I am Alyssa DeLillo. Growing up I have lived a decent life. I was raised in a good household, tried to always keep people happy, and made lots of friends. Up until the age of eight I lived in a small city in California. I had the best parents and grandparents a child could ask for. At a young age though, I lost my father to a heart condition that couldn’t be controlled. At the time of it happening I didn’t understand what was going on but later as I got older my mother explained it to me. For a while, it was all I could think about and it still sits in the back of my thoughts but, I learned to move on and to cope with the sad thoughts. I reminded myself I still had my mom.
My mom had many jobs to help support my sister and me. She tried her
I hope all is well! I am Marissa Vigevani’s younger sister Joanna and I just want to tell you a little bit about her and what you could expect from her in English this year. First off, she is not as smart as she looks. I know that for a fact because this is her first honors class she has ever taken in her life! Now before I get more into how clueless she is let's just talk about her on a more personal level. Marissa was born on January 8, 2001 at Newton Wellesley Hospital. She is funny, athletic, helpful and kind! One thing I would like say however, is that my sister is kind to everyone else except me. I know that for a fact because every time my parents go to teacher open houses they always tell my mom that “Marissa is an angel” and “so respectful
One weekend, we had decided to clean out the house to surprise my mother. My father found papers stashed away that revealed theft charges; my mother had stolen medication when she substituted for the nurse in my elementary school. I remember my dad scouring the house for more evidence, even finding a stash of pill bottles under their mattress. She had another court date coming up that he learned about, just a few weeks before a family trip to Disney. Shortly after that hearing, my family took our last vacation as a whole, knowing that a key member would be lost to us the Monday after our return; she was going into work-release for two months. Before the end of those sixty days, my father learned that my mother had been unfaithful. Their marriage ended, and at eleven and nine, my sister and I said what we didn't realize would be goodbye to our mother for a great while. Her drug abuse continued, and months of time would pass between visits. We saw that sweet, ideal mother devolve into an addict. This loss has shaped me greatly, and it has taught me integrity, strength of character, and great love for others; without these things, my mother cost herself her family and
When I was a child, most of the stories or situations I have been through was, mostly, my dad hitting me and my parents fighting constantly; so pretty much I did not really grew up watching Barney, traveling to places, and going to Disneyland often. I thought I would have to live like this for the rest of my academic life, but one day around the age of eight, my dream came true. My parents had enough of each other, so they went their own ways; even though, I was glad that I do not have to life miserably anymore, I was not. I thought that everything would settle down and live a calm life with my mom, but as a result, I ended up raising my two siblings. My dad left the house, my mom was in her own world, and I had to watch my siblings. I thought my parents divorce would benefit me, but all it did was for me to not live as an eight-year-old would. I thought that my dream of going to a great university and becoming a Physician Assistant came crashing down. A couple weeks later, my dad came back and long-story short, my siblings and I had to go hang out with my dad for
That day I realized I wasn’t as special as I thought I was. I was an accident, a big mistake. I soon realized my mom never graduated from High School and that she could be sent back to Mexico at any moment. My dad, on the other hand, graduated from high school and after I was born he got his associates degree in some type of engineering. My dad’s degree was my families advantage. Even with his degree, my mom is still my idol. She is the toughest person I know. She worked two 8 hour shifts when my dad went to school, she never cared what might happen to her as long as my siblings and I were happy. She walks with honor and pride even when people tried to bring her down, and trust me they tried. They used me as the trigger. I am the reason she never made it to
Everything is perfectly fine, everything is great, then one day it all comes crashing down and shattered pieces are left. My life would never be the same but I guess change is for the best and it forced me to become the person I am today. It’s rough to be the oldest child, especially when your mom is diagnosed with stage 4 cancer and you have 3 younger sisters that look to you for comfort when their mom can’t be there. When the cancer is spread throughout your moms body doctors can’t just get rid of it no matter how badly you wish they could. Rounds of chemotherapy only slow it down, yet it’s still there a lurking monster waiting to reappear at any given moment. Nothing can even begin to describe the fear I felt, and still have to deal
I am Aliyah Shaleese Crawley. I’m just a small town girl. I was born in Fayetteville on September 18, 2001 and was raised in Lake Waccamaw with my mom, dad, and older sister, Amanda. As a baby, I was always bouncing on my bed, looking over the rail. I was constantly smiling with a red rash under my nose from allergies.When I upgraded out of my pen, I was happy playing with my blocks on the regular making houses with them for my dolls play with and sometimes, I'd go organize the tupperware cabinet. I'd sit in front of it, to surprise my mom, even putting a child lock on it so she couldn't get in it.
