‘Light’ shines on Fassbender, Vikander Romance

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It’s hard to fathom, but Michael Fassbender has only been working, really working, for eight remarkable years. Ever since director Steve McQueen saw what a decade’s worth of casting directors didn’t and chose him to play Irish hunger-striker Bobby Sands in 2008’s Hunger, his career has been in the Hollywood fast lane. The first time Fassbender appears in Hunger, his character is being forcibly stripped and washed. Fassbender is thrashing and naked, howling with the fury of a guy who’d pretty much given up on basic human vanity, let alone a career. He was 31 then and had no reason to think the next ten years of his life would be any more fruitful than the prior ten, most of which he’d spent behind a bar as a bartender.

“I had already been turned down by two drama schools,” Michael Fassbender, who grew up in Ireland, explained to a New York Times reporter. He was 19 then, and that rejection led him to London to try his luck auditioning for the Drama Centre there. He was accepted, but later dropped out stating, “In drama school, they don’t think of movies as a pure form like theater, and it’s films that I love most. There’s an intimacy in movies — I wanted to have the same impact on others that movies had on me. “

mike1It’s difficult to imagine that before 2007, although Fassbender had played small parts in television and film, arguably his most well-recognized role had been as a man who swims across the Atlantic Ocean to apologize to his brother over a pint in a Guinness commercial. Since 2007, Fassbender has starred in three Steve McQueen films, and has been sought after and worked with directors such as David Cronenberg, Cary Fukunaga and Ridley Scott; he had an especially glorious bit in Quentin Tarantino’s ‘‘Inglourious Basterds.’’ Today, Fassbender is both Magneto in the ‘‘X-Men’’ series, a darling of critics and intellectuals, and starring as the ultimate icon of inventiveness and imagination, Steve Jobs.

His latest role, takes him far away from a character with superpowers or super fame. In The Light Between the Oceans, based on the bestselling novel by M.L. Stedmen, he plays a lighthouse keeper with a dark secret.  While filming the movie, he met and fell in love with his co-star Alicia Vikander, a Swedish actress and dancer, who had just won a best supporting Oscar® for her role in The Danish Girl.

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The 27-year-old actress, who now lives in London, shot from relative obscurity to international superstardom with four major films in just 12 months—Testament of YouthEx MachinaThe Man from U.N.C.L.E., and The Danish Girl. She’s both a muse to modern fashion designers—a year ago she became the new face of Louis Vuitton—and a dream for costume designers doing lush period dramas.

Her mother, Maria, was a company member at the state theater, which provided a kind of collective creative playground for Alicia. She performed small roles there as a child. By nine, she was studying dance at the Royal Swedish Ballet School and was, almost without realizing it, on the path to becoming a serious dancer. However, the stress and her desire for perfection was too overwhelming.

She found relief in the form of acting when, at age 16, she was cast in a mini-series. But her hopes were dashed when she applied to, and got rejected by, the local drama school. Then, one day, while working at a Levi’s store, she got a call from a casting director. A Swedish film director, Lisa Langseth, was looking for a girl to star in Pure, about a deeply troubled young woman whose only solace is classical music and who falls in love with an older, rather cruel conductor. She got the part, and her performance captured the eyes of several casting directors.  It was not until Alex Garland’s script for Ex Machina landed in her lap that she had the kind of material that would make her a movie star. The plot revolved around a computer analyst charged with administering a Turing test to an alluring female android. In fact, “Is the really hot droid human?” was the central dramatic question—one that any actress would love to sink her teeth into.

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In The Light Between Oceans, Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander portray doomed newlyweds whose makeshift family collapses under the weight of moral dilemmas. Alicia portrays Isabel, whose whirlwind romance and marriage to lighthouse keeper Tom (Fassbender) results in heartache when she suffers two miscarriages. Their grief dissipates when a dinghy washes ashore carrying a dead man and a baby girl, whom they opt not to report to authorities and instead raise as their own daughter (Florence Clery). For years, they live in familial bliss, until a chance encounter with Lucy’s birth mother (Rachel Weisz) sends the couple into a moral tailspin.

Fortunately, the real-life couple’s love story is much rosier. It began in 2013 with a classic meeting on the dance floor during the Toronto International Film Festival, where the two were promoting their respective 12 Years A Slave and The Fifth Estate.

“We had a boogie,” Vikander remembers. “He’s a very good dancer.”

The actors reunited a year later to shoot Oceans (in theaters nationwide Friday), where their relationship blossomed on the period drama’s set in Australia and New Zealand.

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What with all the success, and the highly visible romance, Vikander has found herself the focus of public curiosity. She’s well aware that the public likes to build female stars up, only to take them down a few notches, and of the cruel power of tabloids and social media. But with her unending drive and focus to be a success that is matched only by his, the young couple has the makings of a perfect pair that can effortless combine work and play.

Words Matter! Political Discourse Is Even More Confusing

male politician talk in public

By Katherine Sharma

I’m an Internet political junkie. I follow commentary on the presidential campaign from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Politico, etc. and even occasionally dip in the roiling Alt Right pro-Trump waters of Breitbart.com (Get a feel for its politics with these headlines from the tenure of Stephen Bannon, who is now the Trump campaign CEO: http://www.mediamatters.org/blog/2016/08/17/breitbart-news-worst-headlines/212467.)

I also watch those shouting panels of pundits, partisans and journalists on television news programs. So I just have to address several language issues that are driving me crazy. The new favorite word of TV panelists is “relitigate,” as in “I don’t want to relitigate the issue.” Now “litigate” means “to contest at law,” which makes no sense for a bunch of TV talking heads. But “dispute” is an archaic meaning of “litigate,” and “dispute again” is what I think these folks are trying to say. Guys, please, just admit you want to stop arguing and move on; you may actually win points in the “court of public opinion.

American Politician Addressing a Crowd of Supporters

Another term bandied about in this year’s uncivil political discourse is “bigot.” A bigot is someone “who is intolerantly devoted to his or her own prejudices and opinions,” per Merriam-Webster. So, Donald Trump, it makes no sense to label Hillary Clinton as a bigot with an explanation that equates failure to deliver effective minority policies with prejudice. Of course, Donald’s imprecise wording stirs constant debate, both important and trivial; there were arguments over whether he was saying “bigly” or “big league” in speeches, for example.

