A Boy That Was - A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words

in Freewriters25 days ago

Johney's Bite Sized Fictions

Good morning,

Today I'm getting back on the horse after a lengthy hiatus and committing myself once again to writing. It is my passion, it's likely what I'm best at, and it brings me peace and joy.

In saying that, let's get on with it!


Presenting

A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words

A weekly writing challenge, brought to you by the folks over at @FreeWriteHouse


This week's prompt is the following image:

image.png

Describe what you see

A distracted young boy. He is healthy and well dressed, hinting to a home environment where his physical needs are met. In contrast, his expression appears distracted and vacant. It suggests feelings of loneliness, rumination, and emotional abandonment. He might be watching something that makes him sad, or that brings those feelings to the surface.

Describe how you feel

Upon reflecting on the photo I feel somewhat exposed. Vulnerable. As though that boy could be my own son. It makes me question myself: that perhaps I may be neglecting his emotional needs more-so than his physical ones. It makes me feel guilty, for things I have not done. I love my son. Even so, it makes me intensely self reflective as a father. I do not want my son to feel abandoned.


The Boy that Was

I'm in an office. I'm cold and hungry. This chair is too big. This is a grown-ups chair. This is a grown-ups room... definitely not for kids. I can't see over the desk in front of me. I don't want to see. There's a man there, and he's looking at me. I'm scared. I'm cold, I'm hungry, and I'm scared.

"Jack. It's okay, Jack."

His voice sounds like dads'. It's the same voice he uses after he yells at mum. When he knows I've been watching.

"Can you look at me, jack?"

I don't. That's what dad says. I look at my hands, hiding my eyes with me hair. I fidget. I try to stay still, but I'm cold. I'm cold and I'm hungry. Not answering grown-ups is bad. Dad hates it. Dad smacks me when I don't answer him. He always smacks me. I try to speak. Nothing comes out.

I'm in so much trouble.

"By God, you're shivering."

The man stands, his chair scraping on the tiles. He's walking toward me. I start crying. I curl up as small as I can on the big chair. He's close to me now, so close I can smell him. It's... it's nice. Different to dad. I watch him through my hair and the tears streaming from my eyes. He's older than dad. Fatter too. His hands are so big.

He moves suddenly, and I flinch expecting a smack.. but it doesn't come? Instead he wraps something around me. A coat. It's warm. So warm. It smells a bit like cigarettes, which reminds me of mum. I wrap it around me as tightly as I can.

"No one is going to hurt you, Jack. You're safe now."

A gigantic hand rests on my shoulder. But.. it's not heavy. It's light, and it doesn't hurt.

The man moves in front of me, he's so tall he blocks out the light, then he kneels. He lowers himself until we're face to face.

"You've been through a lot, mate. The whole town has been looking for you. People who love you. People who care about you."

He tries to look at my eyes, but I don't let him.

"You don't have to talk, mate."

I stay silent, still expecting a smack. Dad always smacks. Then he does something I don't expect.

He smiles like pop used to. That same way when we would go to visit.

I relax a little.

"Come on. Let's get some food into you."


By: Simon Tonkin.

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Wow, this story struck a chord... how important it is to treat children with love, it is at that stage that the first traumas are generated. Well done! @johneyreacko 🤗

Such friendly persons can change a troubled child's future. Interesting one.

I know this child is fictional, but I'm rooting for him to make it ... this hit all the heartstrings. Welcome back, and well done (and, I think this Freewriters prompt runs from Thursday to Wednesday, so Sunday is on time).

Thank you, glad to see you’re still around. Can’t wait to read more of your posts ❤️

Yep, still here ... looking forward to reading more of your work, too!

The world of children is magical and we, the parents, must be attentive to interpret and support them, to give them the security they need. We are the refuge for them. Blessings.

Yeah we really are. The responsibility is also a privilege and an honor. I want my boy to thrive

The situation sounds very familiar though to me it feels something is missing. It also reminds me of a schoolmate with a forever low-ranked father in the army. A great reason to beat up wife and children. We learned how to tiptoe through the house, tried to be invisible and stayed that way.


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