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  This book is dedicated to the safe return of missing children everywhere.

  Preface

  As a little girl, I always imagined that I’d go to school, study music in college, get married, have a family, and be a music teacher out of my home. That was what I envisioned for myself, partly because that’s what my parents envisioned for me, and I never dreamed that anything else could happen. I would grow up, find my Prince Charming, be a bride, and live happily ever after. I look around myself now and, yes, some of those things have come to pass, but when I was fourteen, I survived a horrific experience that forever changed my life and the lives of the people I love.

  Afterward, I did go back to school and studied music in college. I married a wonderful Scottish man named Matthew Gilmour, an entrepreneur building a company in the vacation rental industry, and now we have a beautiful, vibrant little girl named Chloé. When she was born, she looked exactly like her father, with angelic, delicious facial features, and had a strong singing voice. My life has been and is filled with love and support. I am happy, but at the same time I’m dumbfounded at how different this life is compared to the life I imagined before I was kidnapped and brutally taught that “happily ever after” is a myth. Instead of quietly teaching music in my living room, I’m traveling almost constantly, doing everything I can to advocate for exploited women and children through the Elizabeth Smart Foundation and as a reporter at large for Crime Watch Daily and other news programs. I do quite a bit of public speaking, sharing my story and talking about what helped me survive and recover from this traumatic experience. I never asked for or wanted this platform, but it is what it is, so I’m determined to use it to help others.

  I recently visited a small Ohio town that used to be a major hub of industry, with steel mills and automobile factories employing thousands of workers. Since almost all the factories have moved to Mexico or elsewhere, the population has significantly decreased. People go to where there are jobs, and the people left behind are struggling. At the venue, I was greeted by a flock of gracefully aging women. They brought me inside for the sound check, asked repeatedly if there was anything I needed, and told me how excited they all were that I was there. They could not have been more welcoming. It was like having an army of grandmothers looking after me. The auditorium held close to six hundred women, and I’m pretty sure I was the youngest one there by at least forty years.

  After some announcements and housekeeping issues, the president of the ladies’ group introduced me. “In 2002, when Elizabeth was fourteen years old, her story captured hearts and minds all over the world. She was abducted at knifepoint from her home by a pedophile and his wife. After nine months of indescribable abuse, she was rescued and returned home, thanks to the diligent efforts of her family and others who refused to give up the search. Sustained by faith, her family, and her own resilience, she rose above this ordeal and wrote about it in her bestselling memoir, My Story. She’s now a wife and mother, an internationally recognized speaker, and an important voice advocating for exploited children and survivors of sexual violence.”

  It’s always hard to hear my experience summed up this way. For eight years after I was rescued and returned home, I swore up and down that I never wanted to write about what had happened to me. I just wanted to leave it in the past. Then the criminals who abducted me were finally brought to trial, and I had to talk about it. But it just felt like facts on a piece of paper, and that felt wrong to me, because all those things happened, but that wasn’t all that happened. My goal in writing my first book was to tell the rest of that story.

  My goal when I stand in front of an audience is to let them know that they’re not alone and that whatever they go through does not define who they are. So I stepped to the podium with that purpose in mind.

  I smiled and said, “Thank you so much for having me here today. It truly is a pleasure to be here. I feel so lucky that I get to travel around the country and meet different people and work with different organizations. I’ve learned so much, but the one thing I have noticed that we all have in common is that we all have problems. We all have trials, and we all have those mornings when we just want to pull the covers back up over our head and go to sleep until all the problems disappear. Unfortunately, that never seems to work. At least not for me. But I’ve also noticed that every day, we make choices. And when we’re faced with struggles, we have a choice to make: Either we surrender to our problems and give up, or we decide to keep moving forward no matter what. I’m not at all suggesting that once you make the choice to move forward, your problems disappear, but making that choice is the first step down that path. We are so often worried that we will be defined by what happens to us, and yes, that sometimes happens—when we let it. But it’s important to remember that you are not defined by what happens to you. You are defined by the choices you make after. Some people will look at me and forever see the little fourteen-year-old girl who was kidnapped all those years ago, but when I look in the mirror, I see a wife, a mother, an advocate, a friend, a survivor—someone I want to be, someone I never want to disappoint. No matter what our situations may be, we always have the power to decide who we want to be.”

  After the speech, we moved on to a nearby banquet hall/restaurant for lunch and a Q&A session. A ninety-four-year-old lady seated at my table leaned over and said, “Dear, you did such a wonderful job, but I’m disappointed that you didn’t speak more about God and his influence in your life.”

  “God certainly does play a big role in my life,” I said, “but some things are a little more personal than others, and that is one of them.”