Meanwhile, everyone yammers about “dog whistles” this year. For the mystified, a political dog whistle means messaging that has a general interpretation but also another intended meaning for a target group. An example would be using the president’s full name, Barack Hussein Obama, while talking about Islamic terror policy to tap into those who suspect he’s really Muslim or a Muslim sympathizer. “Talking point” is another term that I find popping up in media discourse this year, often with an accusatory tone. Pay attention when someone calls out a “talking point,” however, because it may be spotlighting political propaganda. A talking point is a succinct, persuasive statement of one side of an issue, purposefully developed by politicos and then launched through media personalities and sympathizers’ responses so that media repetition eventually frames the debate and turns the favored argument into accepted fact. That’s why so many TV panel discussions degenerate into shouted “talking points.” For a quick primer on more political jargon, read https://www.bloomberg.com/quicktake/american-political-jargon

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.

Nearly Lost, If Not For A Second Chance

Sad boy

Our runaway son gave my bickering husband and me a real wake-up call.

Drew came storming down the stairs half-dressed, holding a shirt. The scowl on his face told me he was angry, but I was in no mood to fight with him that morning. My head was pounding and I had to get Lucas off to school on time. As it was, our argument the night before had been a doozy, sapping my strength while at the same time, still keeping me up for most of the night.

“Damn it, Brenda! Can’t you do anything right?”

I sighed. “Now what’s wrong?”

“Look at this shirt.”

“What’s wrong with it?”

“You can’t tell?”

“No.”

“It figures.”

I didn’t want him to goad me into an argument, so I quietly said, “Tell me what’s wrong with it.”

“It’s all creased, that’s what’s wrong with it,” Drew answered in such a nasty tone that it triggered a negative response from me.

“If you don’t like the way I iron, then do it yourself.”

“That’s a great answer. Just what I expected you to say.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Take it any way you want to,” Drew said, practically shoving the shirt in my face. “If you were a loving wife, you’d fix it.”

I was at my limit. “I don’t believe you!”

“Stop fighting!  Why can’t you ever stop fighting?” Lucas shouted at us as he ran upstairs to his room holding his ears.

Drew didn’t even hear Lucas’s plea or see him run from the room. Instead, he continued to vent at me. But I had seen the pained look on our boy’s face as he fled from us. I hadn’t realized how much our constant bickering was affecting him. He was only seven, but sometimes he acted more mature than Drew and I did. Still, I was so busy trying to protect my own feelings from Drew’s assaults that I had never even stopped to consider Lucas’s.

Where had our marriage derailed? And what had happened to the love we shared that was supposed to last forever?

We had been so much in love. When I met Drew for the first time at a high school dance, I knew he was the guy for me. I could picture spending the rest of my life with him—living in a white house with a picket fence and an enclosed backyard where our children could play. I had to be his girl, and I made that my primary goal. Luckily, it didn’t turn out to be all that hard, because he asked me to dance that night.

Girl helping boy with boutonniere at prom

We soon began to date and stayed a couple all through high school. We planned on getting married as soon as Drew found a decent job. They were great plans, but we never expected we would have to get married.

I wanted to remain a virgin until the wedding night. Drew and I had discussed this and agreed to wait. Then one night after graduation we went to a party at a friend’s house and had too much to drink. I ended up getting pregnant, thus derailing our plans.

Drew was upset, but he realized it was as much his fault as mine, and maybe more. We weathered that storm, though, protected by our love. I worked as a receptionist in a law office until Lucas was born. Drew had a good job working as a car salesman and he also worked in a department store a few nights a week. When Lucas was old enough for daycare, I went back to work.

Things went well, until there was an autoworkers’ strike in Detroit. That’s when everything soured for us. Drew’s car dealership fell on hard times and being worried about paying our bills, he would lash out at me. I’m sure most of it was unintentional, but it still hurt. And this behavior became a pattern. Whenever things went wrong at work, Drew would become extremely difficult to live with. He would never physically hurt me, just verbally vent at me. Knowing it was only temporary, I tried to get through it. Besides, I loved Drew and I knew that he loved me. I kept telling myself that he was only frustrated and that it would pass.

Now another strike was going on and business at the dealership had practically come to a standstill. Drew had been going on interviews for other sales positions on his days off. Hopefully, he’d find another job or the strike would be settled before our marriage disintegrated.

“Where are you going?” Drew snapped. “This isn’t over.”

“It is for me. I have to get our son off to school,” I said as I left the room.

“Lucas, please come down,” I called up to him from the bottom of the steps. “I’ll drive you to school.”

He didn’t answer. I knew that he had heard me because his room was right at the top of the stairs. I called to him once more and still got no answer, so I walked upstairs and found him sprawled across his bed, sobbing.

I gently rubbed his back. “Lucas, sweetheart, I’m sorry you’re so upset. Daddy and I were wrong to argue in front of you. I promise to try and not let it happen again. Come on—go wash your face and I’ll drive you to school.”

“I don’t wanna go.”

“But you love school.”

“I wanna stay home.”

“You know you can’t. Daddy and I both work. There’s no one who can watch you at the last minute— unless you’re sick. But you’re not sick, are you?”

“Yes, I am. I’m sick of you two.”

Great! I thought to myself. Drew and I are doing a real bang-up parenting job with Lucas.

“Go wash your face before you’re late. We’ll talk about this on the way to school.”

Lucas slowly slid off the bed and went into the bathroom. A few minutes later he was ready and we walked down the stairs together. Drew was finishing his cup of coffee and he said good-bye to Lucas as he passed him. Lucas totally ignored Drew. The last thing I noticed as I left was the bewilderment on Drew’s face.

In the car, as Lucas buckled his seatbelt, I said, “Lucas, I am truly sorry about this morning. I didn’t realize how much our disagreements bother you.”

He just sat there staring out the passenger window. Even though I knew he was listening to every word I was saying, it felt like I was talking to myself.

“Things will get better; you’ll see.”

“No they won’t. They never do.”

“I’m going to have a very long talk with Daddy about all of this.”

“You and Daddy never talk about anything. All you do is yell at each other.”

Hearing that from my seven-year-old son really struck a chord. “We’ll just have to try harder to work things out.”

Lucas turned back toward the window and said nothing more after that. He just sat there like a broken toy. I doubt if he believed a single word I said.

But, thanks to Lucas, reality had hit me. Somebody had to try and do something to change things; Drew and I were at an all-time low. Things had never been this bad. If a brake wasn’t applied to this skid, we would probably end up in divorce court. Though, at this point, I myself wasn’t too sure about how I felt about that. I knew I loved Drew, but I wasn’t sure I could continue to live under the same roof with him.

I pulled up in front of Lucas’s school. Before he could run off, I kissed his cheek and told him, “I promise to try and make things better.”

