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Freedom




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  Contents

  * * *

  Acknowledgments

  Introduction

  Fly Me to the Moon

  * * *

  OMG! Out in Public!

  * * *

  Who’s That Girl on TV?

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  “SMILE”

  * * *

  Cold Soup?

  * * *

  A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes . . . When You’re Missing

  * * *

  Just Sing!

  * * *

  “Puppy Love”

  * * *

  “Dream a Little Dream”

  * * *

  Lesson Learned!

  * * *

  Walk the Plank

  * * *

  Don’t Judge

  * * *

  Confessions of an Imperfect Person (or Where the Heck Are the Minis?!)

  * * *

  Addiction

  * * *

  “Oh So Pretty”

  * * *

  In Plain Sight

  * * *

  Disgusted

  * * *

  Barbies Are Good for the Soul

  * * *

  Most Embarrassing Moment

  * * *

  First Christmas

  * * *

  That Time We Went to See Garth in Ireland

  * * *

  Most Frustrating Moment

  * * *

  Journey to a New Land

  * * *

  Two Psychologists and a Survivor Walk into a Bar . . .

  * * *

  Hope Is a Four-Letter Word

  * * *

  Lil Sis

  * * *

  Where’s the Rage, Jaycee?

  * * *

  Open Wide and Say AHHH!

  * * *

  Through Thick and Thin

  * * *

  Now, That’s Grand!

  * * *

  Baked Potatoes

  * * *

  Pass the Cheese, Please

  * * *

  My Inner Circle

  * * *

  About Jaycee Dugard

  I dedicate this book to my mom and all the “moon moms” who hold on to hope!

  Acknowledgments

  * * *

  I want to acknowledge the tremendous support and encouragement I had in even writing this book. I would like to thank Mort and my publisher Jonathan for letting me, not once, but twice tell the story my way and for always believing I could, even if at times I had my doubts.

  To my mom, who by example has taught me patience and unconditional love. To my aunt Tina, who continues to share the magic with me. To my sister, who shines from within and without whenever she walks into a room and who always tells me how proud she is of me—well, girl, I’m so proud of you, too! And to my two daughters, who give me gray hairs before I’m forty but constantly remind me what true resilience looks like: I’m so darn proud of you both.

  I want to also acknowledge all of the people that have sent out their love protons to me and my family throughout our terrible/grand adventure.

  I want to thank Monkey and Nanny Goat for always having my back and for giving me so much. I can’t imagine my life without either one of you.

  Last of all, I want to acknowledge and thank all the people that have gotten me to this place in my life. All the little moments add up; each one has helped shape me and tells a tale. I am so thankful to have you all in my inner circle of love.

  Introduction

  * * *

  You can’t really be strong until you see the funny side of things.

  —ANONYMOUS

  Hi again. For those who read my first book, A Stolen Life, I would like to thank you for your huge amount of support. Some of you, however—and you know who you are—still can’t quite remember who I am. No, I am not a Duggar. I do not have eighteen siblings. Let’s get one thing straight: my last name is DUGARD.

  Many confuse me and my story with Elizabeth Smart. Just for the record, I am not Elizabeth Smart. Even though we both have blond hair, we have had vastly different lives and experiences. I am the one that was captive for EIGHTEEN YEARS! Not months. Not to say that what she went through wasn’t as bad as what I did. I’m not comparing us, but some have.

  Believe it or not, I have also been mistaken for one of the girls held captive by Ariel Castro in Cleveland. Apart from being held by a deranged man for a number of years, I’m not sure how I get confused with these brave ladies: Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and Michelle Knight.

  When I was first recovered, it was hard to put into words what I and my daughters had been through. I wasn’t really the talkative type back then. Up until that point, Phillip had done most of the talking throughout the eighteen years of captivity, and it was mostly in the form of lectures and his idea of daily sermons. I mostly talked with the girls and that’s it. So to have so many people to talk to all of a sudden was very overwhelming. I gave these men and women the bare essentials of what happened. It wasn’t until I met Rebecca Bailey that I really wanted to open up.

  I remember we were sitting in the backyard of the rental she and her team had found for us to stay in. Just the two of us. It was the first day we met. I told her right off I wasn’t comfortable talking about what happened. The backyard we were in was all fenced in, but we could hear a neighbor working in the yard next door. After making my proclamation about not talking, she said that was fine. We just sat for second or two and all of a sudden, words started pouring out of my mouth. Maybe it was her willingness to just sit there with me. Or the fact I felt no judgment from her at all, but my whole life story just came tumbling out of me. Rebecca was actually trying to get me to stop at one point because she realized the noise from the neighbor had stopped and that there was an unmistakable hush from the other side and we knew someone’s ears were burning. We both laughed at that point and decided it was time for a break. I had told her a lot, though. It went a little like this . . .