  I have always felt that this particular topic is a sensitive one. As a devout Mormon, I have a very strong faith, but I recognize that other people are equally devout in their own beliefs. I always want to be respectful and not give the impression that I’m shoving my faith down anyone’s throat. Plus, I have always felt that my relationship with God is between God and me, something I treasure as very private. I don’t want to sound as though I’ve sold my soul or cheapened my faith, and I definitely don’t want to come off in a preachy way that might make others feel that I’m disrespecting their faith in any way.

  This same lady happened to be the one saying the blessing over the food, and I have to admit, I was ready to eat. Exhaustion had set in, and I didn’t want anyone to notice. Maybe it was because I was eleven weeks pregnant. Maybe it was the lack of a substantial breakfast or the time change from Mountain Standard to Eastern Standard Time. Two hours might not seem like a huge time difference, but at seven o’clock in the morning in Ohio, it is five A.M. in Utah, a time I’m not at my best. In fact, I’m usually flat on my back, mouth open, and snoring (or so Matthew tells me). That morning, I was functioning at a very low level of energy but trying to appear as if the exact opposite were true, and this sweet ninety-four-year-old woman got up and gave what felt like a twenty-minute prayer. Maybe
that’s not considered a long prayer to other people, but I wasn’t sure if I was going to make it through.

  When the prayer finally came to an end, I wolfed down the lunch that was put in front of me. (I would have had seconds if that had been an option.) Then it was time for the Q&A session. The wonderful thing about these senior ladies is that most of them aren’t afraid to say what is on their mind. At the same time, the not so good thing about these ladies is that they’re not afraid to say what is on their mind.

  The questions progressed from “How did you meet you husband?” to “What happened to your captors?” Eventually one woman stood up and said, “I’m going to ask you an indelicate question. How did you not get pregnant during your captivity?”

  This is not the first time I have been asked that question, and she was absolutely right in saying that it is an indelicate one, something that really shouldn’t be asked. There’s no reason for it but idle curiosity, and while I’m willing to answer personal questions if it helps someone, some questions make me feel like I’m being tested, and I don’t see any point to that.

  I responded by saying, “Yes, wow, that is an indelicate question. I actually didn’t start my period until I was fifteen—about three months before I was rescued—and those last three months … well, all I have to say is that it was a miracle that I didn’t get pregnant.”

  The questions didn’t go on too much longer after that, and I was grateful when the session came to an end. Afterward, I was approached by many of the attendees, who wanted to thank me and share their appreciation, which was so kind and sweet of them. Many of them wanted to take pictures with me, a request I always try to oblige, but when they took their smartphones out of their purses, they realized that they didn’t know how to work the cameras. I probably shouldn’t be happy when that happens, but I was so drained, I wanted to skip for joy.

  This type of event always leaves me wondering: Did I serve a good purpose here today? What were the attendees expecting from me? What was I expecting from them? Was it worth a day away from home? The questions I’m asked aren’t always so pointed or personal. People are usually looking for some insight into their own life, not mine. They’re hoping my experience holds some small piece of the map that will help them find their own way through whatever challenges life has handed them.

  There’s one question I get asked wherever I go: “Where does your hope and resilience come from?” The answer, for me, has three parts: my family, my faith, and a broad stubborn streak.

  When I was a child, both my parents tried to instill in my siblings and me a determination never to give up, to always strive and hope for the best possible outcome. That mind-set influenced every aspect of our family life. My mother has always been my example in everything. I truly don’t know where I’d be without her. Mom is and always has been one of my best friends, but she’s also been my therapist, my teacher—everything to me at one point or another. Any time I would come home from school upset, my mom would sit me down, look at me, and say, “Are you going to let [insert bully’s name here] choose your happiness?”

  My mother was full of wise sayings and advice like that. I loved to horseback ride as a child, so whenever I hit a rough patch, she would say to me, “What do you do when a horse bucks you off?” And of course, we all know the answer: “Get back on.” I secretly hated that, because she was continually making this decision to be happy my choice. It was my choice. I had the power to choose. As long as I was alive, I had the opportunity—maybe even the responsibility—to find a way to be happy. And in the end, it made a difference. I do have the power to choose.

  As I travel throughout the country, I meet so many other survivors. So many people come forward and share their stories with me. I’ve seen that everyone has his or her own challenges to face, and as much as I or anyone else would like to know, understand, and help, it’s not always possible to truly know exactly what a person is going through. Even two people who experience the same event will experience it differently, but on some level we all want the same things: love, happiness, and hope.

