An Online Literary Journal for Poetry and Flash

Month: December 2022 (Page 1 of 2)

Mount Kenashi

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Nonfiction by Victoria Clayton

Dear Mount Kenashi,

Our journey together started years before I first met you in the winter of ‘16. It was our first-time being introduced and to be honest, I wasn’t particularly enamored by you. You seemed cold and aloof, mysterious, and strange. To get to know you seemed rather arduous. Other things sparked my interest more, the warm embrace of hot spring waters, easy on the eyes snow-covered landscapes and sweet tasting fruits – all much more charming and needing less effort on my part.

For a few days we brushed shoulders, caught on the edges of one another’s existence. To be honest, I thought you were slightly brash and coupled with my inexperience I found myself constantly tripping over myself around you. However, I will admit, we did have a few good runs together but nothing like how others gushed of you. After that brief encounter we parted ways, said our pleasant goodbyes and despite my best intentions I never really expected to see you again. It wasn’t love at first sight, or ride. And I left you, with some fond memories and large indifference; but still, I did promise to call you again, someday.

Years passed by and my desire to see you grew further from my mind. Then this summer, I met some people who knew you. They spoke of your wonder, your warmth, and I knew I had to see you again. Five years later, to the day I found myself in the exact same spot, but this time round, I decided that I would try and get to know you.

It started like any dream would with snowy skies and easy rides. Green fueled adrenaline rushed through my being, and I couldn’t get enough of you. I rose early every morning to come and be with you until the last hours of daylight slipped below the horizon. For a short while the smooth, effortless gliding through the uncomplicated terrain of a new love as light as the morning’s freshly fallen snow was all I needed.

That was, until we hit our first challenge. Everyone who witnessed our whirlwind thought we were ready. Oh, how wrong they were. Ill-prepared for this first confrontation, we ended free-falling down the side of a slippery slope with nothing under our feet to grip on to. The honeymoon had hardened, and your colder side was revealed. Feeling humiliated and hurt I stumbled back into the arms of an old companion and warmed my weary body in healing waters. The next day, persuaded to reconcile, we tried again to find a solution, but neither of us had changed. I walked away tired and bruised; I needed a break.

In our time apart, I dreamt of you every night, your softness, your serenity. In waking hours, I tried to distract myself from thinking of you yet always found myself back, lost daydreaming in old albums. Determined to make it work I came back to see you. This time there was no blizzard or storm just blue skies propping up the illusion of harmony. I still dared not to reapproach the path of where we both got lost. I just wanted to have fun with you again. So, we did, all while ignoring the elephant in the room or rather the tanuki on the mountain.


Victoria Clayton is an artist, writer and wanderer living and working in western Japan.

Parting Gift

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Nonfiction by Marianne Lonsdale

I cooked dinner for Dad in early December, warming up canned baked beans, cut up hot dogs and a little ketchup in a pot. The television news blared from the family room accompanied by Dad’s hacking cough. Dad took up smoking again after Mom, his wife of 62 years, died four years earlier. I pushed open a window to diffuse the constant stream of second-hand smoke but worried the cold air would chill him.

I’d given up on cooking anything other than dishes with hot dogs or ground beef—Dad considered pretty much everything else an extravagance. Individual bowls of iceberg lettuce served as my attempt at something healthy and green. I whipped up his favorite salad dressing, equal parts mayonnaise and ketchup.

I put our plates on the table and we took the same spots that we’d been sitting in since we’d moved to this house when I was five years old. Dad at the head, and me to his right. We missed having my mom at the other end and being surrounded by my sister and six brothers.

He spooned the goopy dressing over the beans mix and the salad, ate quickly and handed me his plate.

“Is there more?” he asked.

He’d weighed in at just 130 pounds at his last doctor’s visit. I wasn’t sure what he ate on the nights that I or one of my siblings were not at the house, and it made me happy to see him with an appetite and eating with gusto.

“Thank you for cooking,” he said. “I really like seeing you. I appreciate your coming.”

Dad said the same few sentences to me on each visit and not much else. His world had shrunk to the walls of his house and his memories of his wife, my mother.

Mom’s death disoriented him; he still cried every time I visited. He was so lonely but had little tolerance for visitors. He was even ready for me to leave after about 90 minutes, usually heading up the few stairs to his bedroom without saying goodnight.

