A girl in her late teens screams at her mother, “You mean I have to be in this cast for three months.”
“Who wrecked the car? Deal with it.”
“Is my car all right? I don’t remember.”
“No. It’s going to take months to get the parts to fix it.”
***
Two months later, the girl pouts. “This recovery is getting to me. I don’t know if I can do it.”
Her mother is sympathetic. “I know, honey. It’s wearing on me too. But I promise, on the other side, there is much catching up to look forward to.”
Written in response to Charli Mills January 9, 2024, prompt at Carrot Ranch Literary: In 99 words (no more, no less), write a recovery story. What instigated the recovery? What is being recovered? Data, athletes, illness — expand the idea of recovery and find your story. Go where the prompt leads!

01/18/2024 at 08:06
Hi Sue, this story has a lot of truth in it.
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01/18/2024 at 10:02
Thanks, Robbie.
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01/18/2024 at 10:37
Love this work of grim parental recovery. 😉 There’s the physical, and then the spiritual, as the body recovers!
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01/18/2024 at 12:07
So true, Liz. I think we’ve all experienced the lack of patience during a recovery and then thinking “that wasn’t so bad, “ afterwards.
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01/18/2024 at 13:09
…and then, do I have to make an amends, for a few things I might’ve said…lol!
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01/21/2024 at 09:48
A positive attitude is the key to everything!
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01/21/2024 at 10:12
You’ve got that right, Michael. People who can see that way have a gift.
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