  I don’t think life is meant to be easy. We’re challenged every day to see what we’re capable of doing with this day we’ve been given, to see what choices we’ll make, and ultimately, to see if the decisions we make will lead us to happiness. Even after I had accepted that “happily ever after” was a myth, I was not willing to accept that my fate was to live unhappily ever after. I realized that I had been given a second chance at life. Everything—my family, my home, my chance to go to school—had been given back to me, and I didn’t want to miss a second of living my own life.

  What happened to me changed my life forever—not just that nine-month period, but everything that’s happened to me since. I get asked the same questions over and over. Not about what happened so much as “How have you moved on?” “Have you forgiven these people?” “How have you healed?” “Are you angry?” “Do you deal with depression?” A lot of people are really struggling with these questions in relation to their own lives, and I can’t even pretend I have all the answers. I’ve been searching for those answers myself. And seeking those answers—for myself and for you—is my goal in writing this book.

  I decided to ask some of the people who inspire me how they rose above the challenges in their lives. Starting close to home, I interviewed my own parents, who’d faced every parent’s darkest nightmare, and then I went out into the world and recorded conversations with a number of other people who’d survived extraordinary circumstances and were somehow able to get through it and go on to be happy and hopeful about life.

  The challenges faced by these individuals transcend age, gender, religion, and geography. We all need to be reminded of hope. We need to believe that no matter what our situation may be, there is always a way forward. The more people I speak to, the more I realize that we all have a story to tell. In the following chapters, I’ll take you with me to meet these people who graciously agreed to share personal stories that are astounding, inspiring, and sometimes shocking. Some of the people you’ll meet are celebrities; some are everyday people just like you and me. Each of them has a unique perspective on moving forward and finding hope. They speak about grief, anger, forgiveness, relationships, love, faith, and finally achieving a baseline joy that makes life worth living despite its sometimes devastating challenges.

  My hope is that through these conversations, you and I will both discover that we are all stronger than we imagined. We choose who we are, and happiness is within reach for each of us.

  1

  Hope Empowered

  “Hope” is the thing with feathers-–

  That perches in the soul-–

  And sings the tune without the words-–

  And never stops-–at all …

  —EMILY DICKINSON

  My mom will always love me, no matter what has happened to me. My dad will always love me. My siblings are stuck with me. No matter what happens to me, my family will always love me, and that is something that can never be taken away from me. That was my thought the morning after I was kidnapped from my bed at knifepoint and brought high into the mountains behind my childhood home.

  I grew up in Salt Lake City, where my family has been for generations. My father, Ed Smart, was in real estate, and my mother, Lois, was a homemaker. Right up until the day I disappeared, I probably would have said that there was nothing remarkable about my parents. They were just Mom and Dad, two kind, quiet-living, salt-of-the-earth people who were devoted to each other and to their children.

  I come from a large family, the second of six kids. Although we all look alike—different variations of the same mold, fair-skinned and athletic—we are all different. But whenever we get together, there’s teasing, laughing, and long conversations.

  My brother Charles is the oldest and used to want everyone to know that, but he’s also highly dedicated and fiercely loyal to those he loves.

  I’m next, so for the first fourteen years of my life, teacher
s and kids in the school halls would always say, “You look just like your older brother!” (Ah, if only I were occasionally recognized now as Charles’s sister instead of as “that girl who got kidnapped.”)

  Andrew follows me. Everyone likes Andrew. He is impossible not to like, making friends wherever he goes. When Andrew was a little boy, probably only about two years old, Mom had taken us shopping, and there was a lady standing outside the store smoking a cigarette. Without missing a beat, Andrew said to her, “Smoking is bad for you!” I think my mom died inside a little bit, and she quickly herded us into the store. When we were returning to the car with our groceries, the lady ran up to us and said to Andrew, “That was my last cigarette. I’ll never smoke again.” Whether it was his boyish charm or his sweet face, I don’t know, but he got away with that sort of stunt then and still does now.

  My only sister, Mary Katherine, is next. She is the kind of person who may seem quiet, even reserved, but once you gain her trust, you will have a loyal friend for life. We shared a room for almost our entire childhood. We were best pals. Being outnumbered two to one by boys, Mary Katherine and I had to stick together. Sometimes we would stay up late after our parents sent us to bed, just giggling until our dad would come in and tell us, “Girls, go to sleep. Now.”

  Edward is disciplined and serious. He’s always known what he wanted and how to get it, and he has a million-dollar smile that tells you everything you need to know about him.

  William is the baby of the family. Even though there are exactly eleven years and six days between us, we have always been close. When he was a little boy and would get scared at night, he would come into the room my sister and I shared and crawl into bed with us. I don’t think Mary Katherine was too keen on that, but I would tell her, “One day he’ll grow up, and he will never do this again, and then you’ll miss it.”