Caring With Kindness in N.B.

Caring With Kindness in N.B. Our Personal Domestic Helpers are fully vaccinated and adhere to the N.B.

COVID - 19 regulations to perform the essential Non Medical Chores/Errands to help Seniors or those who are challenged with a disability or just need some vital Respite "Me Time". Our Non-Medical Services are performed in your Home, on your property forHousekeeping, food preparation, general chores, Gardening or Lawn Care, except when the Personal Domestic Helper drives the client from their home to appointments or runs errands for them.

Please reach out to your loved ones, especially around the Christmas Season. ❤️
12/17/2025

Please reach out to your loved ones, especially around the Christmas Season. ❤️

When Carmen announced that she was getting married at the age of 89, the family burst out laughing. Or assumed the worst.

“You’re getting married?” her eldest daughter asked, half nervous, half incredulous. “Mom, you’ve been a widow for thirty years.”

“Exactly,” Carmen replied with calm serenity. “It’s time I started making myself beautiful for someone again.”

No one knew how to answer.

Carmen lived alone in an old apartment in the Triana neighborhood. Three children. Seven grandchildren. One great-grandchild she had only seen in photos. Visits had become rare—always rushed, always with one eye on the clock.

But now she was talking about dresses, flowers, music.
About a simple lunch.
About a ceremony.

“And the lucky man?” a grandson asked, laughing.

“He’s very punctual,” she replied. “He’s never late.”

A sentence that left everyone puzzled.

Yet Carmen began making preparations. She went to a seamstress. Chose simple white shoes. Ordered a small bouquet of jasmine. She even went to the town hall to ask about the paperwork.

“Are you sure, ma’am?” a clerk asked her.

“More sure than many brides you’ve seen pass through here,” Carmen replied with a smile.

In the end, the family accepted it. They thought it was her way of closing a chapter. Of feeling alive again.

The “wedding” was set for a Saturday in May.

Everyone came.

Children who hadn’t spoken in months.
Grandchildren who barely knew her full name.
Even a sister from Valencia.

The church was almost empty—just family. No frills.

Flowers in place.
A pianist playing softly.
Carmen, dressed in white, entered arm in arm with her youngest grandson.

Smiling.
Her eyes shining with tears.

“Grandma…” he whispered. “And the groom?”

Carmen looked toward the altar.

“He’ll arrive.”

They waited.
Five minutes.
Ten. Fifteen.

The murmurs began.

“Poor thing…”
“She’s not well, that’s for sure…”
“Maybe she’s lost her mind…”

Carmen raised her hand and asked for the microphone.

“Thank you for coming.”

Her voice trembled—but not from age.

“There will be no groom today. There never was one.”

A heavy silence fell over the church.

“I was never really going to get married.
I just wanted a believable reason for all of you to be here. Together. For me.”

Some lowered their eyes.
Others covered their mouths.

“Since your father died,” she said to her children, “I started disappearing too.
I don’t blame you. Life is fast. But I was left behind.”

Then she looked at her grandchildren.

“I didn’t want to die like a notification read in a hurry.
I invented a wedding because… well, people always show up for weddings.”

Silence.

And tears no one tried to hide.

“I won’t get married today,” she concluded. “But I wanted to live something with you, before I go.”

She sat down.

And then the unexpected happened.

Her daughter stood up.
Walked toward her.
Held her for a long time.

“Forgive me, Mom.”

Then another child stood up.
Then another.
Then the grandchildren.

The church filled with awkward hugs, real tears, shy laughter.
That “fake” ceremony became a real celebration—
with stories, food, photographs, and promises.

Carmen died two months later, peacefully, in her bed.

But she did not die alone.

Because from that day on, her family came back—to visit her, to call her, to be present.

One of the grandchildren later wrote:

“My grandmother didn’t fake a wedding because she was confused.
She faked it because she was clear-minded.
She knew that sometimes, love needs an excuse to come back.”

This really resonated with us. I remember from my policing days going to calls from seniors and some of them were trivia...
11/29/2025

This really resonated with us.

I remember from my policing days going to calls from seniors and some of them were trivial but I did realize how lonely they were. Just a small reminder of what an hour out of a week can mean to someone.

My name’s Daniel, I’m 45, and two weeks ago I learned something about my mother that I’m still ashamed I didn’t see sooner.

She’s 80, lives alone in the little tan house she’s been in for half a century. The one with the peeling shutters and the mailbox she still refuses to replace because “it works just fine.”

Last Wednesday, she called and said:

“Danny… I need help with my grocery list. Can you come? I think I’m forgetting things.”

My first instinct?
Annoyance.

I had deadlines.
Kids’ activities.
Bills on my desk.
A hundred things pulling me in every direction.

So I said, “Just tell me what you want. I’ll order it all online.”

But she was quiet for a long moment before whispering:

“I’d rather you come.”

So I did.

When I walked into her kitchen, three grocery bags were already sitting neatly on the counter.

“Mom… you already shopped,” I said, confused.

She waved her hand. “Those are just basics. I still need a few things.”

She opened her notebook — the same spiral-bound one she’s used for years — and handed it to me.

The list said:

• grapes
• paper towels
• coffee creamer
• company

And suddenly everything inside me went still.

She looked embarrassed, like a kid caught doing something wrong.

