Cody VPL

Cody VPL Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Cody VPL, Digital creator, 305 Walkers Ridge Way, Kit Carson, CO.

05/14/2026

Photo Of Trump Family Turns Heads After People Spot Small DetailđŸ‘€âŹ‡ïž Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

“URGENT — 3 HOURS AGO! Princess Anne Speaks Firmly as Meghan Markle Faces Devastating News After Lilibet’s DNA Is Exposed: ‘Oh my God
 it turns out Lilibet is
’ Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

SEAL Jokingly Asked For the Old Veteran's Rank — Until His Reply Made the Entire Mess Hall Freeze... 'Hey, Pop, what was your rank back in the stone age?' George Stanton didn't even look up from his chili when he answered. 'Mess cook, third class.' The three young SEALs standing over him laughed like he'd just handed them the punch line they were hoping for.
The loudest of them was petty officer Miller, a broad-shouldered operator with a neck like poured concrete and the kind of confidence that comes from being faster, stronger, and younger than almost everyone in the room. His tray sagged under enough protein and calories to fuel a machine, and the gold trident on his chest gleamed beneath the mess hall lights like a badge he expected everyone to notice.
George sat alone at a square table bolted to the deck. He was 87 years old, his tweed jacket too formal for the room, his white shirt too old-fashioned, his whole presence oddly out of place among digital camouflage, command patches, and shaved heads. One spotted hand rested lightly beside the bowl. The other lifted the spoon without a tremor.
He chewed slowly. Deliberately. Like the noise around him belonged to another world. His pale blue eyes stayed fixed somewhere beyond the far wall of the Naval Amphibious Base Coronado dining facility, as if he were listening to something older than the room itself.
Miller smirked at his teammates. They tightened around the table in a casual little triangle that wasn't casual at all. 'I'm talking to you, old-timer. This is a military installation. You got a pass to be here? Or did you just wander in from the retirement home because you smelled free lunch?'
The mess hall didn't go silent all at once. It happened in pieces. A laugh stopped halfway out. A fork touched a plate and sounded too loud. Chairs shifted. Conversations thinned. People began to notice the same thing at the same time: this wasn't harmless teasing anymore. It was a public display, and the old man at the center of it wasn't playing along.
George finished his spoonful of chili and set the spoon down with a soft, precise movement. No rattle. No wasted motion. He still hadn't looked at Miller. That calm, more than any argument ever could have, started to get under the younger man's skin.
Miller leaned in until his tattooed forearms pressed against the table's edge. The metal frame didn't move, but the invasion was clear. He was close enough now for George to smell the detergent on his uniform and the sharp bite of pre-workout still clinging to his breath. 'Look at me when I'm talking to you,' he said, and the mockery was gone. What was left was something uglier.
A few younger sailors nearby shifted in their seats and stared down at their trays. They knew Miller's reputation. He was excellent at his job, one of those operators everyone pointed to when they talked about standards. But he carried his status like it gave him ownership over the room, and over anyone in it who didn't wear the same insignia.
George finally turned his head. His eyes were watery with age, but not weak. There was a depth in them that didn't fit the rest of his frail frame. He looked at Miller's face, then at the trident on his chest, then back to his eyes. It felt less like a frightened old man looking up and more like a man quietly measuring distance in a place no one else could see.
Miller's friend stepped closer, emboldened by the crowd that was pretending not to watch. 'What, you deaf?' he said. 'He asked you a question.' Miller straightened and extended one impatient hand. 'Let me see some ID. Now.'
It was a blatant overstep, and everyone in that room knew it. A petty officer had no business demanding identification from a civilian guest in a common dining facility. That belonged to base security, not a young operator looking for an audience. But no one spoke. The cost of correcting a SEAL in public was written all over the lowered eyes and suddenly fascinating green beans at the surrounding tables.
George didn't reach for a wallet. He reached for his cup of water instead. He took a slow sip and set it back down in the exact center of the napkin beneath it. The stillness around that small motion made the air feel tight. Miller's face had begun to color. Public mockery was supposed to end with laughter. Not with this. Not with an old man answering him by refusing to bend.
'That's it,' Miller snapped. 'You and me are taking a walk to the MA. Get up. Now.' He jabbed a finger toward the lapel of George's tweed jacket, toward a small tarnished pin no bigger than a thumbnail. It was old bronze, shaped like a narrow spearhead, worn almost smooth with time. 'And what the hell is that supposed to be?'
For the first time, something changed in George's face. Not fear. Not anger. Something heavier. Almost sorrow. Like he had just watched a young man step across a line he didn't even know existed. Then a chair scraped hard against the deck somewhere behind Miller, and a voice from the entrance cut through the room like steel. 'Petty Officer... take your hand away from that man.'
Miller started to turn, annoyed at first. But the moment he saw who was standing in the doorway, the blood drained from his face. Because the person staring past him wasn't looking at a disruptive old civilian at all. He was staring at George Stanton like he'd just found a ghost sitting in the chow line... and what happened next belongs in the comments. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

