Personal Narrative: Don't Look At My Face

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New York, the city that never sleeps and a place where danger wonders the streets, at least that’s what people believe. I myself, was born and raised in New York and that state is what made me the type of person I am today. Going threw a very traumatizing situation at the age of 6, changed the rest of my life. The words I remember the most are “don’t look at my face” as they began to push me and my brother into the house. It happened when I was in the 1st grade, it was raining as I was walking home from school with my brother and aunt. All I could remember on the way home was that I couldn’t wait to play with my new tape recorder that my dad had bought me. My mother didn’t go to work for some reason that day so we rang the doorbell so that she could open the door. I guess she was taking so long my aunt just took out her keys to open out two doors, and that’s when it all began. Having a gun pointed to someone’s face must be a accelerating moment, so just image three people pointing guns to your family and your face. At six years old a child doesn’t know what to think when a situation like that comes up, at least I didn’t. As they pushed my bother, aunt, and I into the house all I can hear is my mother screaming. It all happened so fast its liked the world stopped for a moment and we didn’t know what was going to happen next. After they got us all into the house they commanded us to go into the living room and all lay down faced first on the floor. They didn’t want there faces to be seen even though they were wearing masks, as a young child listening doesn’t always come natural, so I peaked through the corner of my eye and seen five men standing watching all of us as we were lying face first on the floor, one of them h... ... middle of paper ... ... Going out with my mom after this situation is when I always had to be on my toes with everything. She didn’t want me to walk around without being aware of my surroundings, she always made me look back every few minutes when walking and making sure that the places we went to didn’t look suspicious. In conclusion, this was one of the worst experiences in my life. When I think about it now my life was flashing right before my eyes and I didn’t even realize it because I was so young. Today, I trust no one and I always think ahead of what the worst possible thing that can happen in any situation. I’m always aware of my surroundings in any place I go and I dislike being alone in a house. This changed the way l live as I was growing up but, it made me into how I am today and I just thank god that I still gave my family because the situation could have been a lot worst.

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