Today's RWISA author spotlight belongs to Stephanie Collins. Here is a powerful piece by Stephanie. Enjoy! :-)
Guilt,
Shame & Fear
By
Stephanie Collins
“I can’t stand the feeling of
being out of control, so I’ve never had any interest in trying drugs or
alcohol,” I mused.
“You sure seemed to have an
interest when you were younger,” Dad informed me. He responded to my perplexed
look before I had a chance to deny his claim. “What? You don’t remember trying
pot? Let’s see. It was about 1975. That would have made you five, right? I
remember it like it was yesterday. It was a summer afternoon. I walked into the
living room and found you with a bong in one hand and a beer in the other. You
just looked up at me, glassy-eyed, with a smile on your face and said, ‘Hi,
Dad.’ You don’t remember that?”
“Uh…no!”
“Ha! Do you remember the massive
headache you had the next day? You hated life that day! I told you not ever to
do it again...and you never did,” he reminisced in a tone laced with humor and
pride.
It was after that conversation
when I really began to question my apparent lack of childhood memories. I have
next to no memory of life before the divorce of my parents (when I was eight)
and precious few afterward.
My parental split also marks the
onset of memories of the “secret playtime” I shared with Dad. I remember
realizing that what was happening to me was wrong (to a certain extent,
anyway), but Dad really missed Mom. I felt proud to be there for him in his
time of grief and loneliness. I had many roles as the oldest daughter. I got my
toddler sister to bed on time, scolded her when I found her drinking a beer
(that one I do have a vague memory of), and I cleaned the house. Those “more
intimate interactions” with Dad were just another in my list of
responsibilities as I saw it.
But if Dad remembered the
timeline correctly, Mom and Dad were still together when I was five. Where was
Mom when her Kindergartener daughter was experimenting with drugs? Could this
mean I should add neglect as a descriptor of my “chaotic” upbringing? Could it
mean the molestation began earlier than I have any memory of? Does it even
matter at this point?
For a time, I was skeptical if
someone told me s/he didn’t have sexual abuse in their background. It seemed it
was everywhere. I ran a support group in a junior high school when getting my
psychology degree. It was for eighth-grade girls, and the only qualifier for an
invitation to the group was poor school attendance. After a few weeks of
meetings, I opened a session with - innocently enough - “So, how was everyone’s
weekend?” One girl immediately began to cry. She explained she had confronted
her parents over the weekend with the news that her brother had sexually abused
her for years. She had come forward out of fear for the niece her brother’s
girlfriend had just given birth to. That student’s admission led to the
revelation that six of the seven of us in our circle that day had a history of
sexual abuse.
My best friend in college was
gang-raped in high school. My college boyfriend was [brutally] raped by a
neighbor as a child. Maybe the most disturbing situation I heard about was when
I was a senior in high school. I had befriended a freshman. She came to me one
day, inconsolable. She was petrified, as she was positive she was pregnant. I
tried to calm her with reassuring words, then asked, “Have you told [your
boyfriend] yet?” She burst into a fresh bout of tears. When she was finally
able to speak again, she confessed in an agonized whisper, “I can’t! It’s not
his. It’s…it’s my uncle’s, or my father’s.”
I don’t know how I thought sexual
abuse was rampant all around me but had somehow left the rest of my family
untouched. Soon after my first daughter was born, I learned that Dad had
attempted to molest my younger sister when I was about 12 (my sister would have
been 7 or 8 then). As it turns out, I disrupted the attempt when I went to
inform them I had just finished making breakfast. I learned of that incident
because our [even younger] step sister had just pressed charges against Dad for
her sexual abuse from years earlier. He served four years.
Incidentally, that family drama
enlightened me to the fact that my grandmother had been abused by a neighbor.
My aunt had been abused by her uncle. I wonder if Dad had been sexually abused,
too (in addition to the daily, brutal physical abuse I know he suffered at the
hands of my grandfather).
As with most survivors of abuse
from a family member, I am full of ambiguity and conflict. I am glad Dad was
educated to the error of his ways. I’m satisfied he paid for his crimes. I’m
relieved the truth came out. I hate that the truth came out. I mourn for the
shell of a man who returned from prison. I weep for a family that was blown
apart by the scandal. I am heartbroken for my grandmother, who was devastated
by the whole ordeal. I am thankful I live 3000 miles away from my family, so I
don’t have to face the daily small-town shame they all do, now that Dad is a
registered sex offender. I am proud of my step sister for speaking up. I am
woefully ashamed for not having the courage to do it myself, which possibly
would have prevented the abuse of others after me. I love my father. I am
thankful for the [many] great things he has done for me over the years. I hate
the effect his molestation had on me, including the role it likely played in my
high school rape by another student, and my first [abusive, dysfunctional] marriage.
