Friday, January 25, 2013
No Breakfast First?
Chapter 3 No Breakfast First?
It's 1985, in gorgeous surf city California, and I'm four years old. There's a party at our condo tonight. I hear mom and dad talking about it. At the moment, I was playing with Skeletor and Grayskull Castle. Skeletor had, of course, captured Gem (rockstar Barbie), and now Shera and Night Rider were coming to the rescue. I had a very active imagination, and an ability to block out everything around me, which is what I was doing right now, because I could hear a fight begin down stairs.
It's not like that was unusual. They were always fighting and it was always ugly. So I just disappeared for a bit into the world where the worse thing I had to face was Skeletor and his diabolical slime machine. I knew that after a while, mom would be running to me for comfort; there was no avoiding that. But I could avoid this.
So into the land of Skeletor I disappeared for an hour or so. And before long, as I predicted, I heard sobs and footsteps headed in my direction and then, from the other end of the house, the front door slammed shut. I quickly tucked Skeletor into my pocket. He would have to get me through this one.
Mom sobbed and squeezed me tight until I thought I would suffocate. I found a happy place in my head. I usually found something comforting to say at the end of it. That was my strength, I guess. I was gifted with compassion, empathy and discernment very young. I had a spiritual awareness that both enabled me and frightened me. I was still way too young to understand and use it properly. But I did my best with mom and she needed me. She carried a lot of hurt both from her past growing up and from her marriage with dad, and she depended on me emotionally. It was a lot of pressure for a four year old. But my mom is a very special and dear woman and I love her deeply. I would do anything for her; to relieve her pain. It's complicated. When she felt better; I was exhausted.
The next thing I remember that day (and I am pretty sure it was the same day) was the party. I was very shy at first meeting, however, once I got to know you, I was very, very goofy. Yes, goofy. I remember this party in particular for several reasons. First, because I was allowed to wear my favorite sweater. I was such a tiny little thing at this time, that I was wearing it like a dress. My recent bout with pnemonia had made all my shirts and sweaters into dresses. This was one of my favorites; with big bright shapes on it. If I remember correctly, it even had shoulder pads. This was the 80's and icons like Madonna, Joan Jett, and believe it or not Twisted Sister were who I looked to for my fashion sense.
Secondly, I remember the drugs. Parents don't expect children so young to remember things that they try so hard to keep hidden; things that they think they have “under control.” They weren't addicts, after all. But, as I mentioned before, I was a very spiritually aaware and discrening child. I remember things I think most would not. There was cocaine and pot that night at least. I saw joints, bongs, crack pipes and alcohol. From what I now know, there was more than likely meth as well. I remember my mom drinking, but I know for sure my dad was involved in everything. I could tell at a very young age when he was high. I could read his eyes and behaviour easily. I was afraid of him this way; of his friends. He would never hurt me, but he was unstable and tempermental, when he was usually calm and docile.
Thirdly, I remember that Chris was there. You don't know who Chris is yet. She was a friend of my parent's that I really disliked, so I was less than pleased to see her there. Her daughter Sarah was not there, however, which did please me. Chris, of course was plastered and high and making an idiot of herself as usual.
I believe I was the only child there, which is what led me to come out of my shell a bit. I remember that I jumped up on the coffee table and was dancing to some song. I think it was Kiss “Rock N Roll All Night.” Once I broke out of my shell, I was the life of the party. Mom had to drag me up the stairs one by one to bed. I did not want to go to. Not just because I felt like I was being a brat kid (although I admit to being fully capable of that as an adult), but because I felt as if I needed to somehow protect my mom or stop something from happening, and yet I had no idea how. But, my dad had the ping pong paddle in hand now as a spanking threat. He had not yeat used it, and I didn't want him to. So I wriggled out of mom's grasp and ran off to bed like a good girl.
In bed I pulled my Rainbow Bright quilt grams had made me up over my head and and tried to disappear again.
