ALLEGATION
R/s reportedly Trayzahn (12) and Kamyne (11) have missed a lot of days from school. R/s the children are very smart. R/s it was reported that the family moves a lot. R/s Twaneshia (mom) could benefit from parenting classes and she needs to be held accountable for the children. From CHIPS household summary Christopher (4) is in the home.
R/s the children want to live with their father because has structure and their mother doesn’t have structure. R/s according to Trayzahn, his mother says it’s their fault why they can’t get up and be to school on time. R/s when the children are in their father’s care they are prompt and seems to do very well. R/s Trayzahn speaks highly of her grandmother and he spends a lot of time with her.
The Bragg family grew up with virtually nothing. The father left the family a number of times, offering no financial assistance and stealing whatever he could before he left. When he was there, he was usually drunk and physically abusive to the mother. He rarely went after the children, but when he did the mother was always there to offer protection. Mr. Bragg's mother's life consisted of working herself to exhaustion and using whatever money she had on the children.
...heir parents resulted in damaged relationships and escapes into the unknown. Chris was intelligent and well rounded, but he had several flaws, specifically his inability to make peace with his parents. He could not dismiss the mistakes his parents had made and hurt not only himself but also his entire family in the process. Lily was young, but mature beyond her age. She made impulsive decisions, such as running away with her nanny, but it did not ruin the flawed relationship with her father. Instead, it led to the truth she so desperately needed and a better relationship with her father. Lily’s leaving was the best thing she could have done for herself. Both Chris and Lily left with similar intentions but saw different results. Chris reached the realization that isolationism is not the best policy, and Lily was brought into a world filled with love and truth.
In the story “Swapping Places” by McMillan, the boys would be unhappy if they switched families. Two boys, Dyllan and Billy, are unhappy with their parents and think living at their friend’s house would be better. First, Dyllan asked Billy, do you think your mom will adopt me and Billy responds, “Well, it’s not much better over here.
The beginning of the narrative immediately talks about the absence of the father throughout the weekdays for a long durations. It states “The daylight absence of the men, the fathers, imbued the suburbs with the suspense of desertion.” (Tallent 152) The sentiment expressed in this statement is one that is not so apparent on TV of fathers being gone all day and the mother staying home and taking care of the house. The media only portrays scenes of when families are together which in turn causes both young and old individuals such as Soto to begin to question their family life when in reality there may be nothing wrong with said family but just a misleading images of the
The mother plays a very important part in this story. The mother from the beginning of the story is dealt with a difficult decision of how to feed her 2 boys after her husband leaves her. Since the husband worked, he brought food into the house, but when he left, there was no one who worked. The mother had to get a job, which made her tired. When the mother came home from work tired, she would send the boy to the store. When the mother found out that the neighborhood boys were beating up her son, she repeatedly sent him to the store, so he faces the boys and learns to stand up for himself.
They build a lot of support from their surrounding friends and even though they thought that they could not depend on their parents they quickly realized that they would need them as well as outside sources such as the local police and school peers who were unknowingly involved. All of the girls stay as positive as they can as well demonstrating brave characteristics and acts. When “A” puts the girls in tough situations they immediately send out “S.O.S” text to one another and they quickly compose a plan that makes sure that everyone secrets are kept and they are being put in safe situations. Every character, even the parents, have encountered a taste of what “A” is capable of and they are aware of how dangerous “A” can be because the are constantly asking questions, inferring when the girls are acting any type of way, and ironically each parent play major roles in the community. Spencer mom is a well known lawyer, so “A” makes sure to direct Spencer into situations where she gets into trouble with the police. Emily father is away and serving the country. Aria’s father is a college professor, who knows of Aria’s slip up, as well as knows of the new young teacher. Aria mother works
Brian Motzenbecker supports my idea that the parents are divorced but finds symbolism in what the children discuss and the father’s "quips" (174). I can suggest to the contrary that these stories within the story are meaningful but not symbolic at all. The rapid succession of jumping from one topic to the next suggests to me that the need for conversation without a break is necessary. It keeps everyone from simultaneously t...
