Happy Faces

Happy Faces
The views in Oak Creek Canyon, AZ are a sight to see, even with the 45 degree water at Slide Rock State Park. Here, sons Eric and Dan enjoy a restful moment after several "slides" down the river.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Roger Becomes...

Author's Note:  In this piece, an alternative ending was created for the Langston Hughes short story "Thank You Ma'am". By using text evidence and prediction skills based upon logical events, I have envisioned a place where the main character, Roger, might gravitate towards as he grows older. 


Startled by the sound of the door slamming behind him, Roger almost fell from the stoop.  Reflecting on what had just happened to him in the last hour or so, the boy thought about the things she said to him; the things she did for him and how her “words of wisdom” changed his view of what he wanted to do with his life. Then, proudly he yelled so all could hear, even though it was well past one a.m., “Thank you Mrs. Luella Bates Washington Jones, I won’t let you down!” 
As he meandered down the streets dimly lit by the poor lighting of the neighborhood, Roger said to himself that he wanted to do things in his life the way the older woman would do them: helping those in need. There were plenty of those kinds of kids, friends of his, in the neighborhood: the kind who had no direction, no role models, and no hope. The boy felt that this was his chance to make a difference in his community. But could he change the lives of kids who didn’t want to change, those kids who had managed to set their course in life already?
Roger new it would be a challenge to be positive in a world surrounding him where despair and little hope existed, yet he knew this could not deter him from his goal: to be a role model for his friends and the “little ones” in the surrounding neighborhood. Helping those kids who didn't have a parent figure to guide them, to give them advice, or to provide them a meal when they were hungry was something Roger could do, as Mrs. Luella Bates Washington Jones had done for him.
Living the life of a thief was no way to grow up, and he was going to make sure that Jimmy and Robert, his two best friends, along with the countless kids on the streets, would not go down the path so many of their older friends chose: the life that lead to despair and depression, the life of the criminal element.  He was going to make a difference, for himself and others, today!

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