I am reading the book, Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano. It’s the story of four sisters, their individual personalities and how their close and connected lives fall apart due to death and questionable decisions. It has me thinking about my four brothers and where we’ve ended up as adults.

My oldest brother once told me that the worst day of his life was the day I was born. Nine years older than me, he was the fair-haired solo grandson and center of my parents’ universe. As the only girl and eldest of the next four children born in six years, the blame fell to me, oh well. He taught me about sexism, refusing to include me in the rough-housing because I was a “girl.” I hated being left out but I adored him. He came for a visit to Bacalar in December 2023. Since then we talk every few weeks and enjoy long conversations.

My next brother and I were always tight. We had special names for each other when we were little, Boody and Sany, My mother used to say that she held us, one under each arm to go to the bathroom. We were eighteen months apart. Today we talk every weekend like clockwork and he is my best friend and confidant. I’m not sure how he got to be so smart but I greatly appreciate his calm demeanor, insights and advice.

Brother number three and I haven’t spoken in a year. When I had my accident last September (2024), he called both Lisa and me multiple times a week, to check on my condition and progress. I felt cared for. That all changed with a world-exploding US presidential election in November. We were on opposite sides of the aisle which left me in shock. Many families deal with political differences by simply not talking about them. We’ve butt heads too many times and this was the proverbial last straw.

And my youngest brother, who I was very close to, died in 2000 of a brain tumor. His daughter is now in my life and I feel blessed to have her.


I haven’t finished the book but I’m hoping that the sisters work out their differences. For me, three out of four connections aren’t bad. I don’t hold out hope that brother number three and I will work things out. And don’t give me that, “but you’re family”. Some things blood doesn’t seem to be able to heal.
DOS TORTAS

As one of 9 siblings, 6 girls and 3 boys, I feel your pain. The girls run a Mafia, and god help you if you are not in the Club! You are good friends with one of the “Sistahs”.
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Makes me happy we’re down to four 😝
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As one of 9 siblings, 6 girls and 3 boys, I feel your pain. The girls run a Mafia, and god help you if you are not in the Club! You are good friends with one of the “Sistahs”.
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Sorry about the separation between you and your brother, but I sure understand.
I have one sibling, a sister 3-1/2 years younger than I.Thank goodness we align perfectly on almost everything. I couldn’t stand it if we became divided.
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It’s lovely to be close to a sib. Truth be told, there’s always more to the story.
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My younger (and only) brother is also my best friend. I feel so thankful to have him in my life. And thank the gods, we totally align politically and in so many other ways.
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I love this Alex – and I think this book will be my next…😊 Sending love – and regrets that I didn’t see you three this past visit – w/love, Lorrie
Lorrie Jones
Simple Serenity
simpleserenity.comhttp://simpleserenity.com/
253.312.3117
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I’m enjoying the book. Let me know how you like it.
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I also have four siblings – two I see, two I don’t. Tis the way of things, family-wise. 😦
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Living in Mexico where family is everything makes it doubly hard.
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