I sat there and watched him walk over to a bunch of kids, wondering if it wasn’t too late to turn things around.

All during work, my mind was on Lucas and how to approach Drew. How could a child be able to see what we could not? Perhaps this was a wake-up call. It didn’t really matter what you called it—the situation was serious and it needed to be tended to. At this point, I had to decide how I truly felt about Drew. Did I still love him enough to want to save my marriage?  The immediate answer was, of course, yes. But that would mean convincing Drew that we needed to speak to a marriage counselor. I didn’t think we could sort out our problems without outside help.

And Drew would have to learn to control his stress better. I had had enough of dealing with his misplaced aggression. But would Drew agree to see a counselor?  Was he willing to try to save our marriage? Would he even be willing enough to admit that his behavior needed modification?

After work I stopped off at the supermarket. I picked up just the necessities so I could be home by the time Lucas was. I didn’t like to leave him unsupervised, even for a few minutes. You’ve heard the stories about kids being left home alone.

Unfortunately, the supermarket was packed and I was a little late. Back at home, I rushed in, put the groceries on the kitchen counter, and called to Lucas. When he didn’t answer, I figured he was upstairs in his room. After all the groceries were put away, I went looking for him.

I could feel my chest tightening as I went from room to room and didn’t find him. Had he come home from school? I didn’t remember seeing his books, but then again, I wasn’t really looking for them. I ran back upstairs. His unopened book bag sat next to his desk chair, so he had been home. I must have just missed him. But where had he gone?  Maybe he had left a note on our message board in the kitchen.

I ran downstairs to check. A folded note with MOMMY written in big letters on it was tacked to the board. Taking it off and opening it, I read:

Dear Mommy,

              I decided to run away because you and Daddy fight too much.

                                   Love your son,

                                   Lucas

My heart sank. Where could he have gone? I ran to the telephone and punched in Drew’s work number. I reached a doctor’s office, instead. Calm down, I ordered myself. But who was I trying to kid? My child was God knows where and I was going to be calm?

closeup on stressed woman reading letter

I finally keyed in the correct telephone number and reached Drew.

“Drew—”

“I can’t talk now, Brenda. If I have time, I’ll— ”

“But Lucas—”

“Damn it, Brenda, I’m with a customer!” he said, and hung up before I could tell him about Lucas.

I immediately called him back. When he heard my voice again, he nearly hung up on me again.

“What’s your problem? I told you I’d call back later. Can’t this wait?”

“Lucas ran away!”

“How do you know?”

“He left me a note.”

“All kids run away at one time or another. It’s nothing to worry about. He’ll be back by dinnertime when he gets hungry.”

“I don’t think so. If you read his note—”

“You’re making a mountain out of a molehill. Now, I’ve got to go.”

“Please come home, Drew.”

“For what? The kid will be home as soon as his stomach growls.”

“Come home to help me find him.”

“You’re acting like a child.”

“I’m worried. For once in your life, try to see things through my eyes and agree with me.”

“Not if I can already see that you’re one hundred percent wrong.”

“It really doesn’t matter what it’s about. According to you, I’m automatically wrong. Why do I bother?” I said, slamming the receiver down. With or without his help, I was going to look for Lucas and I wasn’t going to give up until I found him.

I called all of Lucas’s friends, but no one had seen him since school. Where would he go? We had no relatives living nearby. Drew’s parents were dead and mine lived in a retirement home in Florida. I only got to see them at Christmas and Thanksgiving.

Feeling I was wasting precious time and what little daylight there was left, I jumped into the car to drive around the neighborhood. Maybe I would be lucky and spot him walking. I don’t know how long I drove, or when I started crying, but soon, the tears and dusk made it too difficult for me to continue. I headed back home without having found a trace of Lucas. I began to fear the worst.

Then, on the way home, it occurred to me that he might have returned already and could be back at home waiting for me to make him dinner. Maybe Drew was right, after all. Kids always threaten to run away. I did once, but didn’t get very far. Anything was possible. But I walked into an empty house. Lucas hadn’t returned.

Desperate now, I called the police. Despite what Drew thought, Lucas was only seven years old and it was a dangerous world out there. I shuddered at the thought of all the things that could happen to him.

The policeman I spoke to was very pleasant and understanding, a great deal more than Drew had been. He asked for a description of Lucas and what he had been wearing. He said he would notify all the officers in his precinct to be on the lookout, but that Lucas would probably be home as soon as he got hungry or tired. That was his experience with missing children. Did all men think alike? I was asked to keep in touch and let him know if Lucas came home. As if I wouldn’t.

As I put the receiver down, Drew walked in.

“What’s for dinner?” he asked, as if nothing had happened.

“Dinner? You want dinner?”

“Why not? Most people want to eat when they come home from work. Are you hinting at the fact that there is none?”

“Your son is missing and you want to eat dinner. Don’t you care, or have you turned into a selfish jerk?” I said, hearing my voice becoming shrill.

“Whoa, wait a minute! You mean to tell me that Lucas isn’t back yet?”

“No, he isn’t.”

“Where’s the letter you said he wrote?”

I handed Drew the letter and watched his face turn pale as he read. “I had no idea. He was really upset by our argument this morning, wasn’t he? No wonder he didn’t kiss me good-bye. He really ran away, didn’t he?” Drew remarked, running his hand through his hair. He looked at me as if he were seeing me for the first time.

“That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you, but you’ve been too stubborn to listen.”

“I never once gave any thought to how our actions might affect him. I was just too angry with you. It’s like I was wearing blinders.”

“I didn’t think about it, either—not until this morning when Lucas ran upstairs crying. Seeing him that way really opened my eyes. Now, though, I’m worried it’s too late—”

“It’s not too late. We’ll find him,” Drew said, nervously running his fingers through his hair again. “Where do you think he might have gone?”

“I don’t know. I drove up and down the neighborhood, called all his friends, and the police.”

“What did the police say?”

“They responded the same way you did. I doubt if they took me seriously. Oh, but they took down his description and all that, saying they’d alert all the officers in the precinct. But they also seemed to think he’d return when he was hungry.”

“That’s just great. Come on—get your coat; we’re going down there. I’m a taxpaying citizen and I demand more than if they see the kid, they’ll let us know.”

The sergeant at the desk took us to see a detective who was eating dinner at his desk. I felt a little funny, but he seemed to be used to the intrusion.

“What can I help you with?”

“Our son’s been missing since this afternoon.”

“Are you the same people who called earlier?”