As I’ve clearly demonstrated, my
story is far from unique. Heck, it’s not even remotely severe or traumatic when
compared to what others have survived. Still, here I am - 40 years after my
first memories of molestation – and I’m still suffering the consequences. Along
with my disgrace for allowing others to be abused after me, I carry incredible
shame for my involvement in the acts (regardless of the decades of therapy that
advise me I had no real power or choice in the matter). I carry unbelievable guilt
for the strain my history places on my relationship with my husband. He’s an
amazing, wonderful, loving man, who deserves nothing less than a robust,
vigorous, fulfilling sex life, but gets – to the best of my ability – a
[hopefully] somewhat satisfying one. I carry secret embarrassment over the only
real sexual fantasy I have – that of reliving my rape and [this time] taking
great pleasure in castrating the bastard in the slowest, most brutally savage
way imaginable.
Heaviest of all, I carry fear.
There’s nothing I can do to change my past. All I can do is work toward
preventing the continued cycle of abuse. I may have a warped view of personal
boundaries, I may struggle with my sexuality, and I may be somewhat unfamiliar
with healthy family dynamics, but I can do all in my power to ensure my kids
fare far better than me. I fear failure.
My eldest daughter has mild to
moderate developmental delay. While statistics for sexual abuse in the general
population is scary enough, the likelihood of abuse when a cognitive disability
is involved is all but a certainty. My second daughter is non-verbal,
non-ambulatory, and severely mentally delayed. She’s a prime candidate for
abuse. What if my efforts to protect them fall short?
My [teenaged] son and my youngest [“tween”]
daughter both have ADHD. Impulse control is a constant struggle for them both.
What if the education, counseling, advice, and coaching I offer them about
healthy relationships, sexuality, safety and personal responsibility aren’t
enough?
I try to counteract these
lingering after effects of abuse by remaining ever thankful for the love, good
fortune, and beautiful life I share with my husband and children today, but my
guilt, shame, and fear cling to me with tenacious persistence.
I am just finishing "It
Begins And Ends With Family" by Jo Ann Wentzel. I highly recommend the
read. The subject is foster care, but no conversation about foster children is
complete without a discussion of child abuse and neglect. While we can debate
the best course of action in helping abused children, the top priority must be
to work toward a goal of prevention; to break the cycle of abuse. I am hopeful
that – as a society – we can work together to empathize, educate, support,
counsel, and care enough to stop the cycle of all abuse. If sharing my truth
will help toward that goal, well…Here I am. This is my truth.
Guilt,
Shame & Fear
By
Stephanie Collins
“I can’t stand the feeling of
being out of control, so I’ve never had any interest in trying drugs or
alcohol,” I mused.
“You sure seemed to have an
interest when you were younger,” Dad informed me. He responded to my perplexed
look before I had a chance to deny his claim. “What? You don’t remember trying
pot? Let’s see. It was about 1975. That would have made you five, right? I
remember it like it was yesterday. It was a summer afternoon. I walked into the
living room and found you with a bong in one hand and a beer in the other. You
just looked up at me, glassy-eyed, with a smile on your face and said, ‘Hi,
Dad.’ You don’t remember that?”
“Uh…no!”
“Ha! Do you remember the massive
headache you had the next day? You hated life that day! I told you not ever to
do it again...and you never did,” he reminisced in a tone laced with humor and
pride.
It was after that conversation
when I really began to question my apparent lack of childhood memories. I have
next to no memory of life before the divorce of my parents (when I was eight)
and precious few afterward.
My parental split also marks the
onset of memories of the “secret playtime” I shared with Dad. I remember
realizing that what was happening to me was wrong (to a certain extent,
anyway), but Dad really missed Mom. I felt proud to be there for him in his
time of grief and loneliness. I had many roles as the oldest daughter. I got my
toddler sister to bed on time, scolded her when I found her drinking a beer
(that one I do have a vague memory of), and I cleaned the house. Those “more
intimate interactions” with Dad were just another in my list of
responsibilities as I saw it.
But if Dad remembered the
timeline correctly, Mom and Dad were still together when I was five. Where was
Mom when her Kindergartener daughter was experimenting with drugs? Could this
mean I should add neglect as a descriptor of my “chaotic” upbringing? Could it
mean the molestation began earlier than I have any memory of? Does it even
matter at this point?
For a time, I was skeptical if
someone told me s/he didn’t have sexual abuse in their background. It seemed it
was everywhere. I ran a support group in a junior high school when getting my
psychology degree. It was for eighth-grade girls, and the only qualifier for an
invitation to the group was poor school attendance. After a few weeks of
meetings, I opened a session with - innocently enough - “So, how was everyone’s
weekend?” One girl immediately began to cry. She explained she had confronted
her parents over the weekend with the news that her brother had sexually abused
her for years. She had come forward out of fear for the niece her brother’s
girlfriend had just given birth to. That student’s admission led to the
revelation that six of the seven of us in our circle that day had a history of
sexual abuse.
My best friend in college was
gang-raped in high school. My college boyfriend was [brutally] raped by a
neighbor as a child. Maybe the most disturbing situation I heard about was when
I was a senior in high school. I had befriended a freshman. She came to me one
day, inconsolable. She was petrified, as she was positive she was pregnant. I
tried to calm her with reassuring words, then asked, “Have you told [your
boyfriend] yet?” She burst into a fresh bout of tears. When she was finally
able to speak again, she confessed in an agonized whisper, “I can’t! It’s not
his. It’s…it’s my uncle’s, or my father’s.”