I never imagined I would find my ex-husband's father abandoned in a nursing home, much less that I would hear him whisper my name as if I were the only person he had left in the world.
For weeks, I cared for the man my ex-husband had all but forgotten.
One night, he took my hand, placed something in my palm, and said, "Claire
 Daniel lied to you about everything."
When I looked down and saw what it was, I nearly gasped. I had no idea that this was just the beginning.
I ended up at that nursing home completely by chance.
That Friday afternoon, I was in East Columbus, Ohio, delivering paperwork for the dental clinic where I worked.
My GPS led me to the wrong building, and after circling a narrow parking lot filled with visitors' cars, I realized I had stopped in front of Maple Grove Care Center.
I was about to turn back and leave when I saw a familiar figure through the front window: a tall man in a wheelchair, his shoulders slumped, his gaze fixed on the television, though he didn't seem to really see it.
For a moment, I thought I was mistaken.
Then he turned his head slightly, and I knew.
It was Walter Hayes, Daniel's father, my ex-husband's father.
I hadn't seen Walter in almost four years, since the divorce.
Back then, he was the only person in Daniel's family who treated me like I actually mattered.
When Daniel dismissed my opinions, Walter listened.
When Daniel stayed out all night and told weak excuses about it, Walter never covered for him.
On the last Thanksgiving we spent sitting together at the table, Walter gently squeezed my hand under the table, as if to say he understood what I was going through.
Two months later, I filed for divorce.
Daniel called me selfish. His mother called me ungrateful.
Walter, on the other hand, never called even once.
Standing there in that parking lot, I told myself I had to leave.
My life was quieter now.
I had my own small apartment, a stable job, my Sunday morning shopping routine, my peace.
What was happening with Daniel's family was no longer my business.
But I couldn't stop thinking about Walter, about that wheelchair.
So I went inside and asked at the front desk if he usually had visitors.
The receptionist checked the guestbook and then looked at me with a soft, knowing expression, as if the answer was obvious even before I said a word.
"Not very often," she said. "Hardly ever."
I signed the guestbook.
Walter looked much thinner than I remembered, his hands as thin as paper and dotted with age spots.
He seemed confused when I greeted him, and then briefly embarrassed when he recognized me.
“Claire?” he asked. “Is
 is it Claire?”
I nodded and pulled up a chair.
His room was desolate: a faded blanket, two framed photographs face down on the low dresser, a pair of slippers by the bed, and a plastic cup of water that he had clearly not touched.
He said that Daniel was “busy” and that his wife, Margaret, “had been having trouble driving lately,” though even in his confused state, the explanations sounded rehearsed.
That first day, I only stayed for twenty minutes.
The following Tuesday, I returned with some clean socks, sugar-free biscuits, and a Western novel I had bought at a secondhand bookstore, because I remembered how much he loved Louis L’Amour.
After that, I began visiting him every week.
I told myself it was nothing more than simple compassion.
Nothing more than that.
But eight weeks later, on a stormy Thursday night, Walter grabbed my wrist with unexpected strength.
He looked at me with a clarity I hadn't seen in years and then said, "Claire, there's something I've been trying to keep from you before it's too late." Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

Teen Thief Mocks the Judge, Thinking He’s Untouchable Then His Own Mother Stands Up...The courtroom buzzed with whispers the moment seventeen-year-old Ryan Cooper walked in, his chin high, sneakers squeaking against the polished floor. He didn’t look like someone who was about to face sentencing for a string of burglaries across his suburban Ohio neighborhood. Instead, he looked like he owned the place—hands shoved into the pockets of his hoodie, a smirk playing on his lips.
Judge Alan Whitmore had seen plenty of criminals, but teenage Ryan Cooper was different. Arrested three times in a year—for shoplifting, car break-ins, and even a home burglary—Ryan showed no remorse. Smirking in court, he mocked the system: “Juvenile detention? Please. It’s like summer camp with locks.”
The judge warned him he was “standing on the edge of a cliff,” but Ryan just shrugged. Then his mother, who had quietly endured every hearing, finally snapped. Standing in the packed courtroom, her voice shook as she called out her son’s behavior: “Enough, Ryan! This isn’t a joke. Not anymore. "The room froze. The judge leaned back, intrigued. For the first time all day, Ryan’s smirk faltered...Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

20 minutes ago in Chicago, Jennifer Lopez has been confirmed as
Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