“Yes,” I answered, a little surprised that he even knew about my phone call.

“So, I take it he hasn’t come home?”

“No.”

“Would you happen to know the reason why he’s run away?”

“He’s angry with us for always arguing.”

“So, unless we find him, he’s not going to come back so quickly on his own. That makes it tougher.”

“Officer, I understand you have to ask these questions, but while we’re sitting here, anything can be happening out there to Lucas,” Drew said.

“Mr.—”

“Sloan. Drew Sloan. And this is my wife, Brenda.”

“Mr. Sloan, in our experience with these matters, children usually come home when they’re ready, in a day or so. It would have been foolish of us to round up a search party, which takes a lot of time and manpower, only to have your child return home in a few hours.”

“But Lucas hasn’t come home.”

“That’s a rarity, I assure you.”

“So what do we do now?”

“I issue an all-points bulletin notifying every police agency about Lucas, and in the morning, we take the helicopters out and scout the immediate area. He couldn’t have gotten far. Do you have any friends or relatives nearby that he could have gone to?”

I shook my head. How can this man be so calm? My child is out there somewhere. I have no idea if he is hurt or in trouble. Does he have any children?  How would he feel if it were his son?

“But we can’t just do nothing because it’s dark out,” Drew added.

“Trying to search in the dark won’t help any, I’m sorry to say, Mr. Sloan. I sympathize with the helplessness you feel, but there’s little that can be done tonight. But I promise, at the crack of dawn, we’ll have a search team out.”

Drew and I left the police station like two lost souls. Going there had not raised our spirits—it had forced us to accept the harsh reality that we were helpless until the morning. Driving home, we took the long route and drove around the neighborhood. Hardly anyone was out. Luckily, it wasn’t a cold evening. We could only hope that Lucas was warm, wherever he was.

We hardly spoke in the car, with each of us lost in our own thoughts and prayers. When we got home, I made a pot of coffee. Neither one of us was very hungry, but we picked at some cookies.

Drew put his mug down and said, “We should talk.”  There were tears in his eyes.

I nodded. I was so frightened for Lucas. I couldn’t help thinking about all the terrible things that could happen to him out there, alone.

“What has happened to us?” Drew asked. “Where are the two kids who couldn’t keep their hands off each other?  Where did they go?”

“They’re still here, only they don’t see each other anymore. They’re too blinded by their own selfish feelings. Neither of us is willing to compromise and communication between us has come to a screeching halt. We’re like two armed camps, with neither side willing to give up any ground.”

“Brenda, what are we going to do?”

“First, we’ve got to find Lucas, and then we have to decide whether or not we want to stay together.”

“We are tottering on the brink, aren’t we?  But I don’t think I want to go it alone. I love you, Brenda,” he said as a tear slipped from his eye.

I had never seen him cry before. He had been raised in a family that frowned on men crying. If they did, it meant they were weak. “I love you, too, Drew; I have from the first day I met you. But things have to change. We need help. You can’t take your frustrations out on me and I have to learn to be more understanding.”

“You know I never wanted to hurt you.”

“But you do, constantly.”

Drew shook his head and put his face in his hands. I got up and put my arms around him, my own tears flowing freely. He lifted his face, wet with tears, and drew mine down to his until our lips met.

“Don’t ever leave me, Brenda.”

“I won’t,” I said, as I settled into his lap and placed my head against his chest.

I have no idea how long we sat there crying together. No matter what happened tomorrow, our lives had changed. Things would never be the same.

The following morning we drove to the police station and joined a group of volunteer firemen who were going to search the wooded area north of where we lived. They reasoned that a child would head there first. I prayed that they were right.

Dark storm clouds began to gather overhead and threatened rain. Inclement weather would hamper the search; we couldn’t afford to lose any more time. Some of the men walked with dogs. We had brought along a sweater of Lucas’s so that they could pick up his scent.

Young lady birdwatching with binoculars on path near woodlandIt was slow going and the weather worsened with each passing hour. Drew and I walked together, prayers on our lips. The wooded area was large enough for a little boy to get lost in indefinitely. We prayed for lots of luck or a small miracle. As the sky darkened, though, things looked hopeless.

A helicopter began to scour the area. We watched as they passed overhead. Right then a dog began to bark ferociously from an area to our left. As we ran toward the barking, my hopes began to soar, but then they quickly plummeted as we discovered it was only a raccoon.

Guilt and fear swirled around in my head. My heart was in my throat. At this point, I was willing to sell my soul to the devil if only I could have Lucas back safe and sound. I doubted I could live with myself if he were lost forever.

No one wanted to come right out and say it, but it was in the back of everyone’s mind: What if an unsavory adult had found Lucas wandering and kidnapped him?  The thought alone scared the hell out of me. And I know it terrified Drew, as well.

When I felt a few drops of rain, I prayed it wouldn’t worsen. Then I heard the helicopter hovering overhead. A man shouted to us. Drew and I ran toward the commotion. I stumbled and fell, but Drew picked me up.

“Are you all right?” he asked.

“I think so,” I said as I gingerly stepped down on my foot. It didn’t hurt; I was lucky. All I cared about was finding out if they’d found Lucas. I’d crawl to him if I had to.

They had found Lucas! He had been asleep in his sleeping bag under a large oak tree, totally unaware of the frantic search going on. I fell to my knees and thanked God for giving my son back to me. The falling raindrops mingled with my tears of joy. Drew and I thanked everyone for all their help.

Mushroom pickingLucas was surprised to find everyone there and thought we were angry with him. I hugged him and planted kisses all over his face. “Lucas, baby, you just gave Daddy and me the biggest scare of our lives. Please don’t ever do that again. We both love you very, very, much and never want to lose you again!”  I kissed the top of his head.

“Does that mean you’re not going to punish me?” he asked, yawning.

“Not this time, but there better not be another time, Son,” Drew said. “Besides, sport, who would I shoot hoops with? Your mother’s a lousy basketball player,” he added and winked.

As Lucas smiled, Drew hugged him, and tears of joy and relief began sliding down Drew’s cheeks. We were truly lucky. We had just experienced a scare no parent ever wants to have. And I realized the ball was now in our court. It was up to Drew and me to mend the situation that had caused Lucas to run away.

We all went home. Lucas took a hot bath and changed into clean clothes. Then he wolfed down two bowls of hot cereal and toast. The little bit of food he’d taken with him hadn’t lasted very long.