My life in California was spiraling out of control. I lost sight of my future, of who I wanted to be and where I wanted to go. I was ready to spend my whole life working at Walmart, barely living pay check to pay check, because of some boy. But my mom saved me. She gave me an ultimatum,
When I was around 8 years old my mom got pregnant with a baby boy, and it excited everyone, especially me. Almost 5 months into her pregnancy my parents began to argue a lot, and my mom thought my dad cheated. She decided to have an abortion without letting anyone in our family know. She just pretended she lost the baby, until several months later when the truth eventually came out. My mom’s decision affected our whole family leaving everyone with unanswered questions, hurt, and heartache. Even my mom too this day experiences challenges living with the fact that she took another life, which led to many months of depression, hurt, and
Hi I'm Ahrianne Rodriguez (they call me Ahri for short) and I'm 16 years old. I am Mexican-German born in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico on March 12, 2000 and I am a fluent spanish speaker with english being my second language, yet I excel in english class. I came to the US in 2004 and I live with my grandparents because my dad was deported and my mom moved in with my 3rd father-figure. Despite my hardships as a teenage girl living in the south side of Houston, I am considered very talented. I am an artist, a breakdancer, choreographer, cosplayer, make-up artist, YouTuber, and professional pc gamer. I strive to do my best at all I do. I do everything to the fullest and I'm guilty of being a perfectionist.
Hi I am St. Alyssa I am also known as St Alice. I was born in Schaerbeek Belgium, 1204. I entered a Cistercian convent called Camera Sanctae Marie at the age of seven. I ended up getting leprosy. I was kept in isolation at all times but I always kept my head up no matter how much i was suffering or how sad I was. After being diagnosed with leprosy I then became blind and paralyzed. I stayed strong in my faith with the Holy Eucharist. I had many visions after. IN my visions Jesus apeared and told me to not be afraid because i would be saved in heaven. I was never aloud to drink from the chalice at mass because of my contagious disease. I died June 11, 1250 at the age of 46. I am the patron saint of the sick and paralyzed people
It s all started after my mother passed away in 2010. It was like my whole world turned upside down everything began to be too much I didn't want to do anything but cry. But then I thought about myself and my siblings I said to myself “my mother's gone who’s going to catch us when fall’’ that’s when I started to focus more because I notices how much of a much of an impact it was having on me so I tried to make friends at school but everyone thought that I was“Weird”. Which didn't make anything better because of what happened.
I was only four years old when my mother was murdered by my father I was there when it all started and I was there when it ended. Her death was a quick one so I was happy that she didn’t have to go through a painful death like the ones that I would have to witness first hand. After my mother’s death my life has been full of pain and sorrow. I miss mother but I know missing her won’t do me any good. The instant that father had murdered mother he put me inside of a facility where kids are not wanted.
It was May 17th, 2011, it was a normal school day when my brother and I were told that my mom called to say that she was picking us up early. I was anxious, wondering why we were going home early and breaking our usual routine. When my mom came to get us, the first thing that I noticed was that she didn’t greet us with her usual smile. I was 9 years old, very observant, but not able to sense what was to come. We got into the car, when I asked my mom where we were going hoping
I didn’t have the most normal childhood that there was to have. I had more family issues than a child under the age of 5 should probably have for proper development. My biological mother couldn 't ever behave like a responsible adult and most of the time couldn 't afford to feed me and take care of me, so she would drop me off with my different family members and I would bounce around from place to place, week to week; Because of this, I moved from Medford, Oregon to Colby, Kansas when I was 6 years old. At first, it seemed like a bad dream. I was thrown into a life with people, my birth-father and step-mom, who I had never met or even talked to before, and now I was being forced to live with them. I felt scared and nervous, like I was a poor animal in a cage with no way out. I had to adapt to love them and treat them like they were my “real” parents, which they were, but to me they didn 't seem like it. Nothing seemed right and I knew I needed someone to make things easier; then I met Hayden, a fun, chubby, and bubbly little kid, who I knew because our parents were friends. Hayden became my best friend, when we were both six, for what would be the next 13 years and is continuing to be a great friendship. We’ve had some great memories and adventures and hopefully have more to come. He taught me how important it was to have a friend like that and to always have someone that I could be close to and be myself with.
My parents were born during the Great Depression and by the time I was born they lived an upper middle class neighborhood in the 1960s. I was the last child of five in my family and separated by many years from my other siblings, so at times I felt like an only child. My mother while well meaning, I would come to discover later in my life that she suffered from bio polar disorder with anxiety. This made my formative years difficult and my sisters often acted as my parent, when my mom couldn't and became role models for me. My father did work a lot during my early years, however, he always made a priority when he was home. When I was ten years old, my mother decided that they would divorce. During this time period and in my neighborhood this was unheard of and many of my childhood friends were no longer allowed to associate with me. My sisters and brothers had moved out of the house by this time in their lives and I was left alone to face the divorce and I felt betrayed by them and no longer emulated them.