  It all started on a bright and sunny day in South Lake Tahoe. I was eleven years old. It was an ordinary day just like countless others I had had in my short eleven years of life. Then everything changed for me and my family. I was walking up to the school bus stop when a car came up behind me and stopped at an angle in front of me. Cutting off any chance of an exit. I wasn’t scared at first, though. I had no reason to be. Nothing could prepare me for what was to happen next.

  The man in the driver’s seat opened his window and started to ask me for directions. Before I could answer, he shoved his door open and stunned me with a stun gun. (I didn’t know what it was at the time, just that it made me lose control of my arms and legs.) I fell back into some bushes. Stunned, I tried to scoot backward, but there was nowhere to go. Nowhere to hide from the terrible man coming for me. Dragging me to his car. I try to hold on to whatever I can to no avail. (Years later, during my recovery process I would remember that the last thing I touched was a pinecone on the ground. It would become my symbol of new beginnings and the logo of my foundation.) The man throws me in the backseat where another person is waiting for me and covers me with a heavy blanket. (Later I learned this was Nancy Garrido, Phillip Garrido’s wife.) This person held me down. I felt like I couldn’t breathe. I know I passed out at some point.

  These events happened so many years ago. Even though I am well into my thirties now, I can still close my eyes and relive these events as if they just happened yesterday. These are
moments ingrained into my psyche and cannot be erased. I choose to not let them take over my life now. And I choose to create new, better memories. Memories that will eventually outweigh these bad memories until they are nothing but dust in the air.

  That was the longest car ride ever. I remember being so embarrassed that I had wet myself. I found out later that it was because of the stun gun he used. The details of my horrific and ultimately triumphant story can be found in my first book, A Stolen Life. My first book was a story that I needed to let people hear. To know it was not my shame but the shame of two people, Phillip and Nancy Garrido. It was therapeutic for me in many ways. I even wrote some of it in my therapy sessions with my therapist, Rebecca.

  This second book is different. This is my new story. In it, I can be whoever I want to be. Not who someone wants me to be.

  I’ve been asked this question many times throughout the year . . .

  “Jaycee, how are you going to rebuild your life?” This question has stayed with me these past years. I didn’t know how to answer it for a long time. I ask myself, Do I know now?

  How do you make a life for yourself and your kids when you have no idea where to begin?

  • How do you rebuild a life?

  • Do you rebuild it on the notion of what you think it should have been? Do you rebuild on a life you once lived?

  • How do I build a life I never thought I would live to see?

  So many questions but no answers . . .

  Today if someone asked me the same question, I would say:

  Hmmm . . . one day at a time.

  One second at a time, one hour at a time, one day at a time, one month, one year . . . and all the little moments and people that go into building and living a new life of freedom and choices.

  Is that an answer? I don’t know, but in order to share my life with you, I have to build you a picture of all the moments that have gone into my life now. These moments have helped shape me, and I hope that the sharing of these moments shows what goes into creating a new life. These seemingly small moments are actually all very significant. Each one has helped me define within myself who I am now.

  Do I wonder what my life would have been like if Phillip and Nancy Garrido never snatched me from my tranquil life? You bet your last dollar I do! But what’s done is done. I can’t take back what happened. I can only march quietly forward and forge a path on uncharted territory. I think I’ve done quite well. If I do say so myself. In fact, I don’t really think I’m at all unique or special. I believe anyone could have survived what I went through. You just have to want to be okay. That’s a choice I made. I wanted to be okay.

  Was I okay overnight? No, it takes time. I believe in seeking help and counseling. It helps to have someone to talk to. That someone for me was Dr. Rebecca Bailey. She is the founder of Transitioning Families, a unique equine-based program that specializes in reunification.

  My daughters had never met any of my family before. Likewise, even though I knew my mom and family, they had never met my daughters. It helped to have Rebecca and Jane, her co-therapist, there for us as a family. Jane became my ADL helper. ADL stands for activities of daily living. And trust me, I had missed out on learning a lot of the daily activities that are normal to everyone else. She helped me with things like balancing a checkbook, even helped me learn to grocery shop by myself. She continues to be an important person in my life.

  We needed the guidance from this team to learn how to connect with each other. You might think, Hey, what’s the big deal? You should be happy you were free. Of course I was! That was the big picture for us. The reality was that we were virtual strangers to each other. What seemed like fun exercises with her horses were actually teaching us the new skills we needed to form those lasting connections with each other. Chef Charles, Rebecca’s husband and the cook for Transitioning Families, was a vital factor in our recovery process, too. Besides all the delicious new foods he was introducing us to, he was also one of the first males my daughters had been around other than their father. I think those early days helped them to see that men could be so much more than what they had witnessed their tyrannical, possessive, egotistical, egomaniacal, narcissistic, psychopathic father being. I think this has led them to have healthy relationships throughout these years of freedom.