After he finished eating, we sat down to talk. We explained to him that things would be different around the house from now on. Drew promised Lucas that he and I would try to work out our problems through discussion rather than arguing. This time, Lucas seemed to believe us. I guess he may have figured we didn’t want to go through all that terrible stuff again, so we’d definitely try to behave.

He went upstairs to his room and left us alone to finish the discussion. I cleaned up the kitchen and Drew called in sick for both of us; we needed the day to recuperate. Finally, we went upstairs.

“We are very lucky, Drew.”

“I know. That was some wake-up call.”

“Maybe it will be the only one we need.”

Drew took me in his arms and held me. We both began to cry. The realization of how close we had come to losing everything that we cherished in life was overwhelming.

“I love you, Brenda. I didn’t realize how much until all this happened. I had no idea how far apart we had drifted.”

“I love you, too, Drew, with all my heart.”

“We’ve got to change—I’ve got to change.”

“I’m not completely free of blame, either. We have to start communicating and really listening to one another.”

Drew nervously ran his fingers through his hair. “If I hadn’t been such a pig-headed fool—”

I put my finger on his lips. “We have both been stubborn and inflexible at times.”

“We can make our marriage work, if we try.”

“We can and we must. We have a wonderful son who needs us.”

“And we need him,” Drew said covering his lips with mine.

A seven-year-old boy had taught us a lesson we’d never forget. We’d almost lost everything we loved, but fate had seen fit to grant us a second chance. And we weren’t going to ruin this second chance. This time, we were going to make it.

Truth or Fiction: Mystery Plot Twists Fascinate Us

tram at night at Prague

By Katherine Sharma

Mystery lovers, by their nature, are lovers of the plot twist. Just a few of my favorites with surprise twists include Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn, The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins,Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon, The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield, In the Woods by Tana French, Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane, The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton, and We Were Liars by E. Lockhart.

girl on trainOf course, the great Agatha Christie has multiple entries, such as The Murder of Roger AckroydAnd Then There Were NoneDeath on the Nile and Murder on the Orient Express. Notice how often the “unreliable narrator” is key to the surprise twist, by the way.

Sometimes fact is even more astounding than fiction, however. Just check out Listverse.com’s post about 10 real-life mysteries solved by incredible plot twists. For example, there’s seven-year-old Maria Ridulph’s 1957 murder solved by a “murder will out” twist 54 years later. Although 17-year-old neighbor John Tessier was suspected of Ridulph’s murder at the time, he had an iron-clad alibi: He had taken a train trip on the day the child disappeared. The police reopened the case in 1994 after a deathbed statement by Tessier’s mother, but the alibi had them stumped–until one of Tessier’s ex-girlfriends helpfully provided an old framed photograph. Investigators found the 1957 train ticket hidden inside, unstamped because Tessier had never used it to take the trip. Tessier was finally charged with murder in 2011. Science, not luck, played the key role in another seemingly insoluble murder.

gone girlAfter a 13-year-old girl was found stabbed to death in 2011 in Italy, police took 15,000 DNA tests to compare with DNA samples found at the murder scene. One man’s near-match led to testing of his family, including a long-dead uncle and the uncle’s children–without an exact match. Police then learned the dead uncle had been a very active womanizer, and 500 women were investigated. Police finally found a married woman whose twins turned out to be the secret offspring of the dead uncle. One of the twins was a match for the killer’s DNA, and he was charged with murder in 2014.

For more real-life twists, read http://listverse.com/2015/03/25/10-mysteries-resolved-by-unbelievable-surprise-twists/.

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.

My Daughter’s Teaching Me How To Date…And She’s Thirteen!

Lovely mother kissing her daughter

Out of the mouths of babes . . . came the sweetest love opportunity of a lifetime!

I remembered being thirteen and giggling with my best friend, just like my daughter, Violet, and her friend, Andie, did all the time. Usually, I didn’t bother them while they enjoyed their “girl time” together. But this time, I couldn’t help it.

“What are you two plotting?” I finally asked the conspiring duo.

My daughter looked up at me, considering me seriously.

“We’ve decided that you and Andie’s great-uncle, Grant, should get together.”

“Like on a date,” Andie clarified.

“I don’t need a date.” I smiled at their concern for my social life, or lack thereof.

“Yes, you do, Mom. It’s been six months since you went out with that Roy guy.”

I groaned and covered my face. “Please, don’t remind me. That disaster made me give up on dating for good.” Roy had spent the entire evening talking about his ex-wives, child support payments, and golf.

The girls joined me on the couch. “Leave it to us, Mrs. Spencer,” Andie insisted. “We’ll set it up with my great-uncle. You don’t even have to talk to him until you meet—we’ll do all the work.”

“A blind date?” I blanched. I’d had plenty of those in my ten years as a widow, but nothing ever seemed to work out. Maybe I’d set my standards too high. I’d married my high school sweetheart, Don, right after graduation and we’d had a wonderful marriage.

“Well, yeah,” Violet admitted. “But it’ll be fine—you’ll see. You don’t have to do anything except show up. Sounds perfect, right?” When I hesitated, Violet flung her arms around my shoulders. “Pleeease?” she begged, drawing the word out. “It’ll be fun.”

“I’ll think it over, but you still have to talk poor Great-uncle Grant into it.”

I did some quick calculation in my head. Andie’s parents were at least ten years older than I was. That meant that one of their uncles would be in his late sixties. I didn’t feel comfortable dating someone thirty years older. But then, he couldn’t be as bad as Roy or some of the other dates that I’d had over the years.

I thought about calling Andie’s mother to ask about Grant, but I didn’t want to burst the girls’ bubble. They were having such a good time with this dating arrangement.

My busy job as a junior accountant kept my mind off the date, and I’d forgotten all about it until the girls cornered me on Thursday evening. “It’s all set,” Violet said excitedly.

I gave her a blank look. “What is?”

Andie sighed. “Your date with my great-uncle Grant.”

Before I could lodge a protest, Violet went on, “Seven-thirty tomorrow night at Pasquali’s. We know how much you love that place.”

I pinched the bridge of my nose and wondered if I really wanted to go through with this.

“My great-uncle’s a lawyer,” Andie added as possible enticement.

“He still works?” I stopped myself from adding, “At his age?”

“Of course,” Andie said. “He works long hours and doesn’t have time for lots of dates. I think that’s why he’s still single.”

Poor guy, I thought, a night out might do us both some good. “Pasquali’s is perfect for a blind date.” I gave both girls a big hug and found myself looking forward to meeting him.

The next evening, dressed in my favorite turquoise silk blouse, beige slacks, and low heels, I frantically hailed a cab. I’d parked my car at the edge of the heavy traffic section of the city where parking spaces were extremely hard to come by. The workday had been a disaster and I’d had to put in some overtime. Because of that, I was running more than half an hour late. By the time the cab driver pulled in front of the restaurant, it had started drizzling. I fumbled for my purse, paid the driver, and scurried inside.

I quickly surveyed the room and spotted a white-haired gentleman sitting alone at a table near the center of the restaurant. He seemed to be having a heated conversation on his cell phone.

“I see the party I’m meeting,” I told the hostess, and then made my way past the other diners.

Great-uncle Grant slammed the cell phone on the table, and muttered a four-letter word under his breath. Then he abruptly stood up and bumped into me. “I’m sorry I’m late,” I said, noting the annoyed look on his face. He must be a stickler for promptness, I thought.

He looked puzzled. “You’re welcome to the table, young lady,” he said, hurrying past me and out the front door.

I stood staring after him. “Nice to meet you, too, Grant.” He hadn’t even given me a chance to explain. Embarrassed, I slowly headed for the door. I only had enough money for cab fare back to my car—definitely not enough for a consolation dinner at Pasquali’s. I figured after I got home, I’d snack on leftovers, and drown my sorrows in a large helping of fudge ripple ice cream.

Outside, the drizzle had turned into a downpour. A cab roared to the curb, and quickly deposited its passenger. As I ran toward the open door, my hair and clothing got soaked. The tall gentleman who’d left the cab held the door for me. His handsome face flashed a dimpled smile as I slid inside and our eyes met and held. I felt a surge of heat spread across my damp cheeks.

a man stepping out of a taxi with an umbrella

“The watered-down version of my usual self,” I told the gorgeous guy, trying for a light ending to the blind date fiasco. My lame joke made him laugh before he shut the door and the throaty, deep sound sent tingles up and down my spine. I sighed and settled into the seat.

My thoughts turned to Don. Even on his worst day, he’s still always managed to be polite and considerate of those around him—something that Grant needed lessons on.

I was glad the girls were spending the night at Andie’s because that meant that I wouldn’t have to report on my disastrous evening until the next day. I was tempted to call Andie’s mother and give her an earful about Great-uncle Grant’s behavior, but I decided against it.

“That sure doesn’t sound like my great-uncle,” Andie said after hearing my version of the story.

I didn’t tell her how irritated I was with the man. It’s true that first impressions can be way off base, but I didn’t think that was the case this time. Great-uncle Grant’s bachelor status probably had more to do with his intense personality than the long hours he put in at the law firm.

“We’ll set up another date,” Violet said. The two conspirators then disappeared into the kitchen.

Let them have their fun, I thought, but I’m not going along for another round. “Count me out,” I shouted to them. I liked people who had manners and patience, and the sour expression on Grant’s face the night before suggested that he didn’t have much of a sense of humor, either.

Besides, I was happy with my life. I had some good female friends—although that didn’t truly make up for being alone. I’d been scared those first years without Don, but I was proud of how I’d stood on my own. I took night classes and got better jobs that added to my confidence and security.

I spent the day running errands and cleaning house. I’d already decided on an early spaghetti dinner when the girls raced into the kitchen.

“Blind Dates, Inc. is back in business!” Violet shouted.

I pulled a pound of sausage from the refrigerator. “What in the world does that mean?”

Andie smiled and glanced at the kitchen clock. “It means that Great-uncle Grant is on his way over!”

“What?” I shrieked. My hand flew to the disheveled ponytail I’d tied my hair in hours earlier. I was also wearing my rattiest jeans and a faded Bon Jovi T-shirt. But then I stopped worrying because I didn’t owe it to Grant to look nice after the way he’d treated me the night before.

The doorbell chimed. “I’ll get it,” Andie said, bolting for the door.

We’ll get it,” Violet corrected, leaving me holding the makings for our dinner.

I could hear a deep voice coming from the living room. Tossing the meat into the sink, I quickly wiped my hands on a dishtowel. Before I’d had much chance to compose myself, the girls burst back into the kitchen with a dark-haired stranger in tow. Well, he wasn’t exactly a stranger—it was the same gorgeous man who’d held the cab door for me in the rain!

“You’re Great-uncle Grant?” I asked, my thoughts whirling. He was taller than I remembered. “But you’re not old enough.” Heat rushed to my face as soon as the impolite comment slipped out. How did I miscalculate his age? This man can’t be more than a couple of years older than I am.

Andie piped in, “He’s my uncle, and he’s great, so he’s my great uncle. Get it?”

Grant extended his hand to me. “I’m Grant Peters, Andie’s mom’s baby brother. I’m really sorry that I was late last night,” he continued sincerely. “I was held up in a meeting, but I called the restaurant and left a message. Anyway, I’m sorry that you got drenched.”

I laughed. “I was late myself. I didn’t get the message because I rushed to the wrong table and was promptly brushed off by an irritated older gentleman whom I thought was you.”

Grant smiled, his blue eyes filled with humor. “If you’ll let me make up for last night, we can go anywhere you’d like right now.”

“How about something home-cooked?” I asked. “I’ve got the makings for spaghetti.” If we had any chance at a lasting relationship, he’d have to accept my ratty jeans and marinara sauce.

“That sounds great,” he answered, removing his jacket. “But only if you’ll let me help. I’m not helpless in the kitchen.”

“We told you he was great!” Violet beamed.

I smiled just as broadly. “You certainly know your clients.”

“I’m great at putting a salad together,” Grant said as the giggling teenagers vanished. “Or maybe you’d prefer that I try not to use the word “great” since it seems to have already caused a lot of confusion.”

I chuckled. “You don’t know the half of it.” I told him then about my experience in the restaurant. He laughed in that deep way again, a sound I was already learning to take pleasure in.

I handed him a head of lettuce and the rest of the salad fixings. He looked right at home as he searched the drawers for just the right knife, and he chopped the vegetables with ease.

Couple breakfast

“Andie and Violet make quite a team,” Grant said, as he tore leaves of lettuce into bite-sized pieces.

“They’ve been best friends for a long time,” I said as I stirred the sausage, carefully adding the marinara sauce. “This isn’t their first business venture, either. They’ve sold lemonade and oversized zucchini that I grew in my tiny backyard garden. Once, they even made perfume from your sister’s rose petals.” I laughed. “They’re nothing if not hardworking.”

“That they are.” Grant draped his arm around my shoulders. “It took a lot of convincing to get me to agree to this blind date business, but they were right on the money.”

I couldn’t have agreed more.