“I just… didn’t know how else to ask you to come,” she whispered. “You’re always so busy, and I didn’t want to bother you.”

That sentence —
those ten quiet words —
hit harder than anything I’ve felt in years.

My mom, the woman who worked two jobs and still made every school concert…
the woman who saved every drawing I ever made…
the woman who put herself last for decades…

felt she had to pretend she needed groceries
just to feel worthy of a visit from her own son.

I hugged her so tightly she laughed and said, “Oh goodness, you’ll break me.”

We never went to the store.

Instead, we sat at the tiny kitchen table covered in little sunflower placemats she’s had since the ’90s.

We talked about the neighbor’s new dog.
About her tomato plant that refuses to grow.
About my dad, and how she still forgets he’s not coming through the door sometimes.

I stayed longer than I planned.
Drank terrible instant coffee.
Listened — really listened — the way she used to listen to me.

Before I left, she walked me to the door and held my hand for a moment longer than usual.

“You made my week, sweetheart,” she said softly.

Driving home, I couldn’t shake one thought:

How many times did she wait by the window, hoping my car would turn into the driveway?

How many afternoons did she tell herself,
“He’ll come when he has time,”
while the house echoed with loneliness I didn’t notice?

I realized that somewhere along the road of adulthood —
work, kids, obligations, noise —
I started treating her like an errand.

Someone to “fit in” when life allowed it.

But to her?
I was never an errand.
I was her world.

And all she wanted
was an hour with her son
in the home where she raised him.

💛 THE LESSON

Your parents won’t always tell you they’re lonely.
They won’t always say they miss you.
They won’t always ask directly.

Sometimes they’ll hide it behind a grocery list.
Behind a broken lamp.
Behind a request that doesn’t really need doing.

Go anyway.

Sit at their table.
Drink the bad coffee.
Let them tell you stories you’ve heard a thousand times.

Because one day the chair will be empty.
The notebook will be closed.
The porch light will be off.

And you’ll wish you had treated an ordinary Wednesday like the priceless moment it truly was

Copied from someone else

12/30/2023

My wish to all my freinds for 2024 is to evolve into the best they wish to be and live to tell about it in 2025!!!

Bring it on!!!!

Everyone please stay safe for the “Trick Or Treat” Fun this Halloween. Remember our four footed family members too as ma...
10/31/2023

Everyone please stay safe for the “Trick Or Treat” Fun this Halloween.

Remember our four footed family members too as many are terrified of the sound of fireworks, so please keep them inside with you.

Took a moment to catch the joke….

From our hearts to yours on Christmas Eve.We wish you the best Christmas Ever!
12/24/2022

From our hearts to yours on Christmas Eve.

We wish you the best Christmas Ever!

We have seen notifications of recommendations or we have been tagged on the services we provide, from people in N.B.A Bi...
12/11/2022

We have seen notifications of recommendations or we have been tagged on the services we provide, from people in N.B.

A Big Thank you to everyone who has recommended Caring With Kindness.

Everyone please be careful tonight. If you have pets, keep them inside with you as the sound of fireworks scares many of...
10/31/2022

Everyone please be careful tonight. If you have pets, keep them inside with you as the sound of fireworks scares many of our beloved companions.

Wherever you are in Canada today, we hope you have a fun filled day with freinds and loved ones near and dear.Happy Cana...
07/01/2022

Wherever you are in Canada today, we hope you have a fun filled day with freinds and loved ones near and dear.

Happy Canada Day!

Sending Happy Day Wishes to all Fathers, Grandfather's and Step Fathers an enjoyable day surrounded with love!.
06/19/2022

Sending Happy Day Wishes to all Fathers, Grandfather's and Step Fathers an enjoyable day surrounded with love!.

Helpful Cleaning Tip -  Use with extreme caution:These cleaning ingredients should never be mixed together as they will ...
05/30/2022

Helpful Cleaning Tip - Use with extreme caution:

These cleaning ingredients should never be mixed together as they will explode or be very fatal breathing in.

05/25/2022

ACTUAL SIGNS WITH LEVITY (Read On)

IN A SHOE REPAIR STORE:
"We will heel you
We will save your sole
We will even dye for you."

AT AN OPTOMETRIST’S OFFICE:
"If you don't see what you're looking for,
You've come to the right place."

ON A PLUMBER’S TRUCK:
"We repair what your husband fixed.”
Don't sleep with a drip. Call your plumber.”

ON AN ELECTRICAN'S TRUCK:
"Let us remove your shorts."

AT A CAR DEALERSHIP:
"To get back on your feet – Miss a car payment."

AT A MUFFLER SHOP:
"No appointment necessary - We hear you coming."

IN A VETERINARIAN'S WAITING ROOM:
"Be back in 5 minutes. Sit... Stay..."

AT THE ELECTRIC COMPANY:
"We would be delighted if you send in your payment on time. However, if you don't, YOU will be de-lighted.

IN A RADIATOR SHOP:
"Best place in town to take a leak."

ON A SEPTIC TANK TRUCK:
Caution: This truck is full " Political Promises "... ! ! !

Address

Riverview, NB

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6pm
Tuesday 9am - 6pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 6pm
Friday 9am - 6pm

Telephone

+15065881781

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