"Get out of here, woman! There's no room for the likes of you in my company!" the captain snapped at the young soldier, but he couldn't even imagine who was standing before him. đŸ˜±đŸ˜±
The barracks was filled with a suffocating mixture of damp, sweat, and old smoke. Dust lay thick on the floor, rusty bunks creaked with every movement, and the soldiers sat in the corner like lost shadows. Their uniforms were tattered, their boots torn, and their faces were filled with fatigue and indifference.
Anna, as soon as she crossed the threshold, felt her insides boil. She expected to see strong and proud defenders of the homeland, but instead, people driven to poverty and despair.
She walked resolutely toward the captain.
"Why do your soldiers live in such conditions?" she asked sharply. "Where are the uniforms, where is the proper food? Why is the barracks a pigsty?" The captain frowned, then, realizing the defenseless girl standing before him, chuckled.
"Who are you to even ask questions? Aren't you afraid of losing your job?"
"I'm not afraid," Anna replied firmly. "I'm disgusted to wear torn boots and eat food I'd be ashamed to feed to pigs. That applies to me and my comrades. We came here to serve, not to survive."
The captain took a sharp step toward the girl, grabbed her by the collar, and barked angrily.
"Get out of here, woman! There's no room for your kind in my company!"
But the captain couldn't even imagine that the girl standing before him was anything but an ordinary woman...Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

BREAKING NEWS. Maximum worldwide alert. The war begins...Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

My wife passed away years ago. Every single month, I sent her mother $300—until I discovered what was really going on

The alert came exactly when it always did—nine sharp on the first morning of the month. I didn’t even glance at my phone. I already knew the message by heart: the bank confirming that the transfer had been completed.
$300 sent successfully.
Recipient: Doña Clara.
My former mother-in-law.
The mother of the woman who had once been my everything—and later, the source of a grief that never quite loosened its grip.
Five years, three months, and two days had passed since Marina vanished from my life. I avoided the word “died,” even though the cold stone marking her grave made denial impossible. To me, she hadn’t died. She had dissolved—leaving behind an empty side of the bed and a silence so heavy it echoed through every room of the house we’d bought together, full of plans that never happened.
They said Marina was killed in a car accident while driving to visit her family in a coastal town, about six hours away. The police report was brief. The coffin arrived sealed because of how severe the crash had been. The funeral passed in a blur—faces streaked with tears, condolences I barely registered.
What stayed with me was her mother.
Doña Clara—small, trembling, inconsolable—clutched my arm at the cemetery as if letting go would cause her world to collapse completely. In the middle of that shared devastation, I made a promise.
Marina had always worried about her. Doña Clara was a widow, living on a tiny pension, her health fragile. Once, half joking and half serious, Marina had told me, “If anything ever happens to me, promise you’ll look after my mom.”
Standing beside the fresh grave, I swore it.
“I won’t let you struggle,” I told Doña Clara softly, wiping tears from her face even as my hands shook. “Every month, I’ll send you money for food and medicine. That’s what Marina would want.”
She nodded, grateful, and returned to her village.
From that moment on, $300 left my account every single month without fail. It wasn’t a huge sum—but to me, it was sacred. A ritual. A way to stay connected to Marina. Sending that money made me feel like I was still honoring her, still being the husband I promised to be.
My friends thought I was clinging to the past.
“Roberto, it’s been five years,” my best friend Jorge said one night over beers. “You’re still young. You can’t carry that responsibility forever.”
“It’s not about her,” I told him every time. “It’s about Marina.”
But life has a way of forcing your eyes open when you get too comfortable living inside grief. Everything shifted on a completely ordinary Tuesday.
I received a letter from the bank—not a routine notice, but a problem. Doña Clara’s local branch had shut down. They needed updated account information to continue processing the transfers.
I tried calling her landline. Disconnected.
I tried the cellphone I’d bought her two years earlier. Straight to voicemail.
A quiet unease settled in my chest. Not panic—something colder. I realized I hadn’t actually spoken to her in months. Our conversations had dwindled to short thank-you messages.
I checked my calendar. I had unused vacation days my boss kept reminding me about. My car keys sat on the table. Why not? I thought.
I’d visit her. Fix the bank issue in person. Make sure she was alright. Maybe even see the town where Marina grew up—maybe that would finally help me let go.
I had no idea the trip wouldn’t bring closure—
—but would instead rip open a truth I never imagined.
I packed a small bag, bought things Doña Clara always liked—good coffee, chocolates, imported canned foods—and hit the road.
The drive was long and quiet. Memories flooded in as the miles passed: Marina’s laughter, the way she tilted her head when she listened, the faint vanilla scent of her hair. I cried alone in the car, allowing myself a vulnerability I never showed anyone.
I reached the village at sunset. Cobblestone streets. Colorful houses. Beautiful—but worn, like a place time had forgotten. I hadn’t been there since the funeral.
I drove to the address burned into my memory:
Las Flores Street, number 42.
And when I arrived, I stopped cold.
The old, modest house I remembered was gone. In its place stood a freshly painted bright yellow home. A pristine garden bursting with roses and bougainvillea. A brand-new wooden fence.
And parked in the driveway—
—a nearly new sedan.
I checked the GPS again.
Same address.
That’s when I knew something was very, very wrong. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

Mysterious dolphin approaches divers and then something miraculous happens. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

05/13/2026

Did you know that waking up at 3 or 4 AM could be a sign of
Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

Address

305 Walkers Ridge Way
Kit Carson, CO
80825

Telephone

+16302016373

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Cody VPL posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share