Written for Friday Fictioneers where our host
Rochelle asks us to use the photo below as inspiration
to write creatively in 100 words or less while
making every word count. This is my flash.

Tenderly, Abe placed all his late wife’s treasures into a shoebox. Each one held a memory.
Abe’s daughter recently told him she was selling the house, moving into a condo just big enough for her and her daughter; Abe would have to move into assisted living. Slowly he walked to his room, cradling the box. Nearing his granddaughter’s bedroom, he heard her talking on the phone.
“My mom said bat mitzvah is outdated. I’m not doing it.”
Abe’s eyes filled with tears. Turning, he walked outside and dumped his wife’s box of treasures into the garbage. He suddenly felt obsolete.
NAR©2024
100 Words
This is “The Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys” by Traffic
All text, graphics and videos are copyright for Nancy (The Sicilian Storyteller), The Sicilian Storyteller, The Elephant’s Trunk and The Rhythm Section and are not to be used without permission. NAR©2017-present.
Oh my, how this resonates. Nicely done, if painful to assimilate. Well done.
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Thanks for reading and sharing your thoughts, Sandra.
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Dear Nancy,
A touching and heartwrenching story. It’s hard to watch the next generation(s) regard time honored traditions as something to trample under their feet. Well told.
Shalom,
Rochelle
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Very true, Rochelle, and it’s something we see happening more and more these days. Lack of respect is a real problem; when it impacts the safety and well-being of the elderly, it becomes a complicated and often dangerous situation.
Thank you. Shalom,
🕊️
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Beautifully told. This sort of thing breaks my heart, even though I know things can’t stay the same…
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Thank you! I’m hearing you, Angela. It’s a worrisome social situation and the older I get the closer it hits home.
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I swear. I am starting to think boomers are as bad as teenagers, getting all up in their feelings. When did we start giving up?
Okay…I may have taken this too personally. 🙂
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You haven’t, Dawn. This is a terrible fact of life; many people don’t want to be bothered with caring for their elder parents. It’s a sad situation but a very real one. I’m sorry if my story upset you, Dawn.
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You didn’t upset me. That’s what my loved ones are for, lol.
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😂
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Powerfully told.
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Thanks very much for your kind comment, Bon.
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how sad, but such is life.
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Yes, perhaps …. but it shouldn’t be.
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Oh Nancy, this brought tears to my eyes. A beautifully told touching story. In one hundred words! Thank you. 🐚
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Lovely comment, Michele. Thank you!
I tried to convey the importance of keeping traditions alive and respecting our elderly. I hope that message came across.
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A success. You’re very welcome! 🙏🏻
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Too much, all at once 😦 I hope he has a friend to talk with about it and that he gets back to grab the box from the bin before it’s too late.
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You’re right, Lisa. It’s all to much for him to handle, and rightly so. 😔
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That’s so heartbreaking 💔
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People can be heartless, casting aside traditions and the elderly when they are no longer meaningful.
Thank you, Esther.
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Broke my heart again…
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Oh, thanks so much, John. People can be just horrid!
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The thing that got me was at the end, where he’s throwing all his wife’s treasures out. In my family, anything left behind by a late relative is treated like a sacred relic. Seriously, I have a box of stuff that belonged to my great-grandfather that he probably would have thrown out if he hadn’t died first. It was in an old Marshall Field’s gift box that was falling apart. I bought a plastic box to keep the stuff in, because I knew that, if I threw it away, one of aunts would call and say “Do you have that box of Etaba’s (their name for him) things, like his Knights of Columbus sash?”
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Thanks for sharing you personal story, John. I know where you’re coming from.
In my story, Abe knew how important family and traditions were to his wife. She cherished them. He felt the same way. If his wife had lived long enough to feel the sting their daughter’s disregard for the elderly in the family and their granddaughter’s disinterest in making bat mitzvah, it would have destroyed her. Throwing her precious treasures in the garbage is symbolic of the end of an era, a time when traditions and family mattered.
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Brutal!
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People can be vicious. Thanks, Tiffany.
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Wonderful song. The vocals reminded me of Nina Simone’s. Cheers Nancy.
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Thanks, Matt! Cheers!
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why do things change , why do people not care…
the daughter and granddaughter will regret their ways.
A thought provoking piece.
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Change is inevitable, Willow. And I really don’t mind it, as long as we deal with it in a loving and thoughtful manner. Traditions and people, especially the elderly, should be respected.
Thank you, dear friend. 🩶🩶
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i so agree 💜💜
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Oh, how very very sad!
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It is, Sue. Too many of our elderly and our traditions are allowed to fall by the wayside. They need to be respected.
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I agree.
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That is the way of the young, And of the old. Both have their role
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I suppose that’s true, Neil; I’m not so sure it’s a good thing. Thanks for your comment.
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It’s sad.
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What’s sad is when we show no respect for our traditions or our elderly.
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My feelings exactly.
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I feel sorry for Abe unless when he got back he played this album, it rocks.
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It’s a good one, that’s true, Ernie!
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Heartbreaking
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The really heartbreaking fact is our lack of respect for traditions and our elderly. Thank you, Sadje.
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Very true my friend. We are trying to make them feel irrelevant and we forget that we also will reach that state.
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