes with everything. The thought of leaving crept in quietly—not a dramatic urge, just a cold idea: disappear for a while, stop being needed. Not because I didn’t love my children, but because I didn’t feel I had anything left to give. The day I finally broke wasn’t spectacular; it was an ordinary Tuesday, when my child asked for a simple favour and I couldn’t respond. I sat on the kitchen floor, unable to move. My son looked at me, frightened: ‘Mum, are you okay?’ And I couldn’t answer. No one came to help or save me. I just couldn’t pretend any longer. Only when my strength ran out did I seek help—from a therapist who finally said what I’d never heard: ‘You’re not a bad mother.’ And explained what was happening to me. I realised no one had noticed because I never stopped functioning; as long as a woman keeps doing everything, the world assumes she can go on. No one asks after the one who never falls. Recovery wasn’t quick or magical, but slow, awkward, guilt-ridden—learning to ask for help, to say no, to accept that rest doesn’t make you a bad mum. I still care for my children and keep my job, but I don’t pretend to be perfect anymore, I no longer let a mistake define me, and I understand now: wanting to run away didn’t mean I was a bad mother—I was simply exhausted.
Im 38, though time in dreams stretches and folds. For years, I believed the fault was minesomehow a bad
La vida
08
A man was enjoying his day off and sleeping soundly, when suddenly the doorbell rang. Who could be visiting so early? Upon opening the door, he found an elderly woman he didn’t recognise—she was frightened. “Who are you here to see?” he asked. “Son, don’t you recognise your mother?” “Mum? Come in… you!” he stammered. He remembered the day his mother was taken from him. He had waited for years in the orphanage, hoping she would come and bring him home. Eventually the pain faded. He graduated from school, attended university, and started his own business. When asked about his parents, he always said they had died. Independent and successful, no one would have guessed he was raised in care. The woman could not recall when she lost custody of her child. In her youth she drank heavily, and her mind would shut off during her binges. She spent time in prison, where she thought of her son—not with love, but because she felt sorry for him. When her second son was born, maternal instincts awoke. She would do anything for this child—putting him first, forgetting the elder son entirely. Her younger son grew up just like her—moving through care homes, and at 15 receiving his first suspended sentence, then another, and eventually prison. Now, desperate to save him from jail, she searches for her successful older son. She sits in his home, crying and clinging to him, telling him tales of searching, praying for his health, and hoping every day to see him again. He believes her, but something inside him warns him to keep his distance. Despite his reservations, he rents her a flat, gives her money, and promises support—while watching closely to judge her true intentions. Before Christmas, he visits the children’s home where he grew up, regularly donating toys and food. An elderly carer approaches him. “Your mother was asking for your address.” “Thank you for helping her,” he replies. “But be careful. She wants you only for money, to help her younger son. She never loved you—don’t trust her!” “Do I have a brother?” “Yes. Ask her yourself.” His throat tightens; it’s hard to breathe. He cannot believe his mother may betray him again. Pushing through his emotions, he seeks out the truth. The woman faces his questioning, reluctant to admit the existence of the younger brother for fear he would refuse to help. Days later, the man is attacked—beaten severely. When police catch the assailants, they confess—his mother had hired them, hoping to kill her elder son and inherit his wealth to give her younger son an easy life. In court, she feigns remorse and begs for forgiveness, but he has made up his mind. “I lived without a mother before, and I’ll keep living without one now!” he whispers through tears.
The man was enjoying a rare day off and snoring away quite contentedly, only to be jolted awake by the doorbell.
La vida
08
Once, I Received a Call from a Distant Aunt Inviting Me to Her Daughter’s Wedding—My Long-Lost Cousin Whom I Last Saw at Age Six. Not One for Family Gatherings, I Tried to Make My Excuses, but My Aunt Declared, “Once in Twenty Years—Don’t You Dare Not Come!” An Invite Adorned with Doves and Roses from Svetlana and Anatoly Arrived, with Reminders, So Off I Went, Grumbling About My Lost Saturday. Arriving at the Reception with a Bouquet, Foul Mood, and Plans to Slip Out Early, I Was Seated Among the Groom’s Jovial Friends, Who, After a Few Drinks, Began Praising Me as the Bride’s Stunning Aunt—and Suggesting We All Get to Know Each Other Better. I Didn’t Recognize the Bride, Who’d Gone from Mousy Kid to Glamorous Blonde, and Felt the Whole Affair—Full of Grumpy Aunts, a Nervous Groom, and a Bride Enamored with Her Own Beauty—Was Rather Gloomy, Saved Only by Our Lively Table. I Missed the First Round of Toasts, but Was Next Up, When the MC Announced, “Now a Word from the Bride’s Young and Beautiful Aunt!” As I Began, All Fell Silent—Only for an Aunt in Pink to Hiss That the Bride’s Name Was Actually Lucy, and the Groom Was Oliver. Realization: I’d Crashed the Wrong Wedding! My Invitation Clearly Said Svetlana and Anatoly, Hall So-and-So—But Apparently, There Was Another Banquet Hall Upstairs. Despite Savage Glares and Accusations from the Real Family, Salvation Came in the Form of a Waiter, Who Redirected Me to the Correct Party, Where My Real Aunt—After Some Odd Winking—Reunited Me with the Actual Bride and Groom. I Was Spared from Handing Over My Gift at the Wrong Wedding, But the Best Part? I Was Still Bidden Farewell by the Groom’s Friends from the First Wedding!
A little while ago, my distant aunt rang me unexpectedly and invited me to her daughters weddingmy distant
La vida
04
What You Cut Away Cannot Be Restored: Taia’s Journey from a Lavish Wedding to a Life Redrawn – Love, Freedom, and the Heartaches of Second Chances in the Heart of England
WHATS CUT SHORT, CANT BE PUT BACK When Daisy showed her wedding photos to friends, she always laughed
La vida
010
A Christmas Eve Adventure at ‘Toyland’: The Red Knitted Dress, an Empty Fridge, and the Surprising Kindness of Our Grumpy Neighbour, Mrs. Davies
The day before New Years Eve, Mum and I popped into Hamleys for a bit of last-minute shoppingshe needed
La vida
03
The Cat Slept with My Wife: Our Hilarious Battle for Her Affection, a Feline Feast of Fish, a Chaotic Cat Attack, and Finding True Happiness Together After a Harrowing Explosion
The cat used to sleep with my wife. He would press his back against her and push me away with all four paws.
La vida
06
My Husband Works, But I Pay for Everything – How I Became the Breadwinner in My Marriage and Why Love Made Me Blind to Inequality
My husband has a job, but I pay for everything. You ask how I ended up here, how I allowed my life to
La vida
06
When He Got Home From Work, The Cat Was Gone: How Quiet Patrick Chose His Unlikely Cat Over a Demanding Girlfriend and Found True Loyalty
When he came home from work, the cat was gone. James is a reserved young man without any bad habits.