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    empath
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Kept Boy to Made Man - 10. Interlude - Unwanted Son

A breath…. :)

 

Unwanted Son

By Sam James

There is magic in a newborn’s first cry. His parents can’t help but feel overwhelming love for the tiny new human. That’s how it’s supposed to be, but sometimes those first cries are simply the herald announcing a lifetime of misery to a world that doesn’t want him. The child becomes another unwanted son.

This past Monday, Thomas Miller received his day in court. You may remember the name. It was in the news last February. Thomas Miller killed his own father with a baseball bat, striking him numerous times. At that time, details were scarce. Today, after telling his story, Thomas Miller is free.

The seventeen-year-old from Hyde Park was charged with second degree murder. He spent the past four months in the Cook County Jail while he waited to learn his fate; a teenager held without bail in a facility built for adults. During that time, no one bothered to ask him what really happened. If they had, this is what they would have heard:

“He was so mad, and he was screaming that he was going to kill us … he lunged at me again. I just reacted. I didn’t mean to kill him. I was so scared. I just reacted.”

Those were Thomas Miller’s words from the stand as he and almost everyone present dissolved into tears. Minutes later, the state dropped the charges against him. It seemed clear to all that the teenager had acted in self-defense.

I could tell you many of the details of Thomas Miller’s life, but I won’t for the sake of his privacy. I will say that the trial was just one more moment in a long line of painful life events. He has suffered both neglect and abuse from the family that should have loved him. The systems created to protect him chose to imprison, villainize, and prosecute the teenager instead.

Why? It’s simple. Thomas Miller is an unwanted son. Literally, no one in his life cared.

Those words are hard to read, aren’t they? For some like me they will feel too familiar, but for others they may seem difficult to believe.

I am tempted to write about the incredible injustice Thomas suffered. There is a part of me that wants to expose the legal system that allowed a teenager to suffer one-hundred-twenty-seven days in near isolation, only to later drop all charges; A system that assigned an attorney who only visited the boy twice, telling him on each occasion that he had no hope.

I could describe how the prosecution spent the entire morning portraying Thomas Miller as a violent and unstable threat to society using half-truths and complete lies. I am, however, most known to you as the author of an opinion column, so that is what I want to share. My opinion.

There should never be and unwanted son or an unwanted daughter. When a child’s family can’t or won’t love them, someone else should step in and take their place. I believe everyone should feel wanted.

Perhaps it is because I know what it feels like to be rejected by the very people who gave me life. Thomas Miller and I have that in common. I felt sorry for him as I watched Monday’s events unfold. Perhaps you do as well.

It is difficult to describe my emotions as I watched Thomas enter the courtroom. Apart from the hand cuffs and terrorized expression, he might have been a boy on his way to the prom. He was sharply dressed in a suit and tie. The blond, thin teen was handsome, in a way that is only possible for that short period of post adolescent youth. He was also incredibly alone.

A guard and a disinterested public defender were his only support. The courtroom was full of predatory expectation, but all I felt was inexplicable dread as I watched another unwanted sit in the surrounding hostility.

But then everything changed. Someone unexpectedly stood up for Thomas. That simple sounding action was a loud declaration. Son, you are not unwanted anymore. It was as if someone had finally heard Thomas Miller’s cries and responded as his family should have seventeen years ago.

A man in a position to help decided to act, to listen to the unwanted teen’s story and stand beside with him when no one else would. Thomas Miller was rescued by his new attorney who drew out the truth, saving the teen from almost certain conviction.

I watched the reactions in the courtroom when the state withdrew their charges. There was shock, but what I’ll always remember are the many looks of disappointment I saw. The courtroom cleared quickly as the jury was dismissed. Very few cared to know what would ultimately happen to Thomas Miller, despite crying minutes earlier over his words.

The trial was at an end, but for me, the story truly began in that moment. The lawyer had done his job, but he wasn’t done. Thomas is no longer unwanted. He has a job, the promise of an education, some money of his own, and a safe place to live. More importantly, Thomas Miller has a new, albeit unconventional family who obviously want him.

