When people drift apart, two things are normal: to get on with their lives or to try and get back together. But, when a young woman, Laura Garcia, played by Karmine Alers, calls her mother and tries to get her already long ago broken family together, and hears a male voice answering her phone, she becomes suspicious. Going back to her old mother, Laura and her bother Elliot, who is played by Ryan Vigilant, find out that their mother has a man living in her house. At first they get revolted and aggravated, even more angry at her than they were before. But as the time goes by, they start talking with each other, and maybe try to work out their broken relationships. Ted Kingsley, the guy that takes care of their mother, gets involved in a homosexual relationship with Elliot, while Laura and her mother Lilly, played by S. Lue McWilliams, go for a walk and talk about their issues and everything that happened. In the end, they all realize that they have to forget and forgive in order to live happily ever after. Director and writer Richard LeMay has done a great job transferring the message to the screen. And the acting crew was completely successful in bringing their characters to life, as well as their disputes and disagreements.