SOUL CRY. Andre Moore

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      SOUL CRY

      Missing Fathers

      Andre Moore

      Copyright © 2011 ANDRE O’MAR MOORE

      No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior consent of the publisher.

      The Publisher makes no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any commercial damages.

      2013-03-19

      Dedication

      Special dedications to my grandfather, Uriah Brown, I owe the possiblities of all my moments to you. My little girls Aayanna and Aaliyah all I do I do it for you guys. there is no greater love than whats in my heart for my girls.To the man that never gave up on me and was always there to remind me “it’s never too late, to do the right thing.” I am forever in debt to the kindness of your liberal soul. Thank you for being my friend, mentor, teacher, but most of all my father. Harold (dad) “Thank you for keeping me alive all these years. I Love you old guy”—Doodle

      Acknowledgments

      God. Everyone that supported me in my darkest hours and empowered me to carry on always seeking to become better. All the lovely God sent women that played a role in rasing me, thank you guys for opening your heart, doors, and family to a lost stranger. My small cirlce of friends who gave me hope when I saw no hope; Billy, Vance, Prince, DJ Wonda, Mynkz, Huze, V & Cleva (paper boy clothing), JP (machete), O, F49F. Special thanks to Hakeem Iyle. S/O to Rocky, Iceburg, Dose, Mitch and C.

      I’m Alone In Darkness

       Soul Cry

      Missing Fathers

      “It’s never too late to do the right thing.”

      —Dad

      -inspired by true events

      A HardDrive Entertainment Production

      Seven out of ten black kids grow up without fathers. There has never been a greater number of voluntary absences by fathers from their children’s lives than there is in the black community today. When dads are not around life gets lonely, hopeless and confusing for the children they leave behind. So for these fatherless kids, the future becomes unsure as they unknowingly are destined to continue the vicious cycle: the cycle of a tribe lost in the shadows plagued by broken homes.

      No fathers to teach our sons how to grow up to be men. No fathers to display how to respect and treat women. No fathers to teach our daughters their true values and how to carry and respect themselves. No fathers to instill in our daughters what not to accept from boys or men because they’re worth so much more. But most importantly no fathers to teach our sons how to grow-up and become real fathers themselves.

      Without a father, a child is left to learn the other side of life on his or her own. So our daughters are getting pregnant by sixteen, while our sons become missing dead beats by age eighteen. The cycle stays in motion because now the child he leaves behind will never heal from the pain of not having their father around or from the agony the child’s mother endured. He or she becomes the reason Mommy and Daddy couldn’t fulfill their dreams.

      However, nothing in life is gained or discovered without sacrifice. We have sacrificed many generations of black families, and a change has to come. It is time for us as young black men to take a stand and break the cycle of missing fathers. It is time to learn and discover how to be real men and real fathers. We will not begin to change until we are confronted with the reality that we are repeating our father’s behavior patterns; promises, we promised ourselves, we would end. “It’s never too late to do the right thing.”

      Chapter 1

      With the last of my stuff in my hands, halfway out the door I replied, “You said you don’t want me here. You called the cops on me and took back your house keys. You even said I wasn’t your son. So I’m gone. Don’t worry about where I’m gonna stay. Just know that’s it for us now. You don’t gotta worry about me anymore Mummy. Goodbye. Let me go.”

      She was clinched onto my arm, “Andre a where you a go, a where you a go? Don’t go! Andre mi sorry don’t go. ANDRE!”

      I pulled away and slammed the door behind me. It felt good to slam the door and be done with her for good, but the walk to Lance’s car was a hard and heavy walk to take. I was scared as fuck! I had just slammed the door on security and walked into uncertainty. I’m 17 years old, soon to be a parent and now homeless, hundreds of miles away from my family. Here I am running away into a world in which I can’t perceive the future. I felt a new overwhelming feeling of loneliness as I walked to Lance’s car listening to Robin crying behind me. I thought about turning back, as I began my life long journey to where? I did not know.

      As the years came and past I lost that drive. Sometimes, I felt like I had lost my will to survive. This is the stress that lives within me.

       Dear Lord,

       This is my confession. It’s so hard to cope I hope you can forgive me for all of my indiscretion. Before I start this session I’m professing, I have learned my lesson. I pray I’m forgiven for every bad decision I’ve made and it isn’t anybody’s fault because I made the decisions I’ve made. I know you might think this is the life I chose, but this is the life that chose me: A life as a black fatherless child.

      My first memory of life was at the age of three, in Silver Spring Jamaica, on my family’s property. By three years old, I already had a taste for independence, so I decided to cross the bridge by the river all by myself. The bridge was made from four round tree logs and I made it half way across before falling off the bridge. From that point onward, I have been falling off the bridge of life ever since. If you knew my life you would shed a tear yet, I pray that I’m forgiven. If I am not to be forgiven, then all I wish is to be understood. I have grown and am now thankful for the lessons of life given to me.

      On September 17, 1984, in Savannalamore Hospital in Westmoreland Jamaica, Robin Brown, at the age of 21, gave me the gift of life. Growing up, mom wasn’t really around because she went to America to seek a better life for us. Therefore, my grandparents raised me. Life at a young age in Jamaica was happy and good for what we knew and had. My grandfather, Uriah Brown, gave me everything from candy to his chicken bones. He had me spoiled rotten! See I come from a big family and we all built houses on my grandpa’s 50 to 75 acres of land. At the top of the property was my grandparents’ house. My closest, older cousin by two years Anthony and I were the only two grandchildren allowed to sleep and live with our grandparents. Anthony’s mother went to America with my mother, who was her younger sister.

      Down the path past the mango and apple trees by the river was Mervin’s house, Anthony’s father. Behind his house was my uncle Lasie’s house where he lived with my two little cousins Marcey and Suesan and their mom Jem. Following the path, again by the river, you’ll soon arrive at my Aunty Cibel’s house. She lived with Tommy,

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