 

Thrillers Resonate This Political Season

Freedom and statue of liberty

By Katherine Sharma

Recently, Russian digital hacks of the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee were revealed, raising the specter of foreign government interference in U.S. elections. That’s a plot you’d expect to find in a Cold War-era political thriller, not 2016 news stories.

black widowSo this very unusual political season has inspired me to take a closer look at political thrillers. An example is the just released novel about ISIS terrorism in France from bestselling political thriller author Daniel Silva. In The Black Widow, the spy hero is poised for promotion to chief of Israel’s secret intelligence service but takes on one final operation after ISIS detonates a massive bomb in Paris, and the desperate French government asks him to eliminate the man responsible before he can strike again.

 

manchurian candidateThe classic political thrillers emerged after World War II when the West faced a nuclear-armed world divided by Cold War ideologies and post-colonial chaos. Among the best-known works is Richard Condon’s 1959 The Manchurian Candidate about the son of a prominent U.S. political family who is brainwashed into becoming an unwitting Communist assassin controlled by his domineering mother, who seeks to make her husband, a McCarthy-esque senator, into a puppet dictator.

 

quiet americanIn 1955, Graham Greene’s prescient The Quiet American depicts French and British colonialism in Vietnam being uprooted by American involvement during the 1950s, revealing a blind American “exceptionalism” that fails to see disaster looming.

 

 

 

jackalColonialism’s poisonous roots in the Muslim world are exposed in 1972’s Edgar Award-winning The Day of the Jackal by Frederick Forsyth, about a mysterious professional assassin contracted to kill French President Charles de Gaulle by the OAS, a French dissident paramilitary organization upset by France’s Algeria policy.

 

 

 

justiceMore recently, America’s racial politics are the subject of A Certain Justice by John Lescroart, published in 2006: When an angry white mob in San Francisco murders an innocent black man, the only man who tried to stop the killing is framed and goes on the run amid riots, political posturing, and pressure on police to subvert justice.

 

 

 

gardnerOf course, money is at the root of political evil, and in 2001’s The Constant Gardner, by famed British spy novelist John le Carré, a British diplomat’s search for the truth about his activist wife’s murder in Africa uncovers an international conspiracy of corrupt bureaucrats and pharmaceutical industry money. For Amazon’s latest political thrillers, see https://www.amazon.com/gp/new-releases/books/7538395011/ref=zg_bs_tab_t_bsnr

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.

Jennifer Garner Has a Heart of Gold

jenn1

The Woman

More than just a pretty face, Jennifer Garner is the complete and beautiful package. With a heart of gold and reputation for being a charitable person, Jennifer is a proud mother of 3 kids who wants her children to grow up in a safe and loving world.

Born in Houston, Texas in 1972, Jennifer took an early interest in performing.  She took ballet as a child and studied drama in high school and college.  Keen for experience, Garner made the move to Los Angeles, aimed at TV and film and finally made her screen debut in the 1995 NBC’s made-for-TV movie Zoya, based on the Danielle Steel novel.

Work came quickly and quite easily over the next two years with her securing guest roles on several television shows, including Spin City and Law & Order, and small parts in several motion pictures, among them Deconstructing Harry, In Harm’s Way, and Mr. Magoo . In 2000, Garner earned notice for her recurring role on the hit show Felicity, and the show’s producer subsequently cast her as the lead in a new ABC drama, Alias. It was her starring turn as CIA agent Sydney Bristow that made Garner into an overnight success, earning her a loyal following of viewers and critical praise.

She married actor and Daredevil co-star Ben Affleck in 2005 with whom she has three children: daughters Violet and Seraphina, and son Samuel. After 10 years of marriage, Garner and Affleck announced their divorce in 2015.

nine lives

Her upcoming film, Nine Lives, is a fantasy family film about a stuffy business man (Kevin Spacey) who gets trapped inside the body of a cat. Garner plays the wife of Spacey and the film releases on August 6. She has over a half dozen projects in development for the next year and shows no sign of slowing down.

Her Cause

Jennifer is one of the most charitable celebrities in the world. She is a regular contributor to

jenniferSave The Children–When disaster strikes around the world, Save the Children is there to save lives with food, medical care and education and remains to help communities rebuild through long-term recovery programs. Recently Jennifer, who is a trustee of the organization, launched an Omaze T-shirt campaign to raise funds for relief efforts after West Virginia was devastated by flash floods. Purchase a shirt here.

Children’s Defense Fund–In May of 2006, Jennifer joined a delegation of prominent Hollywood women including Reese Witherspoon, Cicely Tyson, Holly Robinson Peete, LaTanya Richardson Jackson, Regina King, Deborah Santana, and over a dozen other prominent entertainment, cultural, media, and community leaders, in a trip to New Orleans for a Katrina Child Watch visit sponsored by Children’s Defense Fund.

Gap: Red— As a (product) Red partner, Garner helps with contributing half the profits from Gap (Product) Red Products to the global fund, to help women and children affected by AIDS in Africa.

National Center for Missing & Exploited Children-100% of the proceeds from each celebrity donating their jeans will go directly to NCMEC, a nonprofit organization dedicated to finding missing children and preventing child sexual exploitation.

Unexpected Dreams: Songs From The Stars –Actors have contributed songs to an album benefitting the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s music education programs. Buy The CD Here

Physical Challenges Can’t Stop These Sleuths

beautiful fashionable woman detective

By Katherine Sharma

If you like triumph-over-physical-adversity tales, you may want to check out mystery writing’s long tradition of physically challenged detectives. There are many reasons for authors to create sleuths who are blind, deaf, paralyzed or otherwise physically limited. By literally handicapping crime-solving via a detective’s impaired ability to personally gather clues from crime scene inspection or interrogations, an author boosts the puzzle-solving challenge.

The social stigma often faced by people with physical issues also creates reader empathy and increases reader satisfaction in the protagonist’s ability to overcome and triumph. Authors usually offset a character’s physical disadvantage by honing intellect, senses, instincts or determination to a point beyond the skills of ordinary sleuths. A disability, because it can be misread as incapability, can even give a surprise edge in outwitting arrogant suspects, deceptive witnesses or uncooperative authorities.

