Very short stories with the Present Perfect Continuous (The Present Perfect Continuous Tense_Learn English With Africa_January 2020)

English Grammar (Lesson 4): VERY SHORT STORIES with the Present Perfect Continuous Tense

Read interesting and very short stories with the Present Perfect Continuous Tense. Colourful and detailed worksheets are provided. (Level A2-B1-B2)
Share this course:

Very short stories with the Present Perfect Continuous tense!

The Fallen Politician

Very Short Stories with the Present Perfect Continuous Tense, The Present Perfect Continuous Tense_(1) Part 2_Learn English With Africa_February 2020

Our Member of Parliament has disappeared. We have been looking for him day and night, searching frantically in places where he is likely to be found. He is nowhere to be seen. Even his wife does not know where he is. He just vamoosed like that, vanished like thin air. We are not surprised as a matter of fact. He has been feeding us with fat lies and the time of reckoning has come. We all believe so.

Since the day we elected him, he has been taking us for a ride. He thought that we were foolish for electing him. He has been taking our respect and loyalty for granted. He has never fulfilled any of his grand promises. Naturally, we got fed up with him. At first, we protested against him verbally. He refused to hear us. We took to the streets and he had the riot police come after us. Time and money were against us, so we left him alone. He continued abusing us until he disappeared for good.

His disappearance actually dates back to last week. Rumour has it that he is abroad. He has gone into hiding. He run away with a concubine. We have been hearing so many stories about him that some of them are just hard to believe. A vendor at the market said that she saw him with a woman in his Mercedes Benz. She apparently looked foreign, and certainly she was not his wife.

The majority of the stories are negative, of course. Our once honourable MP is not here to deny those rumours. He has never been here anyway; he has always lived in town. He has always been running away from his duties. Now, he has run away for good. He has been earning his salary without working for it. Now, we want answers but he is not here to answer our questions.

We wish we could turn back the hands of time. You know, during his campaign there was an event that could have stopped him for good. He was addressing one of his last rallies and one of the supporters of his main rival pushed our future MP off the podium. The poor bloke was immediately rushed to the hospital. We all feared for his life. Luckily enough he did not sustain any serious injuries. He just got away with a broken arm and leg.

Today, marks the eighth day since he left us. We have been living like lost and orphaned children. We strongly feel his absence and hope that the void he left behind will soon be filled by somebody else. Deep down, we all know that a similar ruthless and shameless individual will replace him. Birds of the same feather flock together, we have seen that with our own eyes. Perhaps, it is time we became adults and stopped depending on these thieves. We have been suffering for so long.

So Long

The Present Perfect Continuous Tense_(6) Part 2_Learn English With Africa_February 2020

She takes a small suitcase and fills it up with basic necessities: a few clothes, her favourite books, important documents, some souvenirs. She has been planning this day for so long that she does all the actions in automated mode.

Once she steps out of the house, she does not look behind. She does not even think about it. It does not take long to erase the bad memories out of her mind that she can hardly believe it herself. The chains are falling and she never thought that they would during her lifetime. She has been dreaming about this state for so long that she can hardly breathe.

She boards the first bus that comes. There are a lot of people on board. Some of them smile at her as if they know what she has just been doing. Most of them are indifferent but it does not matter to her. Freedom at last, she mutters but she is sure that everybody has heard her. She is sitting next to a young woman with braids that are so long that they almost touch her knees. The latter says ‘hi’ and she returns the greetings. She has been longing for this moment for so long that her ‘HELLO’ is resounding like the loudest of trumpets. FREEDOM!

She sits back and enjoys the ride.

An imaginary goodbye to her detestable past finally escapes her lips.

So long.

Heroes

The Present Perfect Continuous Tense_(5) Part 2_Learn English With Africa_February 2020

They wake up at four o’clock every morning. Their wives are sleeping and their children too. They have been doing this since they became husbands and fathers. They will be doing this until they can longer do so.

They carry heavy loads of charcoal on their backs. They head to the market to sell it to other heroes ⁠— women and men who strive to do the best for their families, come rain or sunshine. They have been waking up so early for time immemorial that it has become inconsequential for them.

The charcoal they buy will be used to cook food for small heroes ⁠— children who walk miles to go to school so that they can dream of a better future, even though they know that there is none for most of them. Their parents and teachers have been lying to them that they will all have jobs after leaving school — they just have to work harder, heroically.

A few pupils will become doctors or lawyers. Some of them will work in government or private offices, eking out a pitiful existence. The majority of them will be jobless and will become farmers like their heroic fathers, grandfathers or great-grandfathers before them. A tiny few will resort to crime and will be dealt with heroes in uniform. The pupils have been witnessing this situation for so long that they somehow know what the future holds for them even though the adults around them say otherwise.

In any case, these school children will become men and women, heroes and heroines. They will participate in the same upstream swimming that is life. They have been learning this life lesson as soon as they could understand the world around them.

Being a hero is not a choice — heroism is a quality that you inherit when you are left with no other choices.

The Present Perfect Continuous Tense_(3) Part 2_Learn English With Africa_February 2020

Further Exploration: (Very short stories with the Present Perfect Continuous)

Download Worksheets:

Read:

Shop:

B1 Short Stories in English (Very short Stories with the Present Perfect Continuous)

Watch:

More Shopping:

Front Cover (B2 Short Stories in English)_Learn English With Africa
About the Author
Thandi Ngwira Gatignol Learn English With Africa March 2023

Thandi Ngwira Gatignol is the founder of Learn English With Africa. She was born on June 11th, 1981 in Blantyre, Malawi. When she was 19, she left her country of birth for France. She currently lives with her two daughters and husband in Poland.

Thandi holds a Bachelor’s degree in English studies obtained at the Université Paris X Nanterre in France and a Certificate in Journalism from Malawi. She has taught English as a French Ministry of Education certified teacher both in France and in Poland. She speaks six languages fluently, including French, Polish and Italian. She is now learning Kiswahili, German and Spanish. Salt No More is her debut novel and you can find her other books here on the website or on Amazon.

English Grammar (Lesson 4): Very Short Stories with the Present Perfect Continuous Tense© Learn English With Africa, February 2020

Join us as a subscriber and gain full access to website content:

Are you enjoying our courses?

Find out more about our books! Available as pdf, kindle or paperback book.

Comments:

Leave a Reply

See our newest resources:

Login:
Not a member? Check our offer: