The Sun's A Liar-Children's Story Short Contest

You might also like

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 3

The Sun's a Liar-Children's story

short contest-
The Sun Is a Liar It’s been quite some time since I've awoke early enough to meet the
sun coming over the horizon. As I gazed out the window from my bedroom window
seat, the sky was cloud free, allowing the warm rays of the sun to kiss my face like a
loved one. At that moment a memory of something my grandmother used to say came
to me. “A bright sunrise meant a good day.” As a young child it was easy to believe her
and as I got little older I remember trying my best to keep believing. We lived in an
apartment at the Harriet Tubman Towers, a low income project development in Raleigh,
NC. Before then, we lived with Grams, she rented a two-bedroom house in a slightly
better neighborhood. Four years ago we had to move, because Grams died and momma
couldn’t afford the rent. Our apartment was a lot smaller than my Gram’s house, but at
least Janae and I had our own bedroom. Momma never did the stuff that real parents
do. I guess its because she had me at fourteen and with Grams sick most of the time
from cancer, she couldn’t teach her how to be a momma. I don’t know, maybe I’m just
making up excuses for her, because who taught me? When my baby sister Janae was
born I was almost six years old. I remember early one morning I was awakened by
Janae’s cry. I tried to fall back to sleep, but she wouldn’t stop crying. I sat up in bed
and looked around, momma had a pillow over her head trying to drown out the sound
of her cry. I got out of bed, then stood in front of Janae’s crib and stared through the
same wooden bars that once confined me until I discovered how to escape. The more
momma tried to ignore Janae’s cry the more she screamed. Flipping to her back, she
kicked her legs and stretched her arms out and shook, as she turned red with anger. I
walked over to momma and tugged at her covers. “Momma, nae-nae’s crying.” She
moved away from me. I tugged again, “Momma, nae-nae’s crying.” She pulled the
pillow tighter to her head and yelled at me from beneath. Since momma did that a lot, I
knew it meant leave her alone. I returned to my baby sister and watched as tears rolled
down the sides of her face and into her hair. The bottle of red Kool-Aid momma put her
to bed with last night, laid half full where she was unable to reach. I slid my arm
through the wooden bars and put it in her mouth. The crying stopped and that was the
beginning. Thereafter, when Janae would cry in the morning I was the one who would
give her a bottle. Janae learned to crawl and walk quickly, I guest any baby would if
they were kept in a crib for most of the day. I became more responsible for her needs;
she came to me before she would momma. I didn’t mind too much, at least she had
someone to care for her when she was neglected by momma. Grams used to do the
same thing for me before she got too sick to do it anymore. In away Janae’s
dependence on me made me feel needed and loved. Before she was born only Grams
made me feel like that. I guess that’s why I was so mad at God for taking her away
from me. When I got a little older, I remembered she was in a lot pain and going to
Heaven would help her feel better. Then I understood and was no longer mad with God.
I think it was Grams who asked God to give me a little sister, so I wouldn’t be alone
after she was gone. Momma had no problem giving all her attention and affection to the
men who came in and out of our lives like the changing seasons. Some of them were
ok, but most just took from us and never gave anything. They would eat the little food
we had and bring their friends over to watch sports, or play video games, so we hardly
ever got to watch TV. Two things about momma’s boyfriends made me mad the most,
one, the attention they got from her was attention that should’ve been given to Janae
and me, and whenever one would be around for more than a few months or more
momma had us call him daddy. I hated that, especially since it made me feel momma
could care less if we knew who our real daddies were. Grams told me my real daddy’s
parents were in the military and while momma was pregnant with me they were
transferred to a military base in Germany. She said, although he was only sixteen at
the time, he loved momma and intended to live up to his responsibility. That he wanted
momma to go with them, but his parents wouldn’t allow it and he had no other family
or money to stay here with her. I heard different from some of the neighborhood ladies.
They didn’t like momma, because they said she was a home wrecker and they spread
rumors about her and my real daddy’s relationship. That he flipped when momma tried
to accuse him of being the father. He denied ever touching her and refused to have
anything to do with her. Who knows what the real truth is, people gossip and add their
own little bits just to make it more interesting. Besides, who cares which version was
true. All that mattered was he wasn’t there for me. Many times I stood in front of the
mirror and tried to imagine myself as a man. I knew it was strange, but there was a
good reason, at least for me there was. I didn’t resemble momma, nor anyone in her
family, so I must look like my daddy or somebody in his family. When I imagined
myself as a man, I got an idea of what my daddy must look like. It’s awful not knowing
who your daddy is, it’s like a part of me was missing and the fact momma could care
less made it even worse. I thought about what life would’ve been like if he hadn’t
moved away. Maybe momma would’ve been a better momma had he stayed around. I
hated to dwell on stuff like that, because it hurt, it even made me mad sometimes.
Didn’t he care about me, wasn’t he curious, if I was a boy or girl? Didn’t he consider for
one minute it would hurt to never know my daddy? And just like I done with momma I
found myself making excuses for his absence in my life, but they didn’t wash over.
Because, what it all boiled down to, he was my daddy and daddies are supposed to love
and be there for their children. As I reached my late teens the pain still existed, but not
as deep. Possibly I learned how to deal with it, or maybe I considered my little sister’s
situation. Her daddy was absent too and I don’t think momma even had a clue who he
was, so I imagine her daddy issues will be more painful. I knew I couldn’t take away
the empty feeling of being fatherless, but I promised myself and Janae I would do all I
could to shelter her from the anguish of our dysfunctional childhood, as much as
possible. I’m sure by the time she’s my age there’ll be many questions about her daddy
that will more than likely remain unanswered. In my childhood the sunrise in Raleigh
was bright more often than not, just as it was a liar, more often than not. Because
when it came to good days, they were few and far between.

You might also like