Anonymous wrote:Did she receive anything in her father's will?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor kid. That must have been so hurtful. Where does it say that the step-mom and half-siblings ignored her? I didn't see that in the article.
It's a quick line about a third of the way through.
Anonymous wrote:Later, I would put everything back. But now, between avoiding the housekeeper, my brother and sisters, and my stepmother around the house so I wouldn’t be caught stealing things or hurt when they didn’t acknowledge me or reply to my hellos, and spraying myself in the darkened bathroom to feel less like I was disappearing—because inside the falling mist I had a sense of having an outline again—making efforts to see my sick father in his room began to feel like a burden, a nuisance.
That's sad. Laurene Jobs styles herself as a philanthropist. You think she'd have some kindness in her for a child who her husband treated terribly.
I wonder if the estrangement with the stepmom and half siblings has something to do with the book Chrisann Brennan wrote.
"I think that he kind of felt that if you ignore something,” Isaacson told CBS CBS -0.08%, “if you don't want something to exist, you can have magical thinking. And it had worked for him in the past.”
https://www.forbes.com/sites/alicegwalton/2011/10/24/steve-jobs-cancer-treatment-regrets/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor kid. That must have been so hurtful. Where does it say that the step-mom and half-siblings ignored her? I didn't see that in the article.
It's a quick line about a third of the way through.
Anonymous wrote:Later, I would put everything back. But now, between avoiding the housekeeper, my brother and sisters, and my stepmother around the house so I wouldn’t be caught stealing things or hurt when they didn’t acknowledge me or reply to my hellos, and spraying myself in the darkened bathroom to feel less like I was disappearing—because inside the falling mist I had a sense of having an outline again—making efforts to see my sick father in his room began to feel like a burden, a nuisance.
That's sad. Laurene Jobs styles herself as a philanthropist. You think she'd have some kindness in her for a child who her husband treated terribly.
So says wikipediaAnonymous wrote:Is Laurene Jobs still dating former D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor kid. That must have been so hurtful. Where does it say that the step-mom and half-siblings ignored her? I didn't see that in the article.
It's a quick line about a third of the way through.
Anonymous wrote:Later, I would put everything back. But now, between avoiding the housekeeper, my brother and sisters, and my stepmother around the house so I wouldn’t be caught stealing things or hurt when they didn’t acknowledge me or reply to my hellos, and spraying myself in the darkened bathroom to feel less like I was disappearing—because inside the falling mist I had a sense of having an outline again—making efforts to see my sick father in his room began to feel like a burden, a nuisance.
Anonymous wrote:Was he a better father to his younger kids?