Man in blackAmong the well-known detectives in this group is bestselling author Jeffery Deaver’s Lincoln Rhyme, a quadriplegic New York City detective. NYC culprits also find a nemesis in George Chesbro’s dwarf criminology professor and private-eye Robert ‘Mongo’ Fredrickson. Proving lack of sight is not lack of insight is Jane A. Adams’ Naomi Blake, a blind ex-policewoman in the Midlands of England, while reading lips doesn’t hinder reading clues in Penny Warner’s Connor Westphal mysteries about a deaf newspaper journalist in California. For a list of more mysteries featuring physically challenged detectives, go to https://beyondrivalry.wordpress.com/2009/07/02/crime-fiction-book-list-disabled-isnt-unable/

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.

The Price You Pay Getting Into A Relationship

family drawing money house clothes and video game symbol

Rom-coms focus on the tummy-butterfly-infused beginnings of romantic relationships, with the credits rolling long before real life with work, family and the power bill kick in. Love is an expensive endeavor with figurative and literal costs incurred by a couple as their relationship evolves.

Here’s a breakdown of the price you pay for getting into a relationship:

New Love
When you start dating someone, the bulk of the money spent is on entertainment. In a study conducted by the American Sociological Association, of 17,000 people surveyed it found 84% of the men and 58% of the women reported men cover the majority of expenses at the beginning of a courtship.

Boyfriend and girlfriend holding drinks at nightclub

Regardless of if you go Dutch or treat one another, the cost of movies, dining out and trips adds up. You and your love interest make dates and plans that you wouldn’t spend money on as a single person.

Dating someone can also have an impact on other relationships in our lives. Making time and committing energy to a new love interest means that you decrease your commitments to others in your life in order to free yourself up. This relationship cost is not monetary but it can definitely be felt by all those impacted.

Studies have shown that females who swiftly increase the time they spend with a love interest also rapidly lessen the time they commit to friends. This change in interpersonal connections can cost the couple their close friends if balance is not created between friend time and romantic-love time.

Compromise will need to take place, as a couple will need to make appearances at various family functions as well as keep in touch with different friend groups. You won’t be able to attend everything, you will have to get good at saying no and balancing the variety of expectations of your friends and family, and those of your partner.

Getting Serious
You have gotten to know one another and you mutually decide you want to be exclusive. This can mean your dating costs dip because you’d rather spend the night chilling together watching Netflix than getting all gussied up to go out to a fancy restaurant.

African couple eating take-out in freshly painted room

With the growing connection of a couple, there can be a desire to signify the more “serious” nature of a relationship. One way of expanding this level of your relationship is with jewelry, specifically, a promise ring which expresses a token of love and commitment.This is an outward expression of your dedication to one another and your union.

Getting serious may also mean spending nights over at one another’s places. If you do the math, you realize you’re both doling out rent or mortgage money monthly as well as covering the utilities and groceries for each of your homes. The cost-benefit analysis on this can quickly motivate couples to decide to make to move in together.

Make sure to have a discussion about how you’ll share the expenses before you make THAT move.

Moving-in, Marriage & Maybe Even Kids
The more commitment as couple pledges to one another and their relationship, the more significant the costs are. Big-ticket items tend to come into play when couples decide to pool their resources and move in together. Their buying power increases because they can combine their cash to buy furniture, a car or maybe even a home.

Guests throwing confetti over kissing bride and groom, outdoors

If an engagement and wedding are in the cards, the large price tag isn’t far behind. In the US, the average wedding costs around $26,000. Some people opt for more lavish events costing upwards of $30,000, while others keep their expenses down below $10,000. No matter where a couple finds themselves on that spectrum, it is a bunch of money to carve out of savings.

The next question after the wedding wraps up is typically “so when are you having kids?”. Or maybe you forgo the wedding and opt to just have kids. However you slice it, the little rag rats are one of the most expensive investments you’ll make a couple. Kids cost about $13,000 a year.

The expenses of having a child or children continue even if the couple doesn’t. Yup, there is a chance of divorce. An estimated 40%–50% of first marriages and 60% of second marriages end in divorce. Divorce comes with its own hefty fee.

All of the added commitments and stresses of running a household, raising kids while juggling work can take its toll on a relationship. Resentment can rear its ugly head as women tend to assume the majority of cleaning tasks. A recent study found that husbands create seven hours of extra housework a week — SEVEN!

Establishing and continuing committed relationship can be incredibly positive experience as it can bring security, emotional support and fun into your life. But don’t kid yourself, no matter what stage you’re in, relationships are hard work and have costs.

Go into relationships with your eyes wide open and honestly discuss with your partner what you’re both willing to invest of yourselves, your time and money.

(From Never Liked It Anyway, the number one destination for all things break-ups and bounce-back! It’s the place to buy, sell and tell all things ex! Sell your breakup baggage, tell your story and join the community of rock stars bouncing back better than ever! )

‘Bad Seed’ Characters Exist in Fact and Fiction

Dark series - vintage killer doll

By Katherine Sharma

Psychopathic villains–manipulative, aggressive, remorseless and unemotional–abound in murder mysteries, but when those psychopaths are children, an element of horror enters.

Remember Rhoda, the too-perfect little girl murderess in the 1954 novel The Bad Seed by William March? Or Kevin, a school massacre perpetrator, whose mother suspects his evil capacity long before his final horrific acts in Lionel Shriver’s We Need to Talk About Kevin. Agatha Christie’s Crooked House also featured a deadly child in scheming 12-year-old Josephine Leonides, who kills her grandfather because he won’t pay for ballet lessons–and almost gets away with it.

Author Jonathan Kellerman, a clinical child psychologist who writes New York Times best-selling mysteries featuring psychologist sleuth Dr. Alex Delaware, gives support to fictional “bad seed” characterizations. He notes in his nonfiction Savage Spawn, inspired by the spate of 1997-1998 schoolyard shootings, that “psychopathic tendencies begin very early in life, as young as three, and they endure.”

Upset and angry boy

Though research shows psychopathy is 50% genetic, biology is not destiny for our complex human personalities, and nurture can guide nature. Budding pre-psychopaths can be tempered by a non-aggressive environment and by a parenting style that is neither too permissive nor too authoritarian while providing structure and limits, according to psychology experts. After all, children with psychopathic traits do not all become killers; many grow up to use the daring, charming and manipulative aspects of their personalities as successful business tycoons, political leaders or sports stars.

Still, the fictional tales of young murderers are not just fantasy and are reinforced every year by headlines about preteen killers and school shootings. We need to be alert to signs in children that presage criminal acts–violence toward people or animals, lack of guilt or remorse, social isolation, defiance and sensation-seeking–and commit to timely intervention. For more on youthful violence prediction and intervention, see http://crimefeed.com/2016/01/predicting-violent-criminal-behavior-how-to-spot-the-warning-signs-intervene/

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.