I don’t know how I thought sexual
abuse was rampant all around me but had somehow left the rest of my family
untouched. Soon after my first daughter was born, I learned that Dad had
attempted to molest my younger sister when I was about 12 (my sister would have
been 7 or 8 then). As it turns out, I disrupted the attempt when I went to
inform them I had just finished making breakfast. I learned of that incident
because our [even younger] step sister had just pressed charges against Dad for
her sexual abuse from years earlier. He served four years.
Incidentally, that family drama
enlightened me to the fact that my grandmother had been abused by a neighbor.
My aunt had been abused by her uncle. I wonder if Dad had been sexually abused,
too (in addition to the daily, brutal physical abuse I know he suffered at the
hands of my grandfather).
As with most survivors of abuse
from a family member, I am full of ambiguity and conflict. I am glad Dad was
educated to the error of his ways. I’m satisfied he paid for his crimes. I’m
relieved the truth came out. I hate that the truth came out. I mourn for the
shell of a man who returned from prison. I weep for a family that was blown
apart by the scandal. I am heartbroken for my grandmother, who was devastated
by the whole ordeal. I am thankful I live 3000 miles away from my family, so I
don’t have to face the daily small-town shame they all do, now that Dad is a
registered sex offender. I am proud of my step sister for speaking up. I am
woefully ashamed for not having the courage to do it myself, which possibly
would have prevented the abuse of others after me. I love my father. I am
thankful for the [many] great things he has done for me over the years. I hate
the effect his molestation had on me, including the role it likely played in my
high school rape by another student, and my first [abusive, dysfunctional] marriage.
As I’ve clearly demonstrated, my
story is far from unique. Heck, it’s not even remotely severe or traumatic when
compared to what others have survived. Still, here I am - 40 years after my
first memories of molestation – and I’m still suffering the consequences. Along
with my disgrace for allowing others to be abused after me, I carry incredible
shame for my involvement in the acts (regardless of the decades of therapy that
advise me I had no real power or choice in the matter). I carry unbelievable guilt
for the strain my history places on my relationship with my husband. He’s an
amazing, wonderful, loving man, who deserves nothing less than a robust,
vigorous, fulfilling sex life, but gets – to the best of my ability – a
[hopefully] somewhat satisfying one. I carry secret embarrassment over the only
real sexual fantasy I have – that of reliving my rape and [this time] taking
great pleasure in castrating the bastard in the slowest, most brutally savage
way imaginable.
Heaviest of all, I carry fear.
There’s nothing I can do to change my past. All I can do is work toward
preventing the continued cycle of abuse. I may have a warped view of personal
boundaries, I may struggle with my sexuality, and I may be somewhat unfamiliar
with healthy family dynamics, but I can do all in my power to ensure my kids
fare far better than me. I fear failure.
My eldest daughter has mild to
moderate developmental delay. While statistics for sexual abuse in the general
population is scary enough, the likelihood of abuse when a cognitive disability
is involved is all but a certainty. My second daughter is non-verbal,
non-ambulatory, and severely mentally delayed. She’s a prime candidate for
abuse. What if my efforts to protect them fall short?
My [teenaged] son and my youngest [“tween”]
daughter both have ADHD. Impulse control is a constant struggle for them both.
What if the education, counseling, advice, and coaching I offer them about
healthy relationships, sexuality, safety and personal responsibility aren’t
enough?
I try to counteract these
lingering after effects of abuse by remaining ever thankful for the love, good
fortune, and beautiful life I share with my husband and children today, but my
guilt, shame, and fear cling to me with tenacious persistence.
I am just finishing "It
Begins And Ends With Family" by Jo Ann Wentzel. I highly recommend the
read. The subject is foster care, but no conversation about foster children is
complete without a discussion of child abuse and neglect. While we can debate
the best course of action in helping abused children, the top priority must be
to work toward a goal of prevention; to break the cycle of abuse. I am hopeful
that – as a society – we can work together to empathize, educate, support,
counsel, and care enough to stop the cycle of all abuse. If sharing my truth
will help toward that goal, well…Here I am. This is my truth.
Thank you for supporting this member along the WATCH "RWISA" WRITE Showcase Tour today! We ask that if you have enjoyed this member's writing, then please visit her Author Page on the RWISA site, where you can find more of her writing, along with her contact and social media links, if she's turned you into a fan. We ask that you also check out her books in the RWISA or RRBC catalogs. Thanks, again for your support and we hope that you will follow each member along this amazing tour of talent! Don't forget to click the link below to learn more about this author:
Thank you very much, Yvette, for hosting! Take care and have a wonderful weekend! :)
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome! :-)
DeleteHello! This is a raw and powerful piece. I'm sorry––is this true or fiction? It's introduced as a short story but it reads like a true account.
ReplyDeleteI'll let Stephanie answer that, but it feels true to me. :'(
Delete