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I have goose bumps--your reply touched my heart. Thank you so much for reading and for feeling comfortable and sharing your thoughts about your family!!!
I sent you the book and I know that you will like it. It touches opon the same things, life, illness, love, happiness and grief. Let me know how you like it.

Thank you so much for you reply. Your story touched my heart as well and it would've been such a dishonor to my Momma not to reply. Knowing her, it was just another way that she was saying, "Hey, I'm still here, in your heart...stop missing me when I'm still here!" I'll share one more moment with you.
She is the one who got me into reading, it wasn't a hard task and I became obsessed with books as an outlet during my childhood. I would write my own short stories too, mainly of the fairytale variety, of course. My Mom was my biggest fan. I credit the love for reading and writing to her.
On my 23rd birthday I received a package from her containing quite the assortment of books. Mind you, these were HER personal hardback books, something my Mom never shared with any of us. Paperbacks, no problem, hardbacks, if it came back damaged you were buying her a replacement. Hehe. She had sent me her books and in each contained messages within the first pages. " Happy Birthday, baby. I love you, Kimmie." "I'm so proud of you.." Some were simple and sweet, others were paragraphs of love. I never looked ahead in any of the books, figured I'd pick the books up and get the messages whenever.
After my Momma passed, I was working night shift and we have ample time to read then. I had one of my Mom's books with me and when I opened it there was a message from her. I burst into tears for a little bit because it made my heart ache so badly I couldn't hardly catch my breath. (I had forgotten about the messages as this was about 2 years later.) As I began reading her book, I found her finger prints on the corners of the pages in orange. My Momma's drink of choice was orange soda and she was a "finger-licking-page-turner". Once again the tears came.
Every time I miss her and I need something, anything, as physical proof that she had indeed existed in my life, I go to that book and touch her fingerprints.
Thank you so much for sending me a book, you have no idea how much that means to me. Perhaps, one day, if I ever get around to checking off items on my bucket list, I'll get to send you a copy of my book. Of course, I need to write it first.
Have a lovely day.

Kim I think you're a wonderful writer and if you ever need anyone to discuss your writing, please feel free to contact me. In The Seeds of a Daisy I sent you, I placed my business card with my email address. Please feel free to email me anytime.
With a big hug
Alison



With an even bigger hug,
Kim
She was also the glue that held our family together and since her passing our family has fallen apart. My father worshiped her and after 54 years of marriage he is lost without her. He was a recovering alcoholic, (not of the violent variety, of the variety that needs just a little to get by..but that's another story for another time, I suppose.) I use the term 'was' because he gave up the fight and gave into his demons when my mother passed. The rest of my family has ultimately went their own separate ways, to their own separate lives and I cannot say that I miss them much.
My Mother kept peace in one of the most dysfunctional families imaginable. I used to call us functionally dysfunctional, until my Mother's passing, that was enough to subdue and make it acceptable though there was an obvious turmoil that swirled in our family. It is like a dam broke loose and all hell erupted upon her passing. I do my best to stay out of it. As the youngest child, not to mention the one who is adopted, I've earned the stigmata of being a black sheep from her biological children (my bio-father and aunt). I embrace that title with open arms, it is what it is I suppose.
I miss my Momma daily, I still pick up the phone to call her once in a while but when reality sinks in, I usually cry. "You are my sunshine" was the song that she'd always sing to me, in the most off-key way and when I hear that song, I smile and cry at the same time. It never fails, when I am nearing the point of inconsolable tears, that song has a way of finding me. Whether it be through a random youtube playlist in which I've been listening to Slipknot or Taylor Swift (two examples of at least a dozen times that this has occurred) or a commercial pops up on the television with that beautiful song playing in the background. When I need her, she's there. Your story, though very different in ways, parallels my own, and I want to thank you, so terribly much for sharing it.