Personal Narrative: Divorce Mum had briefly informed me that we were going to a place that would "make sure that the right parent looked after us." This was drilled into me for weeks in advance along with the miscellaneous "I love you more than Dad does" and " you enjoy living with me more than Dad, don't you?" What Mum didn't realise is that children can see straight through people like her so her ongoing effort to unbalance my opinion just floated straight past me like a cloud. My brother, on the other hand, had a tendency to make it seem as if he trusted every word Mum said. Whether he really did or whether it was all a very …show more content…
Trying to find something else to worry about I wandered into Mum's room. I found her standing in front of the mirror getting ready to go. She saw me in the mirror but just continued beautifying herself. She was dressed smartly and was applying her make-up as if this was just a chance to show off. I watched her for a while and there was something provocative and spiteful about her, as if she had changed to a different person I didn't know. I lay on her bed and just stared at the ceiling trying to make sense of my first encounter with the confusion of the real, adult world.
A few minutes later Mum had ushered me off of her bed and out of her room and told me to put my shoes and coat on. Instinctively, I went to help my brother put his shoes on because I knew that's what Mum actually meant. He was three years younger than me but I didn't appreciate that he wouldn't understand the importance of this visit long awaited by Mum. I kept talking to him and sharing my feelings but the only response I got was "where are we going, rach?" Since I didn't know the answer to this question I stopped talking and proceeded to tie his shoe laces.
In the car, on the way to this unknown place I sat in the back seat in a daze. I saw my brother trying to glance out of the window but still seeming quite content so I thought I would follow his lead. Just tall enough to look
“I’m getting in the car, are you coming?” My mom yelled up to me. I grabbed my bag and rushed down stairs.
I’ve been blindsided twice in my life, literally and figuratively. The first time at age seven. A drunk driver hit me while I walked through a parking lot, and again at sixteen, when my parents divorced. The closeness of my family was the basis of our survival after the accident, and conversely, why surviving the divorce was nearly impossible. Dinners were shared at the kitchen table every night, playing “high-low,” sharing the best and worst parts of our day. Friends always filled our house and would play “high-low” too; they found a stability in our home which they could not find in their own.
I was on my way to tutoring about to get into the car. When my parents get into an argument. It was a normal occurrence that happened every time. I already knew that my parents were getting a divorce. But I didn’t expect anything bad from the argument but it began to get physical.
The sight of her, knocked the breath out of me like a two ton mack truck hitting a brick wall. I turned around and bluntly stated that I would like for her to leave. Without hesitation, my papaw laughed and said he could not ask his daughter to leave. By this time, I have grown angrier than a leprechaun without his pot of gold. My next statement, I shall leave than, hit my mamaw hard. Instantly, tears began to flow from her brown eyes, but I stuck to my
Thirteen ended up being the worst year of my life, because my parents got a divorce.
What exclusive memories of affliction are innate in that mixture of a young boy dealing with his parent's divorce is burdensome to imagine. I live with my single mother who struggles to take care of her three kids including me. Although, besides the fact that she was divorced, we are the reason she has to work arduously. Still, she loves all of us and cares about the prosperity of our future.
In 2008 my world came crashing down in an instant. My parents finally gained the courage to inform my sister and I that they were planning to get a divorce and sell our childhood home. I was heartbroken, I was afraid of leaving my comfortable life with my family, but I later learned that it was the best thing for our family. This narrative is not about the troubles of dealing with my parents’ divorce, but about what happened a few years after their divorce, when I traded my life in San Jose for new family members.
As a child, my parents had an emotional divorce. My father was sent to jail when I was only six years old. He was convicted of illegal drugs in his system and he attempted robbery. Since I was only in second grade, I was completely oblivious to what actually happened, all I knew is that I would not have a father for a couple of years. Considering I was so close to my dad, I was devastated.
My sister screams at men on buses. She hasn’t always been like this; it started around the time of her divorce. She was married at the end of her nineteenth year; so, married prematurely, she ended up divorced prematurely also. This is the part of the story that people get sad-eyed at, they frown, and they ask if she had any kids. No, she didn’t. Children were spared.
At the time of my parents’ divorce, I was 9 years old. My family and I lived in Martin, Tennessee, but my mother was a nurse at the hospital in Union City, Tennessee. I had been born and raised to that point in Martin and was in the 3rd grade when I found out my mom, my sister, and I would be moving to Union City without my dad. I can not recall every emotion I had at the time, but
Can you imagine watching your parents fight all day long? Can you imagine over hearing them talk about not being together- even worse getting a divorce? Can you imagine getting separated from two of your siblings? Well, I can and you do not want to experience it.
When my parents became divorced, I was devastated. I was being moved place to place to both of my parents homes. The first couple of years I lived with my mom until I was about six years old. Then, due to my religion of Islam, my dad took custody of me. When I moved to California with my dad, I had a great time. My dad would take me to the gym with him, and I would play in the designated kids area. There, in that kids area, I met my best friend for life. It was then that I realized the divorce my mom and dad decided to have, was a blessing in disguise. I found out he had some of the same similarities as I did, his parents were divorced as well, and he also shared the same passion for video games as I did. Since then, my friend and I have had
I was putting some of my clothes away when all of a sudden I heard the window close. I
When I wake up in the morning, I stare at the blank cream colored walls. I don’t see my light green walls or my posters or even my dresser anymore. I felt like I was in a jail cell, there was nothing but bare walls and a bed. My parents divorcing was honestly one of the most life altering experience’s I’ve ever been through.
When I got downstairs, I checked to weather to make sure I could wear shorts today. I swear the heat outside has been unbearable lately! 103 for three days straight has been ridiculous. As I entered the room my mom greeted me.