The girl sat on the edge of the couch intently looking at me. I wasn’t
sure exactly what to think or say at this point. She completely threw me into
my longest lived nightmare within a 10 minute conversation. She was asking for
help and advice and all I could do was sit in silence and fear. Fear for
knowing exactly how she felt and fear for her as I have seen many people in her
very situation and unfortunately the cons far outweigh the pros. Outcomes are
typically sad and filled with sorrow whether in direct correlation to the person
or the indirect affects in the person’s close circle of friends and family.
My first reaction was to scream at her a simple “get out, run and do it
now”. But I couldn’t. I could not bring my own fears into my perspective. It
would not be very fair to her. She was genuinely asking my advice as a role
model and mentor to her. All I could come up with was silence. How does one
proverbially break out the kid gloves of compassion and understanding when the
issue at hand is a solid reminder of a heart in terror so prominent that it
paralyzes you? I was grasping for calmness to answer her. It wasn’t coming fast
enough. Every time I looked at her face it was inquisitive, scared, and tears slowly
streaming down her cheeks. My God, my answer would either break this person
completely or throw her into a titanium ball of fear to a place I would never
be able to reach her. I closed my eyes and sighed, asking for strength and
wisdom that wasn’t quick to come. I argued and stomped my feet at my situation.
Kicking and screaming was not helping me either. Why was I in this situation
and how can I possibly guide this woman who is so broken? One wrong move on my
part will tear her to shreds. I was struggling with my own life and in no way
ready to guide someone else’s. Alas, here I am facing fear in this woman’s eyes
and struggling to keep my own at bay.
This woman’s childhood was filled with pain, sorrow, fear and complete
confusion. To this day she still harbored a self resentment based on blame that
something she did brought on the beatings, hatred, and emotional torment. A
person’s heart and mind is a very deep and dark chasm. I picture it much like
the chambers of the Bastille; long dark hallways with innumerable rooms, closed
off to any signs of light or hope. Each room carries a different memory a
different emotion much like the prisoners once housed in the Bastille…each
sentenced for different offenses and each awaiting their fate. This issue blew
open the doors to my deepest hallway. I keep this on the deepest floor, under
lock and key. It is a place I seldom visit anymore; however, it remains as a
constant reminder of finding my olive leaf and mustering the strength to
overcome it. This woman and her advice blew open the hallway door and every
room in that chamber. It threw me in a tailspin that washed me over with every
emotion I felt as a child myself, forcing the feelings through. I couldn’t push
them back or suppress them. It no longer affected me in a negative way but it
did serve to cloud my otherwise objective advice.
You see I too was a child of abuse. I grew up in an alcoholic
household. Both of my parents drank very heavily from the time I was 5 years
old. I was raising and responsible for myself from that age as I couldn’t count
on anyone to be there. I had no other family I could run to and after I started
school I was terrified to talk to anyone. I always thought it was my fault.
Money was tight, we were in a new place and it’s my fault that my parents
couldn’t make ends meet. I was needy. I needed to eat, needed school clothes,
etc. Therefore, I made my parents drink themselves into numbness and no pain.
It was very logical to me then. As I grew, the situation got much worse. Domestic
violence was a regular occurrence. The weekends were my enemies because they
always turned violent. I remember coming home and every room in the house
destroyed, furniture broken, food trashed and thrown all over the kitchen. My
dad was never home since he was in jail and mom was lying on the couch so
beaten at times I caught my breath seeing her. My pre-teens got worse. I
started rebelling and the violence remained, although we added emotional abuse
to the long list of sorrows. My parents in their drunken states destroyed me
verbally and emotionally. I was their pincushion, their net for venting. The
last fight I remember, I jumped between my parents because my dad had a
butcher’s knife, arm up ready to bring it down in force. I don’t ever remember
feeling the sheer terror I did that night. I ran between them, facing my dad,
harboring my mom. I remember he looked at me and his eyes softened. The knife
slowly slipped between his fingers and he collapsed. He slid down the wall in a
complete alcoholic coma. My mother stood there still talking although the fear
of watching my dad in a complete coma drowned out everything around me.
Something changed in me that night. I still can’t explain what exactly it was.
After that it was about survival. I set my goal to reaching 18 so I could get
out. I did go to college and moved away for a while. My dad went to rehab and
he and I built a very strong relationship. He became the rock and man I knew he
always would be. My mother, sadly, never got over the drinking and she destroyed
herself. I don’t know where she is today and sadly enough I pray she is fine
but do not hold an ounce of desire to reach out.
It took me years to come to terms with my childhood and not use it as
an excuse to be a non-productive member of society either drinking or on drugs
or out for the weekend go times that leave one so empty come the sunrise on
Monday morning. But I have overcome it. I am a stronger person for it and
wouldn’t be the survivor I am today without having gone through it. I also
learned to forgive; myself, my parents and anyone else I come into contact that
needs it. You see I never told anyone what I was going through at home and for
that reason cannot look another in the face and assume their life is perfect.
Silence is fear’s greatest friend. It protects fear and allows it to harbor
deep within you.
Now this girl, poor and terrified sitting on the couch intently making
a plea for help….she too has had a similar background. The issue at hand is
that she never dealt with her fear or past, is not able to be alone in her own
house because she is forced to think and see herself in true light. She went
from that childhood to marrying a man she thought would be her savior, her
security blanket, the one person in her life that would justify and protect
her. Unfortunately, not even God can protect you from yourself, especially when
you are too busy not to listen. He on the other hand married a broken woman
with the intent to fix her and be her champion. Now he has started to drink to
bury his perceived failures and the rage and sorrow has turned physically and
domestically raw. The beatings have started in her marriage. So what do I say?
How do you tell a person to run when the person she is running from is the
champion of her heart.
So with all the calmness and strength I could muster I squeezed her
hand tightly and sat down next to her. My own Bastille was starting the process
of lock down again and we began talking. I’m not sure how this situation will
work out, but I know I won’t leave her…regardless of her choices and my
begging. I had one friend end up in a wheelchair, stabbed 28 times by her
husband and survived raising 4 children…I know it’s possible, I just hope this
woman doesn’t wait until she is robbed of her very freedom. It is truly sad
when all you can do is sit patiently on the sidelines and watch this play out,
when your well intended words are cast upon deaf ears and your greatest fear is
the ending play of the game.
Much like a paladin headed into battle…I brace and prepare myself for a
war. I cannot win and have no control
over the situations that come my way. I only hope that I can face the battle
with the heart of a paladin and his noble strength to survive it.
Comments
My friend that did make it through after being stabbed and almost killed by her husband is the true hero of this story. She has truly survived the most painful experience in life....almost losing it at the hands of the person who took a vow to love and protect you always.
Life is what you make it and decisions create pain or joy...which placed in a story of ideals can make for interesting living. A good writer lives life to the fullest and is true to their heart, regardless of the pain or joy it may encounter.
Thank you again
It's just life....life as it happens to me. I am murphy's law and will continue to be so Im sure.
I dont think I am talented enough for the novel world, but I figure any means to express and reach out works for me.
Thank you
In this situation, I am giving it to God. I did get an answer and I am kicking and screaming about it. The proverbial "be James but put on your kid gloves"....hard to swallow but I must. Ill definately keep this blog updated with the events of that situation.