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YOKNAPATAWPHA COUNTY SHERIFF'S
DEPARTMENT
- Investigating Officer(s): Det. S. Murphy. Det. T. Armstrong
- Incident No.: 000388-31A-2004
- Case Description: Barbara Dubois Homicide
The following evidence item (# 000388-29) is a transcript of a partially finished, handwritten draft
recovered from the YCCC hotel room of Ms. Barbara Dubois during a search
conducted on
January 31, 2004. Preliminary analysis indicates that the handwriting is
consistent with the victim's.
//T. R. Douglas
Forensics Officer
YCSD CSU
Truth
of the Heart
When William
Faulkner accepted the Nobel Prize in 1950, he gave a speech in which he
talked about his work. Faulkner wanted to create out of the materials
of the human spirit, something that didn't exist before. He points out
the importance of recognizing the problems of the human heart in conflict
with itself. He says we must forget fear and see the universal truths
of love, honor, pity, compassion and sacrifice.
Who among
us has not known conflicts of the heart? Who among us has not longed to
acknowledge the truths of our heart but is afraid to reveal those truths?
What makes us so afraid? Is it the opinion of others we fear? The opinions
of our parents or other loved ones? The opinions of friends or maybe just
acquaintances? Why do we care more about the opinions than what our own
heart truly feels?
The great
African-American poet, Paul Laurence Dunbar penned a wonderful and now-famous poem called
"We Wear the Mask." He is, of course, referring to the
African- American experience, but I think these words of this poem refer
to many of us who fear to acknowledge the universal truths of the heart.
These are his words:
We
wear the mask that grins and lies,
It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes-
This debt we pay to human guile;
With torn and bleeding hearts we smile,
And mouth with myriad subtleties.
Why
should the world be over-wise,
In counting all our tears and sighs?
Nay, let them only see us, while
We wear the mask.
Too many
of us wear that mask. Too many of us are afraid to follow our hearts.
Too many of us hesitate to do what is right for us and are lead by others.
Let us all shed our masks, shed our fears and do what our hearts are telling
us is true and right.
I'm going
to follow my own advice. I'm giving up living the life another chose for
me. I'm going to live my own dreams instead of someone else's. I wish
I'd found the courage before this and followed my heart long ago.
I'm no longer
going to be a slave to the pageant life of walking, talking -- even living --
as though every moment on stage is the most important one.
I'm going
to recover something -- and someone -- of great personal value that I gave
up a long time ago to pursue elusive and transitory fame. I am ready to
follow the truths of my heart and find that love and happiness I once
had.
I say to
my close, dear friend who suffers from a dangerous eating disorder, "Embrace truth and freedom by revealing that which you have hidden so you
can be whole and well again."
And I ask
you, the community, to remember that the beauty that you see means nothing
unless it is accompanied by the beauty of the heart and soul it covers.
There is
also one other truth I have in my heart that I must make public, no matter
how much it hurts someone who has much at stake. That truth is
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