Katherine Devaney faces the most difficult decision in her life. Stay in Ireland with her beloved family, and spend the rest of her life in an arranged marriage to a man she doesn't even know or venture to America and start a new life without knowing what challenges lie ahead of her. Katherine Devaney woke up to a cool breeze from the misty fog of the green irish hills of County Mayo. She gets out of bed to get herself ready for another day. As soon as Katherine looks down she sees the gold ring on her left hand and she is reminded of the dreaded arranged marriage her parents are forcing her to be in at only nineteen years of age. She wishes she could break free from this dull life of hers but she doesn’t know how. Katherine walks into the kitchen where she is greeted by her loving mother and father. “Good morning Kathy,” said her mother while stirring her coffee with a spoon, “how about today you go into town and buy yourself a wedding dress.” Katherine knowing her mother means well sighs and reluctantly says, “Sure mother.” Katherine begins to walk up the old broken down stairs her father had built himself when she was a little girl to her bedroom when she is stopped by her father. He whispers to her with a smile, “It’s for your own good Kathy,” and hands her some money. Katherine looks down at the money while she is in her small light pink room and a spark goes off in her mind. She could take the money her father gave to her and instead of buying a wedding dress for
It was finally the day of her contest and the wedding. They went to the wedding that was at the river. While Tripp and Lyla were setting up for the wedding, Lyla’s parents were freaking out on where she was and why she had not been there. Aking around her parents found out that they were at another wedding. They were not happy with them. Tripp and Lyla were having a blast playing for the happily wedded couple. By the time her parents arrived at the wedding, Tripp and Lyla were already packing their stuff. Lyla’s parents stormed in while they were getting payed. Her parents were pissed off; they were trying to rush Lyla to hurry so they could make the contest. Lyla told her parents she don't want to compete anymore and she was only do it to make them happy. After all that commotion Tripps mother gave him back his guitar since he has been good and has decent grades. Lyla and Tripp were able to continue performing for larger
Coming from a lonely and abusive home Mary had to find happiness outside of her house. Her mom made a friend from their church and she happened to have a three month year old baby. Mary always occupied the Richardson’s by helping with baby Alyssa, while also distracting herself from reality. Meeting the Richardson’s ended up being Mary’s worst nightmare. One night the Richardson’s went out and asked Mary and her mother to watch Alyssa.
When Kevin starts having difficulties in school (these difficulties are not expanded on greatly) it begins to test Gil and Karen’s families’ culture and eventually their marriage. This structural issue causes Gil and Karen to doubt their
Daniel has to leave the area and go to live with his Mother in Florida. He decides on his journey that he ca not live without Carla. Daniel hitchhikes back to Carla and finds her at her sister’s wedding. Daniel proposes to Carla in front of the wedding party. Everyone is supportive of Carla and Daniel except for her mother. Carla gets upset with her mother and expresses her frustration with her by saying, “I am sick of you telling me what to do!” Carla plans her wedding with the support of her sisters and father.
As she walks through the door after a long and exhausting day, Monee King is greeted with “Hey Mom!”, from her 4 beautiful teenage girls. She cooks an amazing dinner after cooking for others all day. They sit at the kitchen table and bow their heads in prayer. After a quiet “Amen” the table erupts in stories about each of the young girl's day. She listens and laughs while thinking “This wasn't easy but it was worth it”
“We don’t accept handouts form anyone” says Rose Mary Walls, the mother of Jeannette Walls. In the memoir The Glass Castle written by Jeannette Walls she describes events from her life from childhood to adulthood and how she overcame her struggles. She had to adjust to her family’s situation and comply with how her parents wanted her to act, which was to be independent. Walls’ memoir embodies the theme of being self-sufficient by illustrating scenes that take place in hers and her siblings life that demonstrate the need to become self-sufficient. Jeannette Walls has been learning how to be independent from a young age.
Then, we have Robin Stokes, who is a young, beautiful woman but is simultaneously insecure and anxious and looks for her self-confidence through men who abuse her financially, sexually, and emotionally. Her relationship with her family creates another burden her, as her father has Alzheimer’s and her mother is the only one who wants to take care of him. Eventually, they have no choice but to admit him to a nursing home, but it is a decision that is hard for the both of them. Her relationship with men is also a tumultuous one, in which she has an affair with a man named Russell, and even though she finds out he is married to another man, her good sense is pushed away by her attraction for him.
“That’s why they were only taking a few things at a time; they weren 't really coming for ivory and paintings. They wanted me!” Even when she wasn’t in her room she was always afraid of something. “I always dreaded that my parents would divorce. It was my third biggest fear, right next to the fear that one of them would get abducted by heartmen on the road to Sugar Beach, or my first fear, that I would get sucked into the lagoon by neegee.” Out of all three fears only one seemed to happen. Her parents relationship finally came to an end after a lot of fighting, disagreement, and cheating. “Daddy, I hold your foot, don’t leave us. Daddy, please, I beg you” she cried that day. From then on, except the servants and cook, “it was only women at Sugar Beach.” Even after dealing with something so hard in her life that wasn’t even what affected her the most.
The story’s protagonist, Aidan O’Neill, is cocky, confident, self-righteous, bitter and lonely and yet the reader will be able to identify with him. The supporting cast is well-rounded and easy to empathize with, in regard to their personalities and stories. The underlying romance adds to the redemptive flow and healing process as Julianne and Aidan wrestle with personal issues that affect their individual lives and their work
Furthermore, success is so solo for Kate since seeking the higher education is almost the fateful dream of Morrison clan, from the Great-grand Mother Morrison to Kate’s parents. She works so hard to fulfill it after Matt “betrayed” it. However, by gradually involving in Daniel’s life and his family, Kate learns that the success what she believes in is not as satisfied as she expected before. The people who are successful in the common acceptable concept of success have many problems such as the disagreement between partners and academic dishonesty in their life. For example, Daniel’s parents always dispute with each other in front of other people, the colleague “conducted a highly unprofessional piece of research” (149). However, Daniel’s attitude towards this kind of situations sometime really astonishes Kate. Kate considers “Daniel is naive in some ways,”(149) and Daniel thinks Kate always take everything so seriously. The conflicts between the two lovers are the way to deal with people and the attitudes to life are so different. To make efforts of reconciling the conflicts, Kate feels painful. But this is the course of rediscovering and readjusting herself.
Imagine you have just moved from Kissimmee, Florida and you walk ride into a mansion owned by your dad’s best friend in West Chester, New York. So many emotions are running though your head as you step inside and see a beautiful brunette girl who is staring back at you with antipathy. This is what happened to Claire Lyons as she moved from Florida to New York because of her dad’s job. In the journal I will be connecting, predicting, and questioning.
After the death of her husband, Mother struggles to keep her family together by providing the support and guidance they need, and encouraging them to use good judgment and think of the family as a whole before making their decisions. As the family faces various obstacles, each seemingly more severe than the last, Mother begins
As the tale begins we immediately can sympathize with the repressive plight of the protagonist. Her romantic imagination is obvious as she describes the "hereditary estate" (Gilman, Wallpaper 170) or the "haunted house" (170) as she would like it to be. She tells us of her husband, John, who "scoffs" (170) at her romantic sentiments and is "practical to the extreme" (170). However, in a time
These constant beatings in Maggie Johnson’s home, furniture thrown from parent to parent, and every aspect of her family life as being negative, her family situation is not an extremly healthy one. But, despite her hardships, Maggie grows up to become a beautiful young lady whose romantic hopes for a more desirable life remain untarnished.