He objected to any help. We’d forced a housecleaner on him and he refused to pay her. He sometimes smelled. He’d just begun using a walker after several falls, including one getting out of the sports car he’d bought at age 86, and he lay on the street as cars sped by until some man eventually stopped and helped him up. But every now and then he’d perk up.

“What’s that bird?” Dad asked after he’d taken his last bite of beans. I took a few steps to the freezer, hoping he’d enjoy the vanilla ice cream I’d brought.

What the heck was he talking about? I stared at him; even his eyes, deep brown with hazel highlights, seemed to have faded, filmy and dull.

“The one that people think brings babies?”

“A stork?” I asked and brought two bowls of ice cream to the table. “Do you mean a stork?”

“That’s it! I knew you’d know.” Dad beamed.

“When you were born, the nurse brought me to the nursery in the hospital. All these babies were in clear plastic boxes, lined up. On the wall behind them was a painting of this huge stork—that bird had the most incredible brown eyes. So big and warm and beautiful. The nurse pointed you out to me and I just stared. My girl had the same eyes. So beautiful. Do you remember me calling you Birdseye? Do you remember that nickname?”

I’d hated that nickname. My sister was Princess and I was Birdseye. The name was ugly. I was jealous of Princess. I wondered why my Dad called me Birdseye but never asked why. Questions weren’t much tolerated in our household.

This story had never been told. I was near 60 years old and Dad was 89. He shared this memory with so much love. He said so little these days, like every thought was difficult to pull out.

His story surprised me. I’d never considered that the name might be one of affection. Dad had an unpredictable temper and I’d often assumed that he found humor in being mean and teasing. And I’d shut down, cutting him out of many events of my life, and not sharing how I felt with him. Now I wonder how many times he and I misunderstood each other, blocking so much love that we might have shared.

I didn’t know that would be our last dinner together, or that hospice care would start for Dad in a couple of weeks, and that he’d die on December 27th. I am so grateful that this parting gift, the truth of the nickname, flew from him to me and I better know how much he loved me, right from the start.


Marianne Lonsdale writes personal essays, fiction, and literary interviews. Her work has been published in Literary Mama, Grown and Flown, Pulse and has aired on public radio. She lives in Oakland, California.

Help?

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Fiction by Kraig Kiehl

She knew this was going to be a terribly busy day. They always were this time of year. Gail took off her wreath earrings, since they got in the way of the headset, and accessed the call database. Her day began.

Gail answered the first call, “Emergency Hotline, what is the location of your emergency?”

A woman on the line whispered, “I’m in the garage.”

Gail knew the steps that followed: she had handled many calls like this in her almost 40-year career.

“Ok, sweetie, please stay on the line with me. Is anyone hurt?”

“No, not really – just my feelings.”

“Ma’am, what is the nature of your emergency?”

“I’ve never cooked a turkey, and my mother-in-law says I won’t be able to do it. And I can’t cook a turkey, but I want to.”

“Can you help me?” the woman pleaded in a whisper.

Gail could help her and did. She had worked in this role since the early 1980s. There was no one better in the business. She was armed with a degree in home economics from the state college, a teaching certificate, and over 30 years’ experience as a teacher at the largest high school in Blair City. The kids called her Mrs. G – short for Mrs. Gail. She was retired now and spent more time with her kids, grandkids soon hopefully, but the community needed her today.

She was the lead dispatcher for the Butterbaster Turkey Hotline. It was Christmas Day and although Thanksgiving kicked her butt each year, it seemed like people needed her more on this special holiday.

She completed her notes for the last call, took a sip of water, and reached to pick up another call. The room was buzzing with activity; over 50 other good citizens, in cubicles, in a large room were busy at work; the people needed them.

“Emergency Hotline, what is the nature of your emergency?”

“Mom, it’s me. Why are you not answering your cell phone?” the female caller asked.

“Tara, honey, I’m at work, and the calls are coming in. What can I help with?”

“Mom, I tried the Supercenter like you asked to get our turkey on points, but they were out of turkeys. Dad’s not helping; he is watching Christmas Day bowl games with Uncle Barry. You know this may be a big night for me.”