The seventeen-year-old left the courthouse an emancipated minor. Monday was quite literally the bookend of both his childhood and his life as an unwanted son. He walked into the afternoon sun surrounded by love, something he had never before experienced.

A happy ending, right? I hope so. But I can’t help but imagine the lasting scars his trauma has left. Will he be able to overcome his broken past to build a better future? Will the support of his chosen family be enough?

I’m left wondering about my role and yours in the lives of the unwanted. Will we follow the example I witnessed and stand with someone when no one else will? Will we say, “you are no longer unwanted. I will be your family, and you will be mine.”

Our community knows the pain of being unwanted more than most. Bemoaning injustice can’t be our only response. If Thomas Miller had been convicted, many would have been furious, but their emotions would not have reversed a prison sentence of several years to life. It took the proactive actions of a few to change the trajectory of Thomas Miller’s life.

I hope to play a life changing role in the life of an unwanted someday soon. Do you?

If you would like to support Thomas Miller’s future, a trust has been created at Chicago’s Indemnity Bank.

 

 

Copyright © 2024 empath; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Spectacular Samantha. 

A superbly written chapter @empath which moved me tremendously, a reminder of all the unwanted and unloved cats I have fostered in the past 16 years, the 7 who became my unconventional family, the 5 who have since passed away and the 2 who remain. The achievement in my life of which I am the "proudest" and which has given me the greatest joy and happiness. In loving memory of my boys Rupert and the exceptional Bassey, and my beautiful girls Ava, Kiki and my most recent loss, my beautiful Zelda; and in celebration of Frida (Zelda's sister) and Missy who remain as my family.

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37 minutes ago, Summerabbacat said:

The achievement in my life of which I am the "proudest" and which has given me the greatest joy and happiness.

When we focus on the needs of others (human or not), we often find that our own are met in return.  Thank you for sharing, my friend.  Give Frida and Missy some extra love from me!  

Edited by empath
  • Love 4
11 minutes ago, empath said:

When we focus on the needs others, we often find that our own are met in return.  Thank you for sharing, my friend.  Give Frida and Missy some extra love from me!  

Returned 100 fold. Like all family members we get the shits with each other at times, especially Ava (Gardner) and Frida (from ABBA) getting pissed off with me, but all is, or in Ava's case was, forgotten and forgiven. Frida's face is laying partially on my Apple Mac laptop keyboard as is her wont as I type this, even though I continually move it away which earns me a glare, a yelp, a snit or a paw smack on occasions.

Edited by Summerabbacat
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At my age, I am not certain I could foster a child who has been tossed aside because of sexual orientation.  However, I do what I can to support the community.  To me, nothing is more important that making another feel wanted, loved, accepted for who they are.  I tried to provide this in all my years as a school counselor and did accomplish this to the best of my ability.  Now, the people in charge of government regulations would prohibit me from advertising my office as a safe space, from discussing the sensitive topics of sexuality, and from even referring to a teen by their chosen names!  I'm so glad I retired when I did! 

Samantha's article should appear in its message in every news outlet on a regular basis.

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  • Love 4

More than 30 years ago my parents took in a young pregnant woman who had nowhere to go, because her abusive husband and her parents, former friends of my parents', refused to give her shelter and help. The woman has become another sister to us and she and her son have given back the love, support and acceptance they have received a thousandfold. The son has always been considered one of grandchildren and we love his children no less than the others of my parents' offspring.  But what is considered as a matter of course by some was met with disbelief and suspicion by most of the people around us. The most ludicrous stories were exchanged in the village about who in our family could have fathered the child (which was of course the only explanation for taking a pregnant woman in).  

A famous writer once said: "That country is unhappy that has no heroes? No. That country is unhappy that is in need of heroes" Not sure my translation is correct. I'm afraid the US - and a lot of other countries, too - will see the truth in that in the near future. If Roger (+Mike Chris, Melissa and Juan) had not stepped in and done the right thing the system would have destroyed Thomas as much as it failed him before. And in some states he would have faced the death penalty.

Samantha has written a moving and a necessary article.

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