Monday, October 26, 2009

In an Instant

The warmth of the bright August sun washes over me like a bath, filling me with joy and optimism. The cool breeze gently runs through my hair and brings scents of the changing season to my nostrils. As I sit with my older brother and mom, wool blanket between us and the grass, we watch our German shepherd-husky mix explore Jeffrey Park. At five years old, I cannot imagine being more content with life.

These childhood years of mine were my finest. I would laugh myself to tears, run myself to exhaustion, and play until the sun set. However, this time of frivolity was short lived.

From the first day my parents walked me to my classroom with tears in their eyes, to my high school graduation, school was my life. My father, despite being absent for ninety percent of it, played a prominent role in my upbringing. A law professor at his alma mater Yale, my father corresponded with me only to wish me happy birthday and to remind me that if I didn’t go to Yale that I would fall among the ranks of ditch diggers and garbage men. He explained to me that the boys my age who wasted their time playing video games and hitting balls with bats were degenerates who would be lucky to work for me someday. By the time I was nine, it was engrained into my head that academic success was the only thing that mattered in life.

Soon after marrying my father, my mother relinquished her dreams of becoming a politician in order to become a homemaker and live her life in accordance to my father’s wishes. She was a very intelligent and outspoken woman who was full of life and ambition. However, she loved my father, and her respect for traditional family roles allowed her to subside to his will. She was the kind of person who worked hard and excelled at everything she did. She was always the head of something, whether it was the PTA, bible study, book club, or tennis team, she lead it and made all who came before and after her seem inadequate. On top of all this, she made raising two kids and a dog look like it was nothing. Neighbors envied the cleanliness and beauty of our home, and parents told their children that they should behave more like my brother and me. Loving, supportive, and strict when necessary, mine was the mother of all maternal figures.

My brother was my best friend. Although he was three year older than me, he treated me as an equal and looked after me. Tall, handsome, and athletic, Adam was terrific in the eyes of all, except my father. He suffered from mild dyslexia, which made school a struggle for him. Years of tutoring and all the meds in the world couldn’t help him; he would always be a C student. The only reason he merited any respect of my father’s was that he inherited all of the athletic ability that my mother provided to our gene pool. Being the captain of the football and hockey teams earned him student council president and a full scholarship to the University of Connecticut. Unfortunately for me, his academic shortcomings increased the expectations placed upon me.

The pleasures of freedom and leisure became distant memories of my childhood as I strived to be the best I could be. Even at the prestigious New England prep college prep school that I attended, I was the top of my class. I was brown nose who sat in the front row of my classes, ate lunch in the library, and ruined the curve for my classmates. I was the only student who could boast that I had perfect attendance in school, yet made no appearance at any football games or school dances. I spent my weekends tutoring and involving myself in extra curricular studies. I had no friends (due to lack of time, not social skill), and my only close peers were those who rivaled my studious nature and often consulted me on schoolwork. I didn’t mind my lack of social life because I knew nothing different. When I witnessed others enjoying life, I just recalled the words of my father and knew that someday I would be a greater success than they would, and that would be my time to enjoy life. This mentality kept me going all through school up to graduation.

High school graduation was both the most anticipated day of my life, and the day that would shape my future. I don’t remember many of the details of the ceremony, just what my relatives have told me about how grown up I looked and how proud they were. I graduated with honors as Valedictorian, scored a 2390 on my SAT, 36 on my ACT, and had succeeded in meeting my father’s goal of going to Yale. It was supposed to be the happiest day of my life. However, the only thing I remember is a flashing light. A flashing light and tires screeching as a Lincoln Navigator ran a red light and crashed into the driver’s side door of my brother’s BMW 3-series. He was supposed to be driving me to my first party since my twelfth birthday; instead he, the drunk driver, and myself were taken to the hospital.

A dim light shone over me, but it had no warmth. Instead it gave me the odd feeling of being watched by strangers that I couldn’t see. The air was still, and all I could smell was the choking scent of potent sanitation products. All I could feel was stiffness throughout my body as I tried to survey the scene that lay above me with my blurry eyes. As my eyes slowly batted in my attempt to clear them, I sensed a movement rushing towards me and voices began to fill the stale air. I soon lost consciousness once again, but when I regained it, a familiar voice filled my ears. My mother quickly noticed me and with tears in her eyes, immediately covered my body with hers. I felt a weight, but none of the softness or heat that I remembered being characteristic of a hug. I was tired and confused. I tried to speak, but my mother pressed her finger over my lips as my mouth lazily fumbled over the words.

