Not knowing

3 posts
User avatar
Gender Female
Points 890
Reviews 37
I love my father but I wasn’t aware of just how much until one day he disappeared and I was left alone with my fifteen year old sister. My sister means the world to me just as my father does. I’d do anything to have him back. I hope he’s alright but it’s been a year now and I’m starting to think something really bad has occurred. After all, why would he stay away this long? He wouldn’t dessert us, I know he wouldn’t. When my mother died of a brain tumour he made a promise to be there for us always and my father was never one to break a promise.
The police have discovered no clues. I pray to God he isn’t lying in a ditch somewhere. It scares Eliza to tears; she’s four years younger than me and a lot more sensitive. I think she thinks he’s dead. She’s not as optimistic as me. Neither of us is whole without him. It’s amazing how much our family contributes to who we are as well as who we turn out to be. I just pray that our family won’t be one of those families that has a member go missing, that never discovers what really happened. I think the worst is the not knowing. If he’s dead I’d rather know than go through life wondering, never finding the answers; just hoping, just praying.
Every time I walk down the street I find that I am examining every face, even ones that couldn’t possibly be him. I guess it’s desperation as I want to find him so badly. When you’re desperate, realism goes flying out the window. And let’s face it, I’m desperate.
My mother’s death was bad enough. I didn’t for the life of me think things could get any worse. But at least we knew she was dying. We had the chance to say the important things to one another. However, there have been no goodbyes between my father, Eliza and I; we may never be able to express our love to him in person again. I pray that he be returned safely to us every night before I attempt to sleep. But I think deep down I know it won’t achieve anything; it’s just another act of desperation. After all, my prayers did nothing for my mother. Sometimes I get angry with God. I’ve been loyal to him from a young age but look where it’s got me. My faith is wearing thin.
Often I go and sit in dad’s room and smell his aftershave so his scent is imbedded in my memory. Just like I smell mum’s perfume Red Door as it’s the closest I have to having her with me. I never thought I’d end up doing it with my father’s belongings. I had taken it for granted he’d always be there.
Sometimes I hear a car pull up outside and a car door slam. Thinking it’s my father, I run outside only to see it’s a neighbour and my heart plummets again. I burst into tears and return in doors feeling like such a fool.
I guess if I never know what happened to my father in time I will come to terms with it the best I can. It won’t be easy but eventually I shall have to move on in life and my father will be just another memory.
Just belive and you will acheive!




User avatar
Gender Female
Points 890
Reviews 514
I think she thinks he’s dead.

I think, she thinks. It sounds awkward...for example...
I think that you think that this is a good way to make the reader think about just how much they think and fear for what they think might have happened to their dad.
There are better ways to do this, than saying, "I think she thinks..."

:!: Also, you have a lot of incomplete sentences that would best be combined...

I think she thinks he’s dead.


She’s not as optimistic as me.


Neither of us is whole without him.


I’ve been loyal to him from a young age but look where it’s got me. My faith is wearing thin.


***
I shall have to move on in life and my father will be just another memory.

:arrow: In this case shall seems to formal a word to be used in it's context and time period. Not many people use this regularly.

:!: Another thing that kind-of got to me was that throughout the writing it seemed as if you were trying so hard to impact the reader that the writing itself got lost in translation. It actually distracted me, the lack of anything but descriptions.


:idea: I also noticed a lot of cold feelings, or feelings withoug feeling. Clearly this is meant to be emotional, what with the death of her mother, her father missing. It's a persons worst nightmare. But it seems emotionless. You talk about emotion, about crying, and worry, yet through all your descriptions I can feel the emotion. It kinda goes under that age old, "show don't tell," thing that writers are constantly having to remind themselves of. Myself included.
This could be a very powerful and emotional peice if you just added more emotion.

:!: A lot of the problems in this that I found also had to do with the lengh of it. It was so short that it seemed rushed. What could easily be twenty pages of worry, dread, family, flashbacks and introductions has been sqeezed into six paragraphs.
:idea: Try adding some dialouge to this, it does a lot to hype up a characters feeling, that way the reader gets to hear it and feel it. Double whammy.

:D I love your style and use of description, and with a few things here and there this is a beautiful beginning. Keep it up!

-JC
But that is not the question. Why we are here, that is the question. And we are blessed in this, that we happen to know the answer. Yes, in this immense confusion one thing alone is clear. We are waiting for Godot to come. -Beckett




User avatar
Gender Female
Points 890
Reviews 37
I agree complealty that it is to rushed but this piece of writing was for my writing course so I was restricted to 500 to 600 words which is not my comfort zone thanks for you advice i'll now try and improve it.
Just belive and you will acheive!



Hearing these stories makes me realize that I never did anything with my childhood.
— The Internet