Novels2Search
Emma and Bort
Emma has some problems.

Emma has some problems.

Emma Keady started drinking when she was 3 years old. Her parents soon noticed she’d been drinking daily and became concerned.

Emma has been in recovery since she was 3 ½ years old. She was an active participant in her recovery and experienced positive transformations along the way. As a result, Emma has earned the sobriquet “The Black-Market Child”.

Emma Keady has been an alcoholic for most of her life. Emma struggled to define her alcohol use around social script norms until she turned 18 years old and found a support group for young women. The social script norm of alcohol use is very powerful for women of all ages, but particularly for younger women.

Then at 18, Emma was removed from her home and sent to a residential treatment center. While Emma endured the verbal abuse and neglect, she suffered at this time, she found a lot of support in the form of adults and peers alike.

Emma Keady’s parents were always abusive and never accepted that she was a pyromaniac. To this day, her parents continue to blame her addiction on her inability to have control, despite the fact that they are dead.

Emma Keady had an interest in arson, possibly due to her parents’ alcoholism. She has been identified as having set a fire in her parent’s home in February 1968 at the age of 5.

Emma likes to drink vodka because it makes her feel numb and drunk. She can drink vodka for hours and still have a clear mind and the ability to function normally until the vodka wears off.

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Emma even has her vodka bottle customized. She has had so many bottles of vodka that she has her bottle made to look like the Russian Orthodox cross and it is adorned with a Cossack portrait.

Emma Keady used to drink vodka before and after school to get through the day and avoid her parents and the school, but she usually drank only 5 bottles a day.

Emma’s favorite drink is Vodka because its burning flavor reminds her of the feeling of her throat being set on fire.

When Emma was 13, her parents both died of a mysterious death. She and her younger sister were sent to live with her maternal grandparents after her parent’s death. The Keady family was close, and Emma’s grandparents were “loving and generous”. Emma was not allowed to see her parents at their graves because her parents had no will and had not designated her as an heir. Thus, she couldn’t set her parent’s graves on fire.

When Emma was 26, she learned that her mother died of a brain aneurysm and her father died when he choked on a grain of rice, which she found disturbing because she thought her father was a fireman and would have known how to perform the Heimlich maneuver. She also learned that her mother died of a brain aneurysm which she thought was ironic because she was always saying that her mother was going to kill her. The irony also didn’t escape Emma that her parents’ alcoholism had caused her father to choke on a grain of rice, which she thought was a strange coincidence. But the deaths of her parents affected Emma positively because it taught her that she wasn’t responsible for the deaths of her parents and that she was loved regardless of the decision she made.

According to Emma Keady, the deaths of her parents affected her positively.

Emma wasn't upset about her parent’s deaths because they never accepted her fires.

Emma’s parents were severe conservatives and they believed that the world was run by a powerful emu that needed to be protected. They thought that her fires were a threat to the emu and that her fires were a sin and that they were not a part of natural human behaviors.

As conservative as they are, Emma’s parents were fine with her homosexuality and frequent girlfriends. This was because they were Emma’s family’s only source of income.

Emma is happy about her parent’s death. After she learned about her parent’s death, she made a big happy bonfire and took a bath in it to celebrate.