“Honey, just go over to Martin’s. I know the manager, and he promised to put a nice turkey aside for us. So just take Daddy’s gas card with you to get the discount. Make sure it’s a thawed bird – we are running out of time. I will talk to you later.”

Buzz, Buzz. “Hi, honey, how’s it going?”

“Mom, it’s terrible. Dad and Uncle Barry are going crazy. State is down by 10 points.”

“No, honey. How did the turkey work out for you?”

“Mom, that’s the thing. Martin’s manager promised to hold your turkey until 11. He had to give it away. Stores are closing. What should I do?”

“Well, well…” Gail stammered.

“You are always more worried about other people’s holidays than our family. I just don’t understand,” Tara said with a sigh.

“Honey, you know that’s not true. What I do is important.”

“Yes, Mom. It is.” Tara said.

“Now, listen. Go down to Sanderson’s and see Joey Rabowski.”

“Who?” Tara asked.

“Joey Rabowski. Your Dad and I went to high school with him. Your Dad always called him Little Joe – not sure he liked that. Joey and I dated before I met your dad. He has always had a thing for me.”

“Oh, Mom, that’s gross.”

“Honey, it’s fine. Joey says he always keeps a turkey for me every year just in case I need it. He also gives me chocolate on Valentine’s Day, but don’t tell your dad.”

“Ok,” Tara said reluctantly.

“Go see Joey. They close soon, so hurry.”

Gail closed her flip-phone and wondered, was Tara right? Did she care more about other families than her own?

I really may have ruined my holiday this year, Gail thought.

“Emergency Hotline, what is the nature of your emergency?” Gail asked, a little less confidently than the calls earlier in the day.

“Hi. No emergency. We just called to get your advice on recipes for side dishes for our turkey. We are cooking a turducken in our outdoor oil fryer.”

“Well,” Gail said, “that is certainly a popular way to cook a turkey, not our recommendation, but a popular way. You are surely going to be fine, as long as you are following the directions.”

“We are…” the caller said and began to trail off.

“Sometimes people don’t thaw the turkeys, and they try to cook them froze– .”

Gail heard an explosion on the line, and the caller screamed.

“Ma’am, are you ok?” Gail questioned.

“Um, um. The turkducken exploded, was shot from the fryer, and is on fire in our front lawn. What should we do?”

“Call the fire department and rush over to Sanderson’s. I hear they have turkeys. They may be frozen but see if they have thawed ones in the back. Little Joe, um, Mr. Rabowski can help you.”

Gail disconnected the call.

“Emergency Hotline, what is the nature of your emergency?” Gail asked.

“Mom, it’s me. We got a turkey. Your old boyfriend hooked us up. He had a 20-pound turkey set aside for you and gave us extra cranberry sauce.”

“Oh, honey, that’s wonderful. We will be fine.”

“Mom, ah, one thing. The turkey is frozen,” Tara confessed.

Her day was not turning out the way she expected. Her husband and brother-in-law had drunk a case of Schlitz beer while watching State lose to Southern. Tara was already at the house.

“Emergency Hotline, what is the nature of your emergency?” the operator asked.

“Ethel, this is Gail. I need some help.”


Kraig Kiehl is an American writer of short stories and fiction prose. Kraig is a retired military officer, a former college professor, and currently an executive for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Kraig lives in Pennsylvania with his wife, Renae, and two needy dogs.

Children’s Cookies

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Poetry by Will Neuenfeldt

Baked snowflakes
naked on their trays
await little cousins
armed with butter knives,
ready to blanket the batch
with freshly dyed ice.
The first trays are pristine
with green Tannenbaum’s
adorn with ribbon and stars
while Frosty holds a pipe
in his parabolic smile.
Only then they delve into
Betty Crocker’s nightmare
as frosting blends brown,
sprinkles flurry onto linoleum,
and the older boy is scolded for
the phallus he penned
onto Frosty’s best friend.
Like the sheets of snow
covering the Holiday landscape
they are unique but
thankfully edible and sweet.


Will Neuenfeldt studied English at Gustavus Adolphus College and his poems are published in Capsule Stories, Open, and Red Flag Poetry. He lives in Cottage Grove, MN, home of the dude who played Steven Stifler in those American Pie movies and a house Teddy Roosevelt slept in.

The Willow in Winter

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Poetry by Jennifer L. Gauthier

In the rain the sleet the snow
the willow bends low
and deep
bowing
like a monk in prayer.

