Unforgivable Mother | Teen Ink

Unforgivable Mother

January 27, 2011
By I.Luv.Writing BRONZE, New Haven, Connecticut
I.Luv.Writing BRONZE, New Haven, Connecticut
2 articles 0 photos 18 comments

Favorite Quote:
''There is always room for improvement''


Some people swore that house was haunted and I agreed having been a child that once lived in there. I promised myself to never return to this retched town. I was walking back into my tattered broken down childhood home with 10 inch holes on the roof when I saw my mother through the dust covered front window. She waved to me the same way she did in my childhood when I was on my way to school. Suddenly my vision blurred and the image of mother vanished. I couldd hear the wood rapidly snapping as I collapsed down the porch steps in disbelief. My eyes refocused on the front window but there was no one there. My crazy mother has been dead for 4 well deserved years; so how was I seeing her?

I gently placed my shaking hands on the rotten, thin wood and pushed myself up to stand. My shaking hands embraced the cold door knob, and then I opened the door. Dust and particles rushed upward into my eyes forcing me to close them. When I reopened my eyes, I saw the figure of my mother again. She was transparent and was wearing her favorite purple ankle length dress that I’m guessing she died in. My mother’s ghost walked towards the living room, so I obediently followed her. Her image disappeared again. Abruptly a loud repetitive thumping sound came from the old dusty, overfilled bookshelf. Just as I found the source of which the noise was coming from, a large book flew to the floor and a burst of dusty smoke coated the living room. My heart rate increased and my hands became really moist. I reluctantly walked over and picked up the book with the reoccurring thought that at any moment my mother couldd drop another book from the bookshelf except this time on my small, thick haired head. Yes, my mom is a type of person that would that.

The book was a deep dark green with the title “100 Bedtime stories” written boldly in gold italicised print. After I reread the title aloud, I instantly remembered that was the book my mother read to me when I was about 3 or 4 years old. I gently placed my small sweating palm on the cover and opened the book. An old piece of folded up paper slid out the book and plopped to the dust filled living room carpet. I unfolded the fragile paper and begin to read the letter that started with Dear Anna in dull blue ink. My mother wrote about how she was sorry for starving me and that she tried to be the best mother she could. I wasn’t buying what I was reading but for some reason my eyes filled with tears anyway. My mother explained how my father left her after I was born and how she coulddn’t stand how much I resembled him. So that’s why she locked me away in the closet. She continued to explain that I turned out to be just like my father because I left her too. Unable to hold in the tears any longer I allowed them to come rolling down my face and ruin my makeup. The last sentence of the letter said “Even though you ran away at age 14 and never once visited me, I love you anyway. Love mom.” I threw the note across the carpet in shock, and pure anger. How couldd she expect me to visit after the way she treated me? I gathered the last of my mother things in that miserable excuse of a home .I also took the bedtime story book full of fairytales my mother lead me to believe occurred in real life. As I walked out I turned back to look at the house knowing for sure that I would never return to this place and whispered bye. Nothing was ever the same again after that.


The author's comments:
"I tried to focus on Imagery for this piece.I'm very open to corrections,suggestions, and comments.Let me know what you think!

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This article has 3 comments.


ArcaneGhost said...
on Aug. 18 2011 at 6:15 pm
ArcaneGhost, Hendersonville, Tennessee
0 articles 0 photos 43 comments

Hey, I'm actually glad you replied to this so late. I've lost motivation to write over the last summer, and this reminds me of how I used to think. I'm glad you're considering all this, and if you write a new draft, I would love to have it emailed to me, cause I'm not sure I would ever see it otherwise.

And the reason I said, "I'm not gonna cheat you by being nice," is that I've criticized people before, and then they got mad, and so on and so forth. Just a friendly disclaimer. :)

Are you on Facebook? I need to be prodded to write, anyways. That would be a more consistent way of keeping in touch.

Cheers!


on Aug. 16 2011 at 12:25 am
I.Luv.Writing BRONZE, New Haven, Connecticut
2 articles 0 photos 18 comments

Favorite Quote:
''There is always room for improvement''

So sorry to be replying to your feedback so late. Thank you so much for all your suggestions, corrections,e.t.c. I attend an art high school where I study creative writing. So, im very familiar with critism. No need to say "Im not gonna cheat you be being nice". Again thanks for your help. Due to all your suggestions, I have alot to think about and am considering writing a 4 draft. LOLz...u completely demolished my 3rd draft and im greatful. You had a LOT OF helpful critism. Thanx :)

ArcaneGhost said...
on Apr. 10 2011 at 9:32 pm
ArcaneGhost, Hendersonville, Tennessee
0 articles 0 photos 43 comments

This will be some serious feedback. I'm not gonna cheat you by being nice.

I personally didn't like the haunted theme. It didn't seem right. Maybe you could have her stumble upon a scavenger hunt or something the mom set up, like, follow the signs or something. Maybe have riddles that apply to childhood items.

That being said, the first few sentences no longer work. Be careful of trying to shove too much into your sentences. It makes them awkward.

Maybe you're just trying to be descriptive, but don't over-describe fear. No-one's vision blurs randomly save for crying or losing consiousness. You said your hands were shaking one too many times. Maybe have your character keep catching glimpses of stuff out of the corners of her eyes, if you stay with the haunted theme.

The explanation in the letter didn't seem very solid, either. These are some serious parenting issues that don't seem realistic. Make it so that it really WASN'T the mom's fault and build some sadness that way.

Nothing was ever the same after that? This felt slightly inconclusive. What wasn't the same? Was she a different person? Did her mom's ghost keep haunting her? Did she get a new dog? What wasn't the same? You might just want to totally ditch that sentence.

Proofread. It's hard to take a work seriously when there are consistent errors.

I'm not trying to be mean, but as this is, it's rather unremarkable. I can see potential in it, but perhaps instead of revising this, move on, make a new story with a stronger plot line.

Keep practicing!