Just like Amanda Wingfield from the play “The Glass Menagerie”. But this role of being a mother and a father at the same time doesn’t come to easy, because weather it is shown or not your kids will be affected be the departure of the true fatherly figure. These affects can come differently between the male and female. As for the play the male which is Tom Wingfield and the female Laura Wingfield. These to characters are affected in their own ways by the fact that their father just went on and left them without saying a word. This play was set in the 1940s, Toms and Laura feeling will be different to what a son or daughter would be feeling in the 21st century. But at the same time there will be certain
Lee (her son), Ruth (his wife), Travis (their son), and Beneatha (Walters). younger sister). The younger family lived in poor conditions, and can't. afford to have better living standards. However, Lena is waiting to receive a $10,000 check from her late husband's insurance company.
He wasn’t like the resident fathers of my neighborhood friends. Some seemed accepting and resigned that they had lost their youthful vigor. They worked in banks or delivered the mail. Others tried to maintain a certain urban toughness, but their deportment brought the image of discomfiting coarseness to my mind. I wasn’t too fond of either variety. On weekdays, around six, I’d see all of them amble home toward my apartment building, shoulders hung low, a folded copy of the Daily News pinched between thumb and forefinger.
The first difference that is found between the two fathers is their presence in their homes. While the father in “Alchemy” lives at home with his wife and his daughter Paula the father in “House” lives and calls his wife and daughters, Kathleen and Lorraine, from “Port Hardy where he was logging the Island” (Thien 106). This difference in living at and away from home changes the way their children look at them. Paula looks at her father negatively making her feel uneasy and embarrassed around him and this is discovered after he makes a harsh remark towards Paula’s best friend Miriam to which she “stared at her plate, motionless” (Thien 59). This also makes her wish Miriam would stay over with her and this is opposite to Kathleen and Lorraine who miss their father and want to live a life where their whole family is together which is shown when Lorraine asks her father over the phone “If we have enough money, why do you have to live there?” (Thien 106). While Lorraine and Kathleen love their father and wan...
“Adopted Son” begins with the description of two households the Tuvaches and the Vallins who are living simultaneous lives next to each other. The Tuvaches have three girls and one boy and the Vallins the exact opposite of three boys and
Odile had just heard the news of her mother’s illness. Her husband was in Texas. She had nowhere to take her four children. Odile explained that she had no other choice than to leave her children with Mamzelle. As Odile left, Mamzelle stared at the children, contemplating them. She was unsure of them being with her in her home. During this time of contemplation, she was figuring out what to do with the four children. Mamzelle began to feed the children. During the first few days she realized that she was incapable of taking care of Odile’s children. She had no experience in childcare. Over time, Mamzelle became very familiar with each child and their personalities. She had gotten used to the laughing, crying, and talking coming from each of the children. Each day, she got the children up and ready for the day. She fed the children and bathed them. When the two weeks had passed, she no longer complained about the
Another interesting part of our discussion was related to the preference of inviting more the mother than the father to live with their children. I wondered why was that the case, and I came up with two possible explanations. First, usually, fathers in their younger years are more focused on bringing financial stability to home than to develop a rich and solid relationship with their children. Second, it may be possible that mothers result being more helpful to their adult children, regarding housekeeping and children’s care. These assumptions are based on traditional family roles performed by who are today our grandparents’
Joanne Schieble and Abdulfattah Jandali were unwed parents of a little boy born on February 24th, 1955. They made a life-changing decision to put that baby up for adoption. One of the candidates for adoption was Paul and Clara Jobs. Joanne and Adbulfattah wanted their son to be able to get a college education and a good paying job. Paul and Clara was a lower-middle class couple. The child’s biological parents were reluctant to allow the Jobs to adopt him, but in the end, they allowed it.