She bends but does not
break.

Her strength is in her
supple
limbs stretching.


Jennifer L. Gauthier is a professor of media and culture at Randolph College in Southwestern Virginia. She has poems published in Tiny Seed Literary Journal, South 85, Gyroscope Review, Nightingale & Sparrow, The Bookends Review, little somethings press, HerWords Magazine and Tofu Ink Arts Press.

Separation Anxiety

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Poetry by John Grey

Winter brings me deep snow.
You get the same old kudzu.
If only my frozen air
could fly south
to your steamy fishing shack,
if parka and gloves
knew their way around a line and hook.

Deer tremble through the flakes,
flirt with the ephemeral.
An alligator pokes a head
through brown swamp surface.
Its message is clear.

We live in different worlds
and there’s no shaking the fact.
The weather has cut me off completely.
You feel a little night time chill
but can’t decide if it’s the breeze
or your fourth beer
that’s behind it all.

If only mangrove and coral snake
could float up from the south,
surprise me at my door,
instead of these insolent drifts.

We haven’t just lost touch.
Our winters are different seasons.


John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Sheepshead Review, Stand, Poetry Salzburg Review and Red Weather. Latest books “Covert” “Memory Outside The Head” and “Guest Of Myself” are available through Amazon. See upcoming work in Washington Square Review and Open Ceilings.

Snow Days

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Nonfiction by Crystal McQueen

It’s been a long week with snow and ice imprisoning families in their homes. My teenagers lie abed as I trudge down the stairs on my lunch break. They should be the ones to shovel the snow, but I don’t wake them. I let them sleep.

Outside, the air is crisp against my face, and my breath puffs like tiny clouds. Basking in the joy of closed schools, half a dozen children take advantage of the slick street with their sleds. My kids haven’t used their sleds in years. They sit in the garage, gathering dust, but I don’t have the heart to give them away.

I smile at the little faces from behind my bundled layers, but they do not see me. Shrieks and laughter serenade me as I work. Ice has hardened beneath the powdery snow and sweat pours down my back long before the top layer of snow is cleared from my porch. I have to stop to stretch my back.

Other mothers sip their coffees, overseeing the raucous play as they chat and giggle. Envy tugs at me. Their kids are still young, and most of them are stay-at-home moms while I still have half a day of remote work left for me after I clear these steps. If I can clear these steps. The ice seems determined to thwart me.

My kids have to work tomorrow. If it isn’t done now, it will be waiting for me when it’s getting dark. Leaving the driveway under a sheet of ice isn’t an option. My kids won’t call off work. They don’t even like to request time off to do things they enjoy like vacations, parties and dates. I like that. It shows reliability, responsibility. Yet, here I am, shoveling while they sleep. The irony is not lost on me.

My neighbor, a firefighter, also chips at the ice on his driveway. He probably needs to work tomorrow too. The rest of the street remains dormant, willing to wait out the weather.

The firefighter’s wife, a mother of a girl and twin boys, calls to me.

“Hey, want to hear a funny story?”

I should get back to work. I need a shower, but I don’t want to be rude.

“Sure.”

“Is that your office up there?” She points to a second-story window facing her home. The children have stopped their play to listen, already giggling.

I frown and wonder where this is going. “Yes, it is.”

“Last night, I was giving the boys a bath, and my kid saw you through the window. He said, ‘Mom, look who’s Googling and drinking wine!’”

The kids burst into fits of laughter. The other moms smile at me with knowing nods.

I play along and give them a chuckle, even though I’m embarrassed. Somehow, a six- year-old boy caught a glimpse of me in a writing workshop, a search for who I might become in the next stage of my life, with a rare glass of wine. I seldom drink. The wine has to be really sweet, and the extra calories aren’t worth it.

I explain none of this as the moms cluster back in their circle, and the kids resume their play, grins still stretched across their rosy faces. Back inside, as I shed sweaty, snow-covered clothes in a pile by the door, I wonder if drinking and shopping online is what those kids think the strange lady-who-doesn’t-hang-out-with-their-moms does all day.

From my office window, I see the little ones surrender to the cold, one-by-one tromping back inside to the warmth of their homes until all that remains are the impressions of sled paths and tiny feet.