  It has not been easy. I can attest to that. But each moment has brought an emotion, a memory, a time to share, and a time for self. So many firsts . . . where to begin . . . First sight of my mom in eighteen years, first time meeting my grown-up sister Shayna, hugging my aunt Tina and us celebrating her birthday at Disneyland every year I have been back, first barbecue with the whole Dugard clan. Making the choice to have the girls attend school, first doctor visits, and first shared caramel-covered apples with Mom. Learning to drive and first car, first plane ride and reuniting with old friends. Some of these firsts were in my first book, A Stolen Life. All these years of freedom later, what’s new with me? Let’s find out . . .

  Fly Me to the Moon

  * * *

  First time I flew in the plane I was six years old, and my mom had a boyfriend that was a pilot. I remember it was a little plane and I threw up. It wasn’t the most fun I ever had for sure. I never flew again until eighteen years later, after my rescue.

  The first time I flew in a big plane I was worried that same feeling of nausea would come back from my younger days. The chance to fly in a big plane far outweighed any fears I had, though, and I was looking forward to this new experience. I didn’t want to think about being sick. I just wanted to fly!

  Having a lot of time on my hands in the prison of Phillip and Nancy’s backyard, I had a lot of time to dream and fantasize. One fantasy I had was having the ability to fly like Peter Pan. Often dreaming that with a little fairy dust I could fly myself home—Poof! . . . Tinker Bell, where are you? I would cry. But she never came.

  I also imagined myself flying from city to city as a flight attendant one day. I thought it would be so much fun to see the world in this way. From London to Paris. Rome, Italy, Egypt. I have always wanted to see the pyramids. I did get to see the Mayan ruins on a trip to Belize. A group of us went to help a tiny village called Monkey River rebuild after the devastating hurricane that they were still recovering from. While there, we explored a pyramid called Altun Ha which means “stone water.” It was amazing and so big. Climbing to the top I felt like a queen. But I digress. I will tell you more of this story later.

  This trip was to be my first meeting with Nancy Seltzer. Our need for protection from the media was an obvious priority from the beginning of our recovery. We needed the time to focus on each other and not the constant hounding of the media we were experiencing. Some people wanted to help, and we got involved with one in particular that we thought we could trust. It didn’t end up that way, and we didn’t know where to turn for help after that.

  Rebecca wanted to help but had her hands full with not only our therapy needs but also dealing with all the agencies and law enforcement involved with the court case against Phillip and Nancy Garrido, our captors. Her brother-in-law, an actor, knew of our plight and suggested a woman that he trusted in the business of public relations. Rebecca passed this information on to me and, together with my mom, we contacted Nancy Seltzer and explained our story. We asked for her help and, thankfully, she agreed and the rest is history. She did what she said she would and protected us from the media and those who were seeking to exploit us.

  On the day of my first flight, we were actually met in the airport parking lot by a security guard and taken through a special way to avoid any press that was lurking. My story was still new then and in high demand. I was accompanied on this trip by my mom and therapist Rebecca.

  Once we boarded, I remember the flight attendant asking me if I was old enough to be sitting in the exit row. How funny she would ask, I thought. She said I looked like I was fifteen. No, I replied, I’m thirty! She was shocked. I don’t look my age, apparently. Still don’t to this day. The
other day I was in Costco. They had the food samples out. I went to take one that looked like a health drink, and the lady at the booth stopped me and said, “You have to be over eighteen to drink that.” What? Hello . . . I’m thirty-five! I also went to a wedding once and during the toast I was served Martinelli’s sparkling apple juice instead of Champagne! I had even put on makeup! Come on, people, I am a grown-up! Anyways, I’m wandering again. The flight attendant did let me keep my seat.

  Over the speaker system “Fly Me to the Moon,” by Frank Sinatra came on. I looked at Mom, who was sitting beside me, and we shared a smile. Fly us to the moon, Frank, this is our song! That actually helped me to relax. Until we started to accelerate and actually take off. My hands and fingers dug into the armrest. My mom asked if I was okay, and with gritted teeth, I answered “Yep.” Turns out, I was okay for the entire trip. I did some deep breathing and looked straight ahead the whole way. Landing made me queasy. I knew I had to take an airsickness pill next time. Rebecca recommended Dramamine. I have taken it ever since, and flights have become so much easier. I have also found a homeopathic remedy, MotionEaze, that works for me on short flights.