I will always remember waking up that day, exactly three years, one month, and seven days after my graduation. That day I learned that life doesn’t go according to plans, whether they belong to a father, mother, brother, or son. On that day I realized that life is meant to be taken and enjoyed as it comes, because the future is not guaranteed. But the memory that left the strongest impression of my mind, the memory that I will never forget, is the memory of my mother pushing my wheelchair out of the hospital as she told me we needed to stop by the cemetery before we went home.

12 comments:

  1. OMG! I LOVED your story! The end was so unexpected and heartbreaking that it actually brought tears to my eyes. I also really liked the whole moral of the story thing you had going on at the end.

    Your writing is beautiful and fluid and does a great job of drawing the reader in.I really liked the description in the first paragraph for it really transported me to that scene.
    You also do a great job in the characterization of the characters.

    The only suggestion I can think of has to do with grammer in the last paragraph: "strongest impression of my mind" ;change of to in.

    Other than that, awesome job!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ben, this was wonderful! I actually got goosebumps. the descriptions in your paragraphs and the fluidity of your writing made this piece fantastic. Pretty much I agree with everything Emy said. AWESOME job!

    -kay

    ReplyDelete
  3. Ben
    I liked te story because it was easy to relate to. Stresses and pressures for academic success are always in my life and I'm sure others. It caught me off guard at the end, but I liked that about it. In the paragraph where you said you had no friends, I would take out the ( )... I think that with your description above, the parenthesis are not needed. Just a thought.
    good job

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ben,
    very very thought compelling story. i really enjoyed the pressure you showed in it, the pressure to adhere to your mother and father's wishes, the pressure to perform, the pressure to be a robot, rather than a human being living and enjoying his/her live. All of these pressures seem to plague almost all college students or even high school students. I was going to ask you about the ending. I think it was very sudden, and the suddenness of it definitely pushed your point. However, i think you could revise the way you ended it by giving either more detail or describing your moments of waking. Or describe your moments of seeing your mother. Or your moments in a wheelchair. Or realizing that your brother was dead. just a thought. but good job!
    margaret

    ReplyDelete
  5. Well done. I like the ambiguity, I think it works very well, especially at the end.
    I was a little confused when you mentioned the character's father was gone 90% of the time. Was that because his parents were divorced, or because he was a workoholic? It's a small detail, but I think knowing why he wasn't there would help us know how to view the father even more.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Your piece is beautifully written. I have no suggestions. The story flowed so smoothly that I was able to read it non stop until the surprise ending. I identified with the moral and theme of the story the most in the last paragraph when you reveal that the character was in a coma. I wondered if his brother died in the wreck when his mother tells him they will stop at the cemetery.

    Also, I liked that the family was perfect throughout the piece until the wreck. This was unexpected.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Ben,

    I really liked your story. One thing I was thinking is that you could break up your paragraphs a little more... Maybe it's just me, but I think it's easier to read stories when the paragraphs are shorter.

    Also, I would like to know a little more about the events leading up to the crash and the events after he wakes up.

    Just a few thoughts- good job!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Great work, i like the "competition" between the brothers and how the dad has such a high expectation for his sons.

    This reminded me of a movie where a dad has two kids but loses the "better" of the sons. Definitely shows us to love everyone and not show partiality.

    ReplyDelete
  9. This is such an amazing story. The detail makes it so realistic and really places the reader into the setting. I might add a little more detail into what happens after he wakes up. I really enjoyed this story. Thanks Ben!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Ben,

    I think your story is great! I liked that you described the people in the story with a lot of detail. I really felt like the background set the reader up perfectly to feel sympathetic towards the accident. I do wish that there was more information on the actual accident, and his time that he spent in a coma. How is the family coping? Have they created a new routine? Also you really spelled out the main point of the story; that you cannot focus so much on the future that you forget the present. I think you can leave some of this to the reader to interpret. I dont think you need to explicitly tell us your point. Great story!

    ReplyDelete
  11. This piece was very well written with the proper descriptive detail and flow to make it an easy read to follow. The plot was revealed very well and it incorporated just the right amount of drama to stir the emotions of the reader. The memories talked about from beginning to end kept me reading and wanting to know more about what happened to have these memories described like this. That is the only suggestion I really have to give. If the end had a little more description about what exactly happened. Other than that, Good Story!

    ReplyDelete
  12. This story also unfolded beautifully. I like the changes you made in your final presentation. I like the way you broke up or separated the flashbacks. It was more interesting and easier to read this way.

    ReplyDelete