The sun was slowly waking up from its slumber.
How could this happen? All she could think about was the guilt that was bubbling up inside of her trying to escape. Everything was her fault. Why didn’t she just pretend that she loved Alice in Wonderland as much as her mother did? Her daughter had no idea what to do with this excruciating pain that kept on intensifying, as all she could feel were the tears streaming down her face.
A tiny bit contradictory when we talk about excruciating pain and then all that can be felt is weightless tears. Perhaps a "yet" or other connective could work in here.As the casket slowly lowered into the ground,
this implication of present tense - try "it" was Lauren’s last chance to say something, anything, this was the final goodbye to her beloved mother. There were so many memories that should have been shared. Lauren had always struggled to understand what her mother had gone through both mentally and physically. All she could do was look up to her dad and wonder if he felt as guilty as Lauren did. He had banned her mother from reading Alice to Lauren when she younger as she was terrified of the book.
As soon as Lauren arrived home it was time to slowly start to divide her mother’s possessions into three separate boxes: keep, donate and throw away. This made it feel so official that it was time to treasure the memories and maybe move on from all that was left of her mother.
As Lauren was sorting through her mother’s wardrobe she found an old box filled with different editions of the “The Adventures of Alice in Wonderland” by Lewis Carroll, DVDs and even found a coffee mug with a gold rim that her dad had given to her mother on their wedding day.
The gold rim is a really nice touch. Mum would always read Alice In Wonderland to Lauren as a bedtime story. The thing about Lauren’s mother was that she wouldn’t read the book in her normal voice
comma she would give each character its own unique voice which frightened Lauren when she was younger. The voices were so realistic that it would give her nightmares to the point where her father had to take matters into his own hands and banned Lauren’s mother from ever reading the book to Lauren ever again.
Describe some of the voices here - high pitched and fettered for the rabbit, for example.Lauren wished she would have known that
my we just flipped into first person. mother loved the book so much, if she had known sooner her mother would still be alive. If she had known that her mother was so unwell Lauren would’ve been there to support and help her mother.
"Mother" was used 4 times just now, probably 3 times too many. Consider chopping this sentence up
One of the books that Lauren had found was an old box which contained her mother’s original copy of Alice when she was growing up. I
the change of tense is confusing me? carefully turned the page to find words written around the original text in my mother’s beautiful cursive writing.
“I promised him I would follow him; I gave him my word, my bond, my hands, my eyes and my ears that I would make it to Wonderland to be transfixed and encapsulated by its beauty once more”. Lauren grew more concerned about her mother’s mentality as in Wonderland, the sun would always be smiling and radiating a sense of happiness to create an atmosphere of joy and tranquillity. It was her safe haven.
Her mother could no longer tell the differences between reality and imagination. Every night during dinner mum would get really paranoid about whether or not the food she was about to consume would make her grow to the size of the tallest tree or make her shrink to the size of an ant. She wouldn’t even drink water without Lauren tasting it first. Lauren couldn’t find the words to explain to mum that the food was perfectly fine; nothing got through to her.
Every so often Lauren would hear mum cry out “Oh no! She’s coming for me, off with my head, off with my head, oh! I’ve grown quite fond of my head, don’t let her get me Lauren!”. Red, the colour red had triggered so many emotional memories of constant hysteria. The constant delusion of the Red Queen haunting her was slowly eating her alive. There was no way to help her mother’s antagonising pain.
I really love this bit!!!!The rhythmic ticking of the clock created a pathway for Lauren’s gradual understanding of what her mother had gone through. Every word that her mother had made in the tiny margins showed bits of her childhood. The adventures that she had read about meeting a talking caterpillar that inhaled hookah smoke who had offered the worst advice in a rude, yet concise tone all of which became a real part of her world. It became clear to Lauren as she continued to read that her mother was completely immersed in Wonderland. She had used it as a way to escape an abusive home, where sounds of bottles shattering against the wall would put her to sleep. How can she not have known about this? It’s all starting to make sense.
Beautiful On the inside cover of the book there was a note that Lauren’s mother had written to her parents. They were written along the lines of “Dear mum and dad, I’m sorry to have been such a disappointment to you, no one understands me
comma or elipsis only the white rabbit does…” Tears were rolling down Lauren’s face, how could she have allowed her mother go through this alone.
“Hey dad, can you come here for a second? Did you know that mum felt this way when she was younger?”
“I had no idea that she was battling with such an emotional demon or I would have tried to get her to see a physiologist or something. If I had known, I would have dealt with the situation in a different way.” Dad replied in a sorrowful tone
“Can we read Alice in Wonderland together like mum used to do for me when I was younger?”
“Of course we can, let’s even do the voices just for her” Dad replied with a smile on his face
Dad and Lauren shared a moment to remember and experience the wonder of Wonderland all over again. At least Lauren knew that it wasn’t her fault that her mother had died. All the combined guilt seemed to melt into the air and was replaced with joy.