Page 18 of Sweet Days


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me. My mother was pregnant and they got married

thinking they were doing the right thing. Then the

others arrived, one after the other, and with them

came money problems and everything went to hell.

My father was a womanizer, unable to think of

anyone else but himself. That’s where I got my

moral principles from.

Luckily, two years after he walked out, my mom

met Carl, a good man who is divorced and

childless who was able to make her happy and give

back a bit of normal living to us all.

We always lived in the same house on Pearse

Street, four boys sharing one room with two bunk

beds in a few square meters and the two girls

sharing the only other room available.

My mom and Carl have slept on the couch for at

least six years. They gave up their room for my

sisters and could not afford a bigger and more

expensive house.

Carl works at the Guinness Storehouse and my

mom works part-time in a bakery on Mary Street

because she still has children to raise.

So basically, it was a shit sandwich. We were

never without anything, especially since Carl has

been with us but I have to be honest: at Christmas,

when we got one gift for all of us to share, it’s not

the greatest. It’s not that we didn’t understand, we

k n e w a l l t o o w e l l w h a t t h e e c o n o m i c

circumstances were and we weren’t upset because

we didn’t have more. What really sucked was