Hours later, my boys are well-rested and dressed. Even with their young, strong arms, we spend hours de-icing the driveway, scraping and shoveling until we feel like our backs might break. We are alone, toiling in the fading light, our clothes soaked in sweat.

We get takeout for dinner.

A week passes, and the soreness fades. I spend the day purging the papers in my office. For hours, I shred stacks of papers. Useless medical bills and bank statements, packets of elementary school report cards and quarterly attendance awards. Some go back two decades. My boys each peek into my office, their curiosity drawing them in. For a while, they sit on the floor next to me, folding their long legs into cross-cross-apple-sauce, as I work.

I treasure the time they choose to be with me and discuss their day with their deep baritone voices that are new and unfamiliar, but that I would recognize anywhere. This occurs less and less as the years pass. I try not to think about when they won’t be home anymore, but the thoughts press in anyway. It will happen gradually as if it might escape my notice. No more walks across the hall. Phone calls with occasional visits from college. Then, just birthdays and Christmases. Each passing day drawing them further into their own person. Into their own life. And, I will be there, encouraging them, supporting them where I can. But I won’t be there, all day, every day, watching, guiding, protecting. That won’t be my job anymore.

It is nearly dark when I cart three garbage bags filled with paper shavings across the lawn and into the trash barrel, and I wonder if the neighborhood children see this. I hope they do. Give their little voices something else to talk about. Maybe they will think I am a master criminal or a super spy. Let them imagine a more interesting grown-up life than late night intoxicated shopping. Let them enjoy crafting stories about mysterious adults while they are still safe in their little beds, and their moms watch over them.


Crystal McQueen lives in Northern Kentucky with her husband and two teenaged boys. Crystal attends EKU’s Bluegrass Writer’s Studio, pursuing her MFA and has work in The Writing Disorder and borrowed solace. A passion for adventure and love for her family acts as her inspiration. For more information, visit crystalmcqueen.com.

Christmastide

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Poetry by Ralph La Rosa

(with apologies to Emily Dickinson)

O my dear Prodigious Elf
That merry month is here.
I madly hope You’ll gift myself
With what I’d like—this Year—

A brand-new feeder for my birds
The Phoebes and the Hummers—
Happy wingèd—little—Bards
In Choirs every Summer.

On Wizards of the World’s best Words
Bestow the Wit to Weave—
Worthy webs from their Word-Hoards
That Measure Man’s beliefs.

And lastly—let One—realize
How Chill a life can be
Without those sometimes—sunny—Smiles
That rarely shine on me.


Ralph La Rosa’s poetry appears widely on the Internet, in print journals and anthologies, and in the chapbook Sonnet Stanzas and full-length collections Ghost Trees and My Miscellaneous Muse.

A Rare Snowstorm

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Poetry by Sarah Bruenning

There was snow in the forecast, for the last day of the year and the last day of our trip. We heard that the town wouldn’t know what to do with it – that snow was rare here, even in December. I worried that the stretched, sloped driveway would be impossible to get back down, and that the table you booked months before would sit empty. The day before, the winter sun convinced us otherwise as we climbed over the orange clay and brown desert rocks to get to the closest vortex that looked out over the valley. The day before, the sun was so warm that you had to take off your jacket halfway through our hike, and the daylight was so bright that it ruined the polaroid I tried to take up top. We ate at the pizza place in town for the second time and drove past the nice restaurant on the way back to note where it was. The day before, we dragged our thin blankets outside to sit and drink under the clear sky. The next day, we woke to the silent kind of snow already dusted over the desert rocks and the driveway and our two lawn chairs in the garden.


Sarah Bruenning recently graduated with an MFA from the University of Missouri in St. Louis. Her poetry has been published in Glassworks, River & South Review, and Stonecrop Magazine. She also works as a reader for Boulevard.

Nourish

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Nonfiction by Becky A. Benson

I still have the tiny baking set my mom bought for me from the Tupperware catalog
in the early eighties. The mixing bowls, various and hideous colors of burnt orange, sungold yellow, and dirt brown, (although today I suppose they would call it espresso) were a 1970s left over influence that looked like the color palette had been borrowed from a bag of Reese’s Pieces. The rolling pin is a free spinning wood tool with red painted handles, and of course, the bake ware is metal. Impossibly small sheet pans, muffin tins, loaf pans and even a pie plate.