The next morning I was off to pre-school. I ran to say good bye to my hippie aunt and uncle who lived with us at the time. They were sitting in their room around a bong; eyes as big as saucers. I was four years old, and I remember thinking, “no breakfast first?”
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
1981 Memoirs
My very earliest memory is one I recovered in a guided imagery session back in college, and I wouldn't trade it for the world.
It's 1981, the year I was born. My biological father is holding me in his arms in the house we lived in the year I was born. He is standing in front of the large front window. The woven yellowed 1970s curtains are drawn, but the sun is beating through and it feels warm and safe with him. He is looking at me lovingly. It is like there is nowhere to be. Time is still for that moment.
That was it.
It cut to me alone in the hallway of that house as a tiny toddler, standing in the odd green shag carpet. But for those few moments that he held me so lovingly, I savored it. My father has trouble showing sincere emotion. He is more likely to verbally abuse me than to say he loves me. And he is also more likely to do a line of cocaine or “chase tail” than spend time with his family. It wasn't always that bad, but it wasn't much better. He never hid that fact that he did not want children. He never hid that fact that he loved me, although he had a funny way to show it most of the time. He wasn't a father to me. He was more like a really cool uncle who refused to grow up.
But as a small child I idolized my father, even when he hurt my mom and I. He has so many wonderful qualities under all those sharp edges. So this memory is one of my favorites. It tells me, even after all he has done to hurt me, he does love me and he did want me. Now when I look in the mirror, and I see him staring back at me, I just think of this memory and it isn't so bad. I do love him; even when when my birthday rolls around every year and he forgets again.
Introduction
When you pick up a pen to write, to record what was lost, it is always hard to know where to start, or if you can even begin. For so many years it wasn't safe to talk about my life, and the things that happened to me. When I tried to write about them as I grew old enough to, my parents found my diaries and there were grave consequences. I don't just mean a spanking or “grounding;” I mean my world was turned upside down and suddenly I had do one to trust or turn to, and no place to record my thoughts. I was afraid even to feel.
I was placed with different therapists and counselors over the years, and even there I learned the unfortunate lesson that these therapist and counselors were not my confidants and could not be trusted. I have huge trust issues, so at this point I am pausing to look up the word counselor, and the common expectations for counselors and therapists just to see if maybe my expectations may have been too high. Here are my findings. In the thesaurus, under counselor, I was astonished to see that the words advocate, adviser and confidant are used as synonyms. Part of me was hoping to have no right to be as jaded as I am, but I have every right. As I think back, I get even angrier, remembering how one particular therapist took me for ice cream when I refused to dish out the information she wanted. By this time, I suspected that she was talking to my mom about our conversations, but I was hurting so badly, and she really did seem sweet. She took me to Penguins. I remember. I got vanilla frozen yogurt with gummie bears; my favorite. She really spoke like she was on my side. She was taking my side against my mom. I felt like I was finally getting some help. I could tell her...but of course when we got back to the office she told my mom everything and it was a big mess. I ended up in trouble for something I was trying to get help for; that was being done to me. Everything went back to the mother-ship while I was growing up, needing help; alone. For me, this was very unfortunate.
So I sit here with pen in hand now desperately seeking freedom from within. I have so much to share. Some of it beautiful, the majority of it awful and haunting, but I have spent a long time feeling desperately alone in my thoughts, and it is time to set them free. I can't help but feel that there is some one else who will be reading this who is feeling similarly alone, and I'm hoping maybe now, you won't feel so alone with your feelings and stories. Or at least you will maybe have the courage one day to share as well.
I'm thirty-one. That is a long tie to be alone with your stories and pain, so here it goes. Here is my diary as I can remember it; starting from my very earliest memories.There will be some gaps that I will try to explain the best I can. But hang in there for the ride, while I share with you what my life has been. How shall I describe it? A Beautiful and Equally Horrifying Roller-coaster.
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