.::[[A New Beginning]]::. {The Uprising}
Aug 26, 2010 20:25:26 GMT -5
Post by Sunrise Rainier D2 // [Thundy] on Aug 26, 2010 20:25:26 GMT -5
It's not as if the Uprising hadn't had it's fair share of conflict between members in the past. It was like riding a roller-coaster, if you really took the time to think about the Uprising's past and what it's future might hold in store. The rebellion! The Uprising hadn't existed during those days- nor was Griffin Tucker alive at the time, along with every other member of the gang- but it wasn't long afterward that everything began to take shape. Though it was seemingly impossible to fight once the rebellion had been obliterated and everyone had to recover, all negative feelings stayed strong and that essentially led to the creation of the Uprising.
Strangely enough, however, it was not the Capitol which caused the group grief after they were created. The members shut their mouths and kept the Uprising secret and the Capitol went about their businessof watching innocent children kill each other to surviveand didn't suspect a thing. The Districts were weakened and under their control; why would any of the rebels even think of defying them again? Especially not so soon. No, their problems were not about the Capitol. The problem with the Uprising was purely caused by the members who belonged to it. Arguments, loss of morale, the true image of how lost the cause really was.. it all affected them greatly. When the real task before them was truly contemplated, it seemed impossible. Hell, maybe it was impossible. Maybe it was still impossible. It might never happen and they might never reach their goal, or they might lose their lives. But, they asked themselves, was it really worth it? Did they really want to risk their lives for a cause that had not long ago been proven lost?
The answer was obvious. Too daunted by the task ahead of them and too afraid to repeat the past that already lay behind them, the group was in utter turmoil. The higher-ranking members, the ones more dedicated to the cause, were unable to raise the morale of the lower-ranking members who were simply vengeful. They only had eyes for redemption; for gaining back a bit of what they had lost. They wanted to cause the Capitol some pain, yes, but besides those everlasting feelings of anger they had no hope of completely destroying their enemy. All they had was blind anger and fear, and so they left. Whatever had been left of the Uprising had died away.
What kind of ending would that be? Oh, we don't want to fight anymore. It's not going to happen. We didn't care that much anyways. It's pointless... It was only by chance that the group didn't end at that. The information that they had left behind was found again many years later, solely by chance. The idea arose again, and with it came the Uprising. But people are people, and they don't always learn from the past. There was more conflict within the group, but this time it was between the Leader and the Vice President who assisted her. She ridiculed him for acting foolish, he wanted to be Leader, she thought otherwise, he was violent... And then she brought out a bomb that changed everything. The outcome destroyed those two high-ranking members of the Uprising, leaving the lower-ranking members to fend for themselves, without someone to lead them.
It was then, in another time of distress and conflict, when Griffin came along. He hadn't really been searching for anything when he set off on foot from his District 2 home and into the blank emptiness ahead of him, but it was like he had to leave. He didn't say goodbye to his parents, he tried to ignore the fact that he was leaving his newly found crush behind, and other than that he had no one to say goodbye to. No one that really mattered. He just left, one day, searching for something even though he wasn't sure what that something might be. What he found was completely unexpected. He had stumbled upon the best discovery of his life, if not for a sad image. The faces of the few who had recently lost all guidance told him what had happened, and frankly enough, he found it ridiculous that such conflict could destroy a group more than once.
Griffin Tucker was determined that those events would not be repeated again. This was why he was standing there right then, leaning casually up against the wall of a building that hadn't quite been destroyed during the destruction of District 13. This was their meeting place, though simple as it was, it would have to do for the time being. The building was messy and cluttered, but it was one of the only buildings left standing and it protected from the weather, so why complain? There was a circle of tents not far away when he gazed out the cracked window, essentially for the members to live in. It was great by no means, but that's the card they were dealt with. Griffin had done his best to clear out the cluttered room of the mess that was left, and thankfully for him, there was a large table in the center of what probably used to be the dining room. A few chairs- Not enough chairs to seat everyone; but that was just another thing they would have to endure. It wouldn't hurt them to sit on the ground or lean against the wall, as he was doing right then. Members were entering the room one by one, though the group was small. It always had been, and it probably always would be. They wouldn't take down the Capitol themselves- goodness no, the idea was laughable- but every one of them had that same thing in common. They wanted to make a difference. They wanted to help. They wanted to fight. They wanted their freedom.
Griffin watched as all of the members, whom he had briefly talked to in the past, came into the room. He didn't know all of them very well at all- but that was the problem with the group in the first place! No one really knew each other. He firmly believed that that was the reason that the gang crumbled in the past, and had to make sure that it did not happen again. He did not want to go back to square one once again. When most of the members had filed into the room and situated themselves somewhere, he began to speak. "Hello, everyone." He paused and looked around at all of them, dark eyes settling on each individual once before he spoke again in a strong voice. "Let it be known that this isn't quite what I would call a meeting.. it's more of a party of sorts. I know that most of you are all very new, and I thought it might benefit all of us if we all got to know each other instead of simply going about our business and working by ourselves. It's important that we all work as a team instead of fighting with each other, because that won't get us anywhere. It hasn't gotten us anywhere in the past. So talk with each other, introduce yourselves, get to know the people that you'll be working with. If you have any questions for me, don't hesitate to ask."