Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Family and Young Boy Charley
Book Report For One More Day, By Mitch Albom Made by Kitti Kristanti, Sec 1d For One More Day This is a grade ab discover a family, and as there is a pinch involved, you might call it a ghost story. But every family is a ghost story. The dead sit at our tables long afterward they have gone. This is a beautiful, haunting novel about the family we delight and the lay on the lines we miss. It explores the question, What would you do if you could spend one much day with the ones you love? The storycovers a conversationCharley Benetto has with a sports writer.Throughout the conversation he goes binding and forth amongthe one last day he had with his mother and the importantevents in his life, sharing his feelings both past and present about them. I oddly enjoyed the way he shared throughout the book little vignettes of the times his mother stood up for him and the times he didnt stand up for her. As a mother myself, I couldnt help query if someday my cause children would be able to look back and bump with clarity the sacrifices I have made for them.Throughout the book I hear some of the same things from the juvenile boy Charley that I hear from my own children. It was rewarding and brought hope to see him come to a realization of how his description of the events had been inaccurate and skewed by emotions in the moment. Perhaps my children will too understand someday As a young boy Charley Benetto makes the excerpt to be a daddys boy and does everything his father asks him to. consequently his father disappears, leaving a broken family and an embarrassing situation for the young Charley to endure.Being raised by a single mother has its challenges and megabucks of embarrassment, many that Charley takes out on his mother. So he chooses his father, and he worships him- skillful up to the day the man disappears. An eleven-year-old Charley must then turn to his mother, who courageously raises him on her own, despite Charleys emabarrassment and yearn ing for a complete family. tenner later, Charley is a broken man. His life has been crumbled by alcohol and regret. He loses his job. He leaves his family. He hits bottom after discovering his only daughter has shut him out of her wedding.And he decides to take his own life. He makes a midnight ride to his short home-town, with plans to do himself in. But upon failing to do that, he staggers back to his old house, only to make an astonishing discovery. His mother- who died eight years earlier- is lock in living there, and welcomes him home as if nothing had ever happened. What follows is the one ordinary day so many of us yearn for, a chance to make good with a lost parent, to explain family secrets, and to seek forgiveness. somewhere between this life and the next, Charley learns the things he never k spick-and-span about his mother and her sacrifices.And he tries, with her tender guidance, to put the crumbled pieces of his life back together. I related to this story on many levels. As a single mother myself I could relate to many of the experiences described and gained insight into what my children may be experiencing as a result of events they have no control over. As a daughterwho has at times experienced astrained affinity with my own mother, I gainedvaluable insights into my own childhood memories and interpretations and wasreminded, again, that there is much(prenominal) more to the story that I do not completely understand.And as always the betrayal revealed in the end made the recent and pesky betrayal of my own life seem small and insignificant in comparison. This clever story, told in Mitchs masterful storytelling style, has left me with a new appreciation and understanding for those I love and has motivated me to be more intentional in valuing and cherishing the relationships I enjoy with those I love so that I will not be left with regrets for the experiences and the love lost. I highly recommend this book to anyone who has ever been a or iginate of a family, who has ever lived with regrets, and who has ever questionned the value of their very existence.
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