Jaycee Dugard Pinecone Jewelry & the JAYC Foundation
A pinecone was the last thing Jaycee Dugard touched before she was dragged into the Garridos’ car two decades ago. It is “a symbol of hope and new beginnings,” she told Diane Sawyer in an interview for Prime Time Life. “There is life after something tragic.” Purchase pinecone jewelry to support the foundation here.
“In the summer of 1991 I was a normal kid. I did normal things. I had friends and a mother who loved me. I was just like you. Until the day my life was stolen.”
Simon and Schuster has just released A Stolen Life, a memoir by Jaycee Dugard . There is also an ebook and an unabridged audio book, read by Dugard. A portion of the proceeds will go to The JAYC Foundation, which provides support and services for the timely treatment of families recovering from abduction and the aftermath of traumatic experiences. Scroll down for a link to Jaycee’s pinecone jewelry to support the foundation.
About the book : Dugard narrates the story in the present tense, beginning with the harrowing day of her abduction at the age of 11–her confusion, her terror, her absolute powerlessness as Phillip and Nancy Garrido paralyzed her with a stun gun, dragged her into the car, shoved her to the floor, and drove her from Tahoe to Antioch, California, to the dismal backyard compound where she would spend the next 18 years of her life. Scroll down to read an excerpt.
Each chapter is followed by a reflection, in which Dugard, who has been in therapy since her rescue in 2009, reveals her feelings about the ordeal now, as an adult looking back at the suffering of her younger self. Dugard’s writing style is direct and lucid, filled with detail; the naturalness of her writing is all the more impressive given the fact that her formal education stopped at the age of 11.
Dugard writes about discovering she was pregnant at the age of 14, and about delivering two baby girls in her back yard prison. She writes about how dependent she was on Phillip Garrido for everything. For most of the first six years of her captivity, she was locked in a soundproof room. Garrido convinced her that he knew everything she did. She lived in fear of getting “in trouble,” certain that he would use the stun gun again.
When her youngest daughter was two years old, Dugard was finally allowed to begin going out in public. By then, she had been so manipulated by Garrido that she believed his terrible lie: that she was safer in the back yard compound than she would be out in the world, and that her daughters were safer there as well. On outings, she avoided looking people in the eye; repeatedly, she mentions her feelings of invisibility.
Through it all, we see Dugard’s attempt to live as normal a life as possible–caring for a series of beloved pets, creating a school for her children, establishing small routines, and later, keeping the Garridos financially afloat by running the family printing business–often while Phillip and Nancy spent their days in a drug-induced slumber. She even keeps a journal, portions of which are presented–in her own childish print–in the book. Later journal entries reveal Jaycee struggling with many of the things any twenty-something young woman struggles with: her weight, her desire to eat more healthfully and be more motivated. These entries are extraordinarily poignant, infused with Jaycee’s longing, all these years after her abduction, to be with her mother; her desire to be free mixed with uncertainty about where she would go, or how she would take care of her children, if she were ever to leave; her confusion about Nancy and Phillip’s role in her life. After all, they have become her “family,” but she desperately wants to be with her real family, to be held once again by the mother whose face she can no longer remember, but whose love she remembers vividly.
Some of her journal entries include lists of dreams she has for her life. Along with taking a hot-air balloon ride, visiting Ireland, and learning two languages, she dreams of writing a best-seller. She has done just that; the day of its release, A Stolen Life hit #1 on Amazon.
Dugard also explains her reason for writing this book: she will no longer hide Garrido’s secret, she will no longer protect him from the truth of what he did to her. Others will know the brutality of his abuse.
This is a heartbreaking book from a brave and unbelievably resilient young woman, who now looks forward to a normal life for her and her two daughters. It is also inspiring; so much was taken from Dugard, and yet she has chosen to move forward without hatred. While she still experiences loneliness, she writes, she has fully embraced the joys of making home-cooked meals with her family, walking on the beach, and simply being free. Buy the book.
Having done a great deal of research into missing children while writing The Year of Fog, I followed Jaycee’s case with deep interest. One cannot help but be amazed by the fact that she survived and raised her daughters in such harrowing circumstances, and that she has now turned her efforts to helping other families through the J A Y C Foundation. In her interview with Diane Sawyer, which aired July 10 on Prime Time Life, Jaycee emphasized the fact that crimes such as those committed by the Garridos affect not only the victims, but also the victims’ families.
A note about Michaela Joy Garecht: Jaycee’s recovery momentarily gave hope to other parents of missing children–in particular to Sharon Murch, the mother of Michaela Joy Garecht, who was kidnapped from a Hayward, California, parking lot in 1988, and who has never been found. Sharon Murch is still looking for Michaela; read more about her story here.
Excerpt from A Stolen Life:
In the summer of 1991 I was a normal kid. I did normal things. I had friends and a mother who loved me. I was just like you. Until the day my life was stolen.
For eighteen years I was a prisoner. I was an object for someone to use and abuse.
For eighteen years I was not allowed to speak my own name. I became a mother and was forced to be a sister. For eighteen years I survived an impossible situation.
On August 26, 2009, I took my name back. My name is Jaycee Lee Dugard. I don’t think of myself as a victim. I survived.
A Stolen Life is my story—in my own words, in my own way, exactly as I remember it.
View a video clip of Diane Sawyer’s interview with Jaycee Dugard here.
17 Replies to “Jaycee Dugard Pinecone Jewelry & the JAYC Foundation”
I read the book.You are an incredibly courageous girl who will have a wonderful life now.What a wonderful gift for your mother to get you back,and for you to be finally permitted to be a mother whose chldren can breathe the air!! Good for you!! You made it and I am proud to be able to tell you how inspiring you are!!
