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| #Post#: 57530-------------------------------------------------- | |
| writing as dead | |
| By: Raven` Date: August 13, 2015, 9:34 am | |
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| [ You know Rae is serious when she decides to use proper casing | |
| for OOC notes ] | |
| I was recently reading my summer reading book, The Catcher in | |
| the Rye. So far, its a nice book. Though like most summer | |
| reading books, there are outdated terms that I must use context | |
| clues to solve. But that isn't the point. The point is that, as | |
| I was reading this, I realized. I didn't care much for Holden | |
| Caulfield, the main character, or Robert Ackley, his obnoxious | |
| dormroom neighbor. The old Spencers in the very beginning was | |
| deemed boring the second I started reading into them, and Ward | |
| Stradlater was deemed the same. | |
| It wasn't until Allie was brought up. Allie, the younger brother | |
| with a head full of red hair. Allie, who played baseball with | |
| all his heart. Allie, who wrote poems on the fingers and | |
| webbings of his mitt, so he could be distracted when no one was | |
| up to bat. Who, despite the heavily believed rumor that gingers | |
| were always angry, was always happy. Who would fall out of his | |
| chair because he was laughing at something he thought of. Who | |
| could put a smile on anyone's face. | |
| Who died of leukemia. Who caused grief in the family. Who caused | |
| Holden, on the night of his death, to punch out every window in | |
| the garage, and would've punched out the windows of the car if | |
| his hand wasn't already swollen and bleeding. Who's older | |
| brother can't even make a tight fist anymore because of all that | |
| happened that night. Who I only new for about two pages, and his | |
| life was cut short within the first half. Who brought tears to | |
| my eyes because I could see that he had so much to live for, and | |
| lost his life due to a dumb cancer. | |
| See? Writing a character as dead brings life into them. Ironic, | |
| right? I could care less about Allie if we was still alive. But | |
| no. Allie was dead. His story was done while his brother's | |
| continued to write this book. And that made me think. Why does | |
| writing one as dead make them even more interesting when they're | |
| alive? You could be the most interesting person ever, but you | |
| won't reach your full peak until you're gone. | |
| Now that I'm writing this out, hasn't this happened before? | |
| Hasn't there been cases where authors, artists, and musicians | |
| died before anyone noticed how good they were? How, when they | |
| died, a lot of their stuff was recognized as amazing, and so | |
| were they, but they weren't there to experience it? Weird, isn't | |
| it?? | |
| Well, I'm going to try it. I'm going to practice my writing, and | |
| try to write my family members as dead. Morbid, I know. But I | |
| want to see if that makes them more interesting then if I would | |
| write them as living. I want to see if I can prove my theory | |
| this way. | |
| Here we go. Oldest, to youngest. Oh, and this will be done over | |
| the course of the week. One a day, so I don't over exert myself. | |
| [spoiler=Father]He, like most fathers are, was a great man. But | |
| you had to get to know him, power through a conversation with | |
| him, and be ready for any blunt replies if you wanted anything | |
| friendship like out of him. He was ready to tell the truth, and | |
| only the truth. Nothing more and nothing less would slip out of | |
| his lips. It was a blessing and a curse. | |
| He was a hard worker, too. Last I checked, he worked from seven | |
| to three at an office job for this big corporation, and then | |
| from three thirty to whenever he had to stop because of the | |
| labor at plots of land that held old, condemned or abandoned | |
| buildings, cleaning them up so that more homes were available to | |
| those in need of them. He nearly broke his back every day for | |
| this family, and I don't remember saying as much as a thanks for | |
| it all. | |
| Family was a big thing for my father. Everything he did was for | |
| his family. He struggled at work, even when it hurt him, so his | |
| son could have that new video game that's been on the market. He | |
| puts in a few hours on his day off so that his elder son can | |
| have the money to buy food for his two daughters. He comes home | |
| late at night and, despite everything in his body telling him to | |
| rest, sits at the kitchen table and sacrifices a few hours just | |
| so he can talk to his wife. Family was everything. | |
| Now, of course, everyone has faults. My father's was drinking. | |
| Every day, I remember, my mom would have to run to the corner | |
| store to snag a new pack of beers before my dad could come home. | |
| The first thing he'd do before he'd sit down was crack open a | |
| can and down at least half of it. More than half of the pack | |
| would be gone by the time dinner came around, and the rest would | |
| be done by the afternoon of the next day, when he stopped by | |
| home to change clothes. He had yet to admit his reliance to the | |
| alcohol, but really, that's a hard thing to admit to if you'd | |
| been doing it since your first child, over twenty five years | |
| ago. | |
