Write Thru Crisis – Muffled Cries. My son was three when this first scene occurred. I had entrusted him to the care of another mother, while I went to the laundry room. We lived in a suburban apartment complex at the time, and I anticipated no danger.
When I returned, my son was nowhere in sight. My friend had turned away – for a single moment – to tend to her own child. I saw my son then, past the wide green grass of the play area, across the asphalt sidewalk and a border of more green grass. He was rocking back and forth on a curbstone at the edge of a busy highway.
I dropped my laundry basket and ran. I didn’t stop to wonder how his small-boy legs had carried him so quickly into peril. I didn’t stop to ask anyone if they had seen him take that perilous path. And, I did not cry out. If I startled him, he might topple into traffic, so I muffled the cries that terror had catapulted into my throat.
He was almost twenty when he caused me to do that again. He was back from college and staying with us for the summer. He’d gone out with friends into a formidable city and, though it was hours past midnight, had not yet returned home. I couldn’t run after him this time, and cell phones were years short of invention.
I sat on the couch, muffling my cries once more. I didn’t turn on the lamp. A lone streetlight outside the window illuminated my fears. Nightmare scenarios raced through my mind, though I didn’t once envision my son being locked into a cell, or a police club bashing him. Years later, female offspring would take my imagination to that horror show.
First, it was my granddaughter, in another large, possibly ominous city. She was there to march and shout in protest against the injustice of poverty and oppression. My son, of age by then to be her father, was near enough to find her at the precinct, if arrests should occur. Still, on that bright fall afternoon, I muffled my urge to cry out my worry and fear.
Not long ago, my daughter brought me similar alarm. She was demonstrating in support of her own strong beliefs, as she often does. On this occasion, armed police and members of the military lurked what I considered uncomfortably closeby. My daughter and her compatriots were herded into a roped-off area, but I guessed accurately that she would press close to the barrier and shout to be heard, while I muffled my cries.
Such stories grip the heart. Mike Nichols, an expert on how to create that gripping effect, once said, “We only care about the humanity.” That is because our own humanity resonates with the tale. Almost all of us have suffered through terror in our own lives, especially when we fear for someone we love. We know how it feels to clap our hands over our faces to shut out fearsome visions, and shut in muffled cries. I hope you will write about your muffled-cry moments, too.
My last story happened decades ago, during my own street activist days. I was in the midst of an angry crowd with a friend, when a policeman on a large horse reached down from his high perch and sprayed mace in the face of my friend’s young son. I didn’t clap my hands over my mouth that day. Instead – for a single moment – shock and disbelief muffled my cries.
Each of these stories deserves an ending. I reached my toddler son before he could fall into traffic. Years later, he came home at dawn and was soundly scolded. Phone calls, followed by profound relief, assured me my granddaughter and daughter in turn were safe and unharmed.
The ending of the mounty-and-the-mace story is hardly as satisfying. That afternoon ended my years of street activism. I walked away, into the safety of my whiteness. Because of their blackness, neither my friend, nor George Floyd’s mother, had that choice. I am haunted by their cries, too soul deep and wracked with grief for muffling.
Alice Orr – www.aliceorrbooks.com.
Alice has spent most of her post-activist work life in publishing, as book editor, literary agent, workshop leader, and author. She’s published 16 novels, 3 novellas, a memoir, and No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript That Sells. Her current work in progress includes Hero in the Mirror: How to Write Your Best Story of You. Find her books HERE.
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Alice- What a moving post, today. You touched me deeply with your words. I wanted to share this poem I wrote about my daughter, who lives near Seattle:
June 3, 2020
My daughter, Yaara, woke up and thought
this day calls me, a white woman,
to show, not talk.
This day calls me to demonstrate
Black lives are equal to white lives.
To demonstrate; so during my lifetime,
it won’t be necessary to say Black lives matter.
It will be self-evident, like gravity.
On that morning in downtown Seattle,
she and her husband marched in protest.
They got to the front of the crowd
where a young Black man stood and
Shouted! Shouted! Shouted! Shouted!
She flashed on a hundred scenarios,
and then demonstrated…not only
courage, but coexistence.
Quick, we’ve got to stand next to him
so he won’t get hurt!
They did and he wasn’t.
The day after she told me her story,
I read that a mother grouse, surrounded
by hunters, will fly haltingly away.
Pretend to be wounded,
drawing their fire while her chicks escape.
I think there’s something innate in living beings
that matters far more than our differences.
That matters.
Dear Bob. I apologize deeply for my delay in responding. I fell into a bit of a wallow for a while, but now I am back. One of the reasons for that wallow is the situation you address so beautifully, so movingly in your poem. What should be self-evident, and should have been self-evident always, still remains as it too long has been, in need of reiterating over and over again. Your poem expresses, among many things, the frustration so many people of good will feel. Justice delayed is justice denied, and justice has been denied for way too long. I pray that will change. Meanwhile, I salute your daughter and her husband and you. Thank you for your service to the cause of human decency. Blessings. Alice
I think most parents have had that moment of terror when they see a child in danger. I know I have. Thank you for sharing this story.
Thank you Kayelle for your response. Yes. This is a universal parental experience. The other side of that being the blessing it is to love someone so very much that their peril is your peril, their salvation, your salvation. I pray for those terrified parents who, like George Floyd’s mother and too many others, live through stories that end in tragedy and devastation rather than salvation. Blessings. Alice