You’re really a tough woman and I admire your strength and love for your two daughters. May you find true happiness in life!
God bless!!!
jAYCEE AND GIRLS I REMEMBER YOUR STORY ON THE NEWS AND THOUGHT HOW HORRIBLE THAT WAS.I HAVE JUST READ YOUR BOOK AND MY LOVE AND HEART GOES OUT TO YOU HOW YOU HELD IT IT TOGATHER ALL THESE YEARS I DONT KNOW YOUR LOVE FOR YOUR DAUGHTERS IS OUTSTANDING AND YOUR FAMILY WILL ALWAYS BE THERE FOR YOU I WISH I STILL HAD MY MUM BUT I STILL TALK TO HER IN MY DREAMS MY LOVE TO YOU ALL XX
Jaycee, WOW!, is the one word i can describe!!! Your story is soooo inspirational! Im so happy for you and everything your doing! I read your book and followed with the news! I envy you! Noone should ever have gone through what u did. My thoughts and prayers go out to your family. Your mother is an AMAZING person who never gave up hope!!! Your story really touched my heart deeply! The present and future is yours now and i know that your such a strong person that will live day to day to the fullest. Man, as proud as you can be as a mother to your daughters, i bet they are just as proud of you! Your AMAZING PERSON!! I wish nothing but the best for you, your daughter, mom, family, and FUTURE! <3 <3
Jaycee you are a remarkable young woman who is now in my talks with heaven, YOU and YOUR FAMILY will always be in my heart………..I am close to my mom too and while watching you talk I was thinking of my mom and how horrible it would have been to be where you were……thank God for your lil’girls, I think they helped save you as you were going on for them………again “you are a remarkable young woman.”
Jaycee just finished watching the 20/20 tv show. I’ve been very interested in your experience and have watched all of your interviews as well as reading your book. Not only am I a survivor of a kidnapping and rape by three men when I was 19 years old but my older sister had been kidnapped when she was 6 years old on her way to school many years before. Her perpetrator was a known pediphile in our hometown. I can relate to some of what you went through but can not conceive of how you dealt with all those years in captivity. I am so angry that we as women and children are not better protected from those monsters! I wish that I knew what I could do for your foundation to help get laws changed and procedures upgraded so that what happened to you would never happen again! We must keep these predictors out of our society! Lives are forever changed this I know. Please let me know if there is anything I can do for your foundation.
God bless you and your family!!!
Jaycee- I am amazed by your spirit, and how you can be at peace, and be grounded after what you have endured. You now have an amazing gift; speak and the world will listen. For years you were denied a voice, and now, you are wise, strong and have a unique insight into things that are not often talked about, that others have suffered from as well. You were brave enough to write this book; keep on writing and speaking, others will follow your cause. I am a counselor in Chicago, and would love to learn from you, and embrace your spirit and strength to be able to instill it upon those I work with. You are an inspiration. Your life is your own; have a blast!
Jaycee, WOW!, is the one word i can describe!!! Your story is soooo inspirational! Im so happy for you and everything your doing! I read your book and followed with the news! I envy you! Noone should ever have gone through what u did. My thoughts and prayers go out to your family. Your mother is an AMAZING person who never gave up hope!!! Your story really touched my heart deeply! The present and future is yours now and i know that your such a strong person that will live day to day to the fullest. Man, as proud as you can be as a mother to your daughters, i bet they are just as proud of you! Your AMAZING PERSON!! I wish nothing but the best for you, your daughter, mom, family, and FUTURE! <3 <3
I wish you and your family all the very best for the future. You won both the battle and the war against two monsters !
Jaycee, where to start I could never imagine the pain and suffering you went through, after reading your book I was very touched by the path you took, living in happiness not fear and hatred, you are truly an amazing lady. I wish you and your daughters nothing but happiness. I love my pine come necklace one Iam an animal lover so that touched my heart you included your foundation for the animals as well.
Jaycee, you are an inspiration to everyone. If only more people could have your outlook the world would be a better place. In my job I am exposed to terrible situations everyday which don’t always have the best outcome. I am so happy your’s had a wonderful outcome! I too wish I knew you personally. Your daughters were blessed with the best mother someone could ask for and have the same love for you that you have for your own mom. Good luck with everything you do in your brite future!
Jaycee, I finished reading your book. I want to let you know I am proud of you. I am so glad you let the past go , You as a person can be happy now. You have a future and now there must be no more saddness. Good Luck to you and your Daughters future’s and do take care!
dear Jaycee,I must tell you how in awe I am of your.You are a strong woman with intelligence and gentleness,even with all the abuse you still are a good woman.Your daughters are lucky to have you,they to have a mother like you.God Be with you and your family always.
I have never been touched so much by anything as I have been by Jaycee’s story. I think she is the most amazing person in the entire world. I only wish I knew her personally. I have not been able to stop thinking of her since I viewed her story on Dateline ID late last night. If ever a person could be an Angel, she would be at the top of the list. I love you Jaycee Lee Dugard for who you are. God Bless you and your entire family.
I just watched Diane Sawyer’s 20/20 episode. I alwasy looked for Jaycee and I am at peace that she and her childrend were found finally safe and so beautiful. I am so very pleased that she and her family are recovering so well. Prayers are answered. Godspeed!
I think there is no better love than a mother and daughter and Jacyee’s story is so awesome and yet sad to understand.
Her and her family’s story has touched me and I know she has heard that tons before but I want her to hear it agian and agian. Live the beautiful life finally.
and I thought I had a hard life! what A bittersweet story, the daughters are yours and have become your life, an obvious failure by the system so many red flags but yet no one in charge took the time to heed any warning signs, thank god you made it Jaycee!