| But my father was also a nervous and worrying man. You couldn't | |
| catch that air from him at a first meeting, but he was. He was | |
| nervous about his words, as his native language was Spanish. He | |
| was worried about his appearance, as one smudge on his pants | |
| from his second job could land him in some trouble at his first. | |
| He was worried for his younger kids. Did they have enough to | |
| eat? To snack on? Are they doing good in school? Do they need | |
| help? He worried for his elder kids. Does his oldest have enough | |
| to feed his kids? Does his second oldest even pay attention to | |
| his child? Does his third oldest, who isn't even his child | |
| biologically, know that doing drugs not only hurts him but his | |
| family too? | |
| Hell, I remember one day, talking to my mother about my father. | |
| We pointed out his strong points and his weak points. We laughed | |
| about times we had, we sighed about times we had. But my mother | |
| told me that the reason he's so nervous about me having sleep | |
| overs is because, when he was a kid, little girls would have | |
| sleep overs, and then go home telling their parents that their | |
| friend's daddy touched them. He didn't want that to happen. He | |
| didn't want to hurt my reputation, or his own. So when I had | |
| friends over, he would hide himself in his bedroom, seldom | |
| coming out so he couldn't risk such things. | |
| My father was a good man. I loved him so much. I still do. I | |
| just wish I showed it a lot more when I had the chance. I | |
| remember being scared of talking to him because, like I said in | |
| the beginning, it was hard to power through a conversation with | |
| him. He was nitpicky about certain things, and sometimes, I just | |
| didn't care for a conversation like that. I wish I had powered | |
| through those conversations even more. I wish I told him all | |
| about my school life, instead of saying 'everything's fine'. I | |
| wish I told him more about my fights with my friends or | |
| significant others. I wish I talked to him more, so I could get | |
| more advice. I wish I could get more time, in general, just so I | |
| could tell him how much I love him.[/spoiler] | |
| [spoiler=Mother]I loved my mother so, so, so much. We were | |
| incredibly close. Sure, she was snippy at times, and didn't want | |
| her bratty, stuck up, conceited child in her face all the time. | |
| But so was I. Who in their right mind actually wants to talk to | |
| their mother every second of the day? I did. I still want to. | |
| I loved her so much. Her voice was soothing in such a way that I | |
| wouldn't fall asleep, but instead stay bright awake. Her | |
| conversation was always intriguing, as a lot of it was made up | |
| of hand motions and expressions. She always said things with a | |
| matter-of-fact tone. And, although she would have never admitted | |
| to it, sometimes, her laugh was more like a cackle. Screechy and | |
| high pitched. Sometimes she would bring her hand down on the | |
| table or her knee a few times if her laugh was hard and genuine. | |
| Other times it would just be a soft chuckle. | |
| I rarely ever saw my mother truly sad or truly angry. She had | |
| bipolar disorder, which gave her the extreme highs and lows of | |
| those two emotions. But because these signs were seen as her | |
| just being her when she was younger, she never looked for | |
| treatment. She was forced to live with the crazed highs and | |
| lows. When she was locked up, she was forced to control them. | |
| The mother I saw was the mother I knew, but the mother I knew | |
| wasn't who she was when she was young. | |
| I remember once when I saw my mother cry real tears. It was | |
| during one of the many break ups she had with my father. I had | |
| come home from school that day and she sat me down. We talked, | |
| and I started to cry at the news of moving out. Soon, tears | |
| slipped from her eyes. I pulled her into a hug, thinking she was | |
| crying over her father. No. She told me she was crying for me. | |
| For my younger brother. She never wanted us to go through | |
| something like this before. And the thought alone made her sad. | |
| I remember faintly before all of this when my mother was angry. | |
| My father was terribly drunk and was throwing slurs at her. I | |
| was on my laptop, trying to block out the noise. I would've left | |
| the room to go check on my brother and keep him distracted, but | |
| they were blocking the one door way between the two rooms. So I | |
| stayed in my room and listened to the yelling. At some point, I | |
| heard a thump. I hopped up, and ran to the door and pulled it | |
| open just a little. The table was against the back door, all of | |
| its toppings scattered on the floor. My mother had my father | |
| pinned against the fridge. I remember the fear in his eyes as I | |
| closed the door and hid away under a few blankets. | |
| I loved my mother so much that sometimes, I would let things | |
| slip. I would let her agree to not tell someone something, and | |
| then gossip about it later. I would trust her not to tell others | |
| something, and allow her to tell others anyways. I would let her | |
| convince everyone that any animal under her name was perfect | |
| with no flaws. All because I loved her. | |
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