Thursday, March 21, 2013

The Janes Legacy

  I'm so excited! I've finally started the legacy that I've always wanted to!  As most of you know, starting a blog and take a little while, so I won't be posting as frequently (maybe a post or two a week) until I get everything up and running smoothly for my blog. The link is here: The Janes Legacy Please consider checking it out and giving me feedback. I'm really hoping to focus on the written content of the legacy, instead of just picture, picture, pictures! (Which, regrettably, is what this story has sadly become. Hopefully, that'll change. ) I am NOT quitting or giving up, I'm just letting you know that if you don't see me around as much, it's because of the legacy. The idea has been thought over several billion times and the Janes Legacy was my final thoughts.



Here's the Prologue:

  Just a little, innocent girl who loved to play with her dolls and create stories in her head. That's all she was. The little seven year old girl in second grade who was friends with everyone. The teachers loved her imagination and intelligence. Life was happy and joyous for everyone that met her; My Little Ray of Sunshine, her father would call her. Her life was shielded and safe; the pains of the real world were unknown to her. Until now.
“I can't live with this Sandra! I work all day, there's bills to pay and the baby....how are we suppose to keep paying for your therapy?”
“Mark....please! Give it a chance....give me a chance.”
“Eight years! Eight years I've been giving you a chance! How are you suppose to blame me for wanting to relax?”
“Relax? Mark....” Sandra hardly believed his year long affair with his dim witted coworker was relaxation.
“A new baby was suppose to help! This wasn't suppose to happen! It's been four months and still...”
“Mark, it isn't my fault!” She blubbered, holding back the tears.
“No, Sandy, it was.” He walked off, slamming the front door in her face. They both loved their child; that was the one thing holding them together, yet even that wasn't enough.
“Mommy, where's Daddy going?” She innocently asked, witnessing the fight from the safety of her cracked bedroom door.
“Daddy's...Daddy's leaving....” She burst into tears.
“Leaving?” She was confused. Daddy left for work every morning, but today wasn't every morning. It was Saturday. He was suppose to take her and her mother out to the park so they could go roller skating and lick ice cream from the cones as it dripped down their hands, while watching the annual Fourth of July firework display burst into vibrant color as everyone oohed and ahhed. “Is he working?”
“No, honey...he's going...forever.”
“Forever?” Her teacher told her that forever was a long time. You waited in line at the amusement park forever, but people didn't leave forever. Did they?
The rumble of an old car's motor sent tears flowing down her mother's face. The little child rushed to the window.
She watched as her father's car pulled out of the driveway and zipped away from the house. He didn't even turn to wave goodbye. He just left.
 “Daddy...don't go.” She whispered. “I promise to eat my vegetables and I won't ask for that new doll, and I won't complain when you tell me to clean up my room! Just...” The car turned the corner. She finally understood. Forever wasn't something with rides at the end. It was pain and misery. It wasn't just happiness and bliss; pain, suffering, the world was full to the brim with unhappiness, and few people ever found the special moment; that one true love. Daddy wasn't leaving to go to work, he wasn't going to bring candy or a teddy bear when he cam home, because he wasn't coming home.
Through the tears her mother cried, she felt one thing. Confusion. What did this mean? Tommy's parents had gotten a divorce. Her teacher explained that a divorce was when two parents love each other very much, but they sometimes fight. They decide that they both need a little time out from one another. That's why they all needed to be extra nice to Tommy, and make sure to share the crayons with him. Mommy and Daddy weren't getting a divorce, were they? Did divorces exist, or did you only read about them, like unicorns and fairies?
“Mommy, is Daddy getting a time out?” When she yelled, she got a time out. Was he? Wasn't that what her teacher said a divorce was?
“Sweetie...he...he,” she sniffled. “Daddy's time out is going to be....he....we won't be seeing him, okay?”
“Okay.” She considered what her Mommy meant. Daddy was going to come back, when he learned not to yell. “Will he be back, when he learns not to yell?”
“No...we...we'll never see him, again.”
“A divorce?” Was that what a divorce was? Never seeing each other again?
“Not...not exactly....” Sandra would stay legally married to him for the rest of her life. She'd never trust another man enough to ever have a reason to get a divorce. She'd lost hope in love; a lesson she could only regrettably teach to her daughter; it was impossible avoid. “Daddy's....gone.”
“Gone?”
“It'll be Mommy and you time. That's always fun.” She tried to sound cheerful for the sake of her daughter. Her daughter didn't need to have to deal with tragedies; she was a simple minded seven year old. Wasn't she?
“I guess.” She shrugged, putting a smile on her face, because her mother seemed so bleak and dreary.
“I love you.” Her mother whispered. As she hugged her, tightly, protectively.
“I love you, too, Mommy.”
“Now, go play.” Her mother smiled as her bouncy child rushed off to finished her game of pretend.
What was she to do? A single, unemployed mother who had a growing seven year old to care for. She had to put aside her pains and take care of the only light in the dark tunnel of her life. Him leaving...it wasn't her fault, was it? Her therapy would be too expensive now, she'd have to cope on her own....her own. The meaning hit her. A lonely girl in high school, and throughout life, who'd only met Mark by the pure luck that the jock was failing college and needed the nerd to stay on the sports team. All their friends were Mark's friends, who excepted his quiet wife. She had no real friends. If Mark left, so did they.
The girl's life was losing the sheltered, perfect way day by day. She'd age, every year her clothes getting a little tighter, her toys becoming more worn, and money tighter. She learned to not ask for anything new and ignore her feelings. Her mother was giving up everything for her and she had to thank her someway; by earning A's and the highest praises in school. Maybe then, Daddy would come home.

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