My stay-at-home-mother made everything from scratch. Everything. And I would
sidle right up next to her in a chair pushed to the edge of the counter and mime along with the baking. My favorite was when she allotted me the extra pie crust to roll out because the extra would always be baked with cinnamon and sugar. It was one of my favorite treats. It still is.

Baking along with my mom was an act of love, one I still practice today. I loved
spending that time with her. Her mother’s recipe for southern chocolate pudding pie is our family’s all-time favorite dessert, and holiday staple. Propelled by both nostalgia and hope for the future, I had the recipe printed on tea towels as a gift for everyone in the family. My eighteen-year-old daughter is now the fourth generation to make this holiday and family gathering staple. Her first job was as a baker at a local bakery and she came home beaming with pride every time she expertly crafted a new treat.

This last Thanksgiving my brother looked on intently as we began making the pie.
Calculating and reprogramming our movements in his mind, filing them into a folder he could open at a later date, and asked my mom and me to describe, in detail every step of the pie making process as we stood at my mom’s stove and did just that.

“You have to temper the eggs,” I told him. “It’s a very important for creating the
custard in your pie and getting it to set up correctly without having scrambled eggs end up throughout the chocolate pudding. Wisk the eggs in a separate bowl, then add some of the chocolate mixture a little at a time, mixing as you go. Next, return the egg mixture to the pot with the rest of the chocolate mixture and stir until it’s nice and bubbly.”

After returning home he promptly and proudly sent us a picture of his very first
homemade pie. It was perfect.

As I knead the dough that has risen in my kitchen next to the warmth of the oven, I
think of the process of creation. Bread making teaches patience with its often, multiple intervals of rising. A science unto itself, baking relies on the correct proportions, of mixing and combining ingredients to create a new chemical compound. A flavorful chemistry experiment. I smell the yeasty scent wafting up to meet my nose as I pull and shape the ball of dough on my counter. I think of the nourishment it will bring my family, the joy over the comfort of it, and the relishing of the taste it provides.

It’s taken many years to become a skilled bread maker, and it’s a skill I’m proud of.
A fresh loaf of warm bread is always a welcomed offering. Creating these devourable masterpieces feels a lot like offering my love. The process is also an act of self-care for me in many ways. It accomplishes the necessary task of providing food, but it’s also a creative outlet where I can dream up new concoctions and combine them in a way to delight the senses.

In the kitchen I can tune out the world. I can focus on the task at hand because it
requires every ounce of my attention to be successful. Here I can leave the worries of my day behind and add a little goodness back into my immediate world. The meals and memories shared in the kitchen have the power to stick with us throughout our lives.

My confident, self-sufficient, enterprising young woman of a daughter once
famously told me, when I sarcastically quipped that she, “apparently didn’t need me for anything,” that she still needed me to make dinner. Then capped it off with, “I’m just a kid. I can’t use the stove.” She was five at the time and happily reports (often) that she’s able to use the stove these days. Moreover, she prefers to do it all on her own now. Sometimes I’ll come home to the most delightful treats I had nothing to do with. I couldn’t be prouder.

I wish I could have spent all these years baking with both my girls, laughing together and dusting their noses with powdered sugar as they tried to sneak a lick off the spoon. The memories we were never afforded the opportunity to make wash over me in a flood. Who would my youngest daughter be had she not died of Tay-Sachs disease at the age of three years old? Would she love chocolate pie as much as the rest of us? Would she, now at should-be-fourteen, also use the stove all on her own? I’ll never know.

My nine-year-old son stands in my doorway as I type and sheepishly asks if maybe
we can make something together today. As a child who spent the entirety of his short life in an unfortunate, harmful, and unstable placement in the foster care system before coming to us just a week shy of his seventh birthday, he relishes in any time we spend simply doing things with and including him. Finding his voice to speak up for even these small requests has been a big step in learning his own agency, as well as connection, and support.

Of course, we can make something together today. I know just the thing. After all,
who doesn’t love chocolate pie?


Becky A. Benson‘s work has appeared in print, online, and various television and podcast outlets. Becky serves as a public speaker, holds a degree in psychology, and works for the National Tay-Sachs & Allied Diseases Association serving families of terminally ill children as the organization’s Family Services Manager.

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