C-PTSD, Childhood, Crime, Leadership, Pastor John Grant, Sexual Abuse, Shame, Uncategorized, United Pentecostal Church

The Aftermath

Part 10

Over time I became attached to SD as other parts of my world fell apart. My parents were divorced, my mother was constantly struggling to keep us fed and to keep the lights on, and being in the Christian school did not turn out to be the way I thought it would be. I became a master at disassociation and I felt trapped in a life that I did not want and did not know how to escape. None of my fears about God, the devil, and hell went away during this period. I only felt more distant from grace and I feared that my sin had crossed the line into being unforgivable. Was I the reason we did not have electricity? Was my sin keeping my mother sick? I just knew I was some kind of horrible Jezabel and maybe I hadn’t fallen far from the tree. My father was a dirty cheater after all. My mother told me all about his dog-like inability to control his impulses. I was like my father in lots of ways, maybe I was a dog too. 

 Eventually, I blew the whistle. I do not know how I gained the courage to tell someone but I did. I worked for the church’s popcorn wagon. We had a little food truck that sold popcorn, soda, and fruit downtown near the state capital. The minister who baptized me ran this little operation and I would work up there a couple of days a week. It was unpaid and a part of the church’s fundraising efforts. My partner was a young woman named Shannon. She was about 19 years old and she lived with a young couple a few blocks from my house. We became friends and I trusted her. One day when we were done for the day and sitting on the curb waiting for Brother O’Neil to take us home I blurted it out. To her credit, she did not react in a surprised or horrified way. She asked me questions in an interested way which made it easier for me to tell her. It felt good to tell someone. I had been carrying around this secret for nearly two years. At this point, I had no idea what was coming. 

Shannon was one of the only adults who did not fail me in this situation. She may have only been 19 but she acted much more mature than the other adults. When she went home for the evening she discussed what I told her with Sister Cox. To her credit, Sister Cox who was a friend to me tried to do the right thing. She told Shannon to tell me that if I did not tell pastor Grant what was happening she would. At the time this sounded like a threat but now I actually believe she was trying to help me. Within the UPC this is what you do. No matter what the issue is, you take it to the pastor. No one went to the police or even talked to a mental health professional and the last thing you would do is call social services. This is the part of the story where I’m in awe of the strength that I had. After all, I was only 12 or 13. The next day I set up an appointment with pastor Grant. This took guts! I was afraid of him and I avoided the church secretary like the plague. She had always made it clear she was judging me and everyone else and I firmly believed she did not approve of me or my parents. Once John Grant came in for the day he called me to his office. There I was in the lion’s den! We were never this close and I was never alone with him. He asked why I wanted to see him and I started to explain. He stopped me and got out a small (for that time) tape recorder and started taping our conversation. The distance between us seemed enormous. John Grant is known for his ridiculous oversized desks. If you talk to any survivor of Calvary Gospel Church they will tell you about his gigantic desks. I felt like Lily Tomlin’s character Edith Ann, everything in the room was huge and I felt small in my chair. He asked me questions, very generic questions, and I answered very generically. He knew what happened but he did not ask and I did not give details. He knew enough to know SD had been molesting me for almost two years and that he had tried to have intercourse with me. Our conversation ended with John Grant telling me he would get back to me but he never did. I then left his office and took the long lonely walk back to my desk. I bore this burden alone. No one checked in on me or asked if I wanted to speak to a therapist. No one offered to pray with me or even offered a hug. It was almost like it never happened. The only proof that it ever happened came in whispers and innuendo. 

At this point I did not have much trust in adults. It took a lot of courage for me to tell anyone what happened to me. What crushes me as I write this is how strong I had to be to reach out to an adult and how thoroughly they all judged me and offered no help. The lesson I learned from this is to keep my sadness and pain to myself because no one would care or help if I shared. I received the message that I was not worthy of help. If my world was lonely and dark before now it had darker and more ominous clouds. 

The most painful fall out came from my mother who called me a little hussy and was mad at me for a long time. I’m actually not sure how she found out. I know it was not pastor Grant because she told me, “I had to find out through the grapevine!” My guess is that Shannon told her. They had developed a friendship. All I know is she picked me up from school one day furious. She did not see me as a victim; she saw me as a whore, probably because she did not see me as a child. If I was a child I would need more from her and she had too many other things to worry about. Around this time she read my diary and saw the things that I wrote about SD. She mocked me and called me names. I never wrote in a diary again until I was in my own apartment. I was not surprised by her reaction. Around this time she had also referred to me as, I won’t use the word but you’ll understand, lover because a young boy my age who rode the Sunday school bus with me had started calling the house. This made absolutely no sense to me. She was disowned by her own parents for a time because she married a Mexican so one would think she would be more understanding. She did not seem to have problems with black people except if it seemed like interracial dating might be going on. To look back on this makes me so sad. This sweet boy never tried anything with me and our interactions over the next couple of years involved him following me around like a lost puppy. We were children, after all, not even teens yet. One day a friend and I met him and his friend at the mall. He won me a little red furry heart out of the crane machine and the four of us ate pizza. To this day that memory warms my heart as one of the few happy memories of childhood associated with the church. My mother thought his friendship was a sin and I had to hide it from her, and she thought my sexual assault was at least partly my fault, and this is why I never went to her for help. 

During this time I felt completely estranged from my mother. As I grew older she became more cruel and crass when interacting with me. She would even mock me and make fun of me in embarrassing ways in front of other adults from the church. As time went on she became more and more like Jim and less and less like the mother I thought I knew. I spent almost all of my time in my room alone. She and Jim were wrapped up in their lives with each other and my father wasn’t around much. I had an old tape player/recorder, the kind you would see in schools in the ’80s. It made a kachunk sound when you closed the cover. I would listen to Amy Grant and others for hours in my room. I had to use batteries when we had no electricity and so sometimes the music would be very slow due to the batteries running low. I read a lot and thought a lot about SD and what he was doing and if he was ok. I took long bike rides alone. I moved through the world feeling a great sense of loneliness and sadness or just being numb and dissociated. 

Shannon and Jeanette (sister Cox) never treated me badly but they never offered help or went to the police. I think the assumption was that pastor Grant would deal with things. Everyone who knew about this John Grant, his wife Darlene, Jeanette, Shannon, and my mother just went on with life. My mother gave me the side-eye a lot but she never asked if I was ok or offered her support. Everyone else just went on with things but I could tell the undercurrent had changed. People were less friendly and seemed kind of standoffish at times. There was a change in the wind, things were colder now and I could feel their eyes on me. Writing this reminds me of a scene from the film Age of Innocence when Newland Archer figures out that everyone knows about his affair with Madame Olenska. “He guessed himself to have been, for months, the centre of countless silently observing eyes and patiently listening ears…” As a child, I was never really sure who knew. I knew that the pastor’s son knew because he brought it up to me in front of my peers at school. I knew that most of the younger adults knew because DD was friends with them and a husband doesn’t just disappear and no one notices. He would not be playing trumpet at the front of the church and his wife would be sitting alone. I’m sure that John Grant would have called a meeting of the elders to discuss what had happened and at that time there were around 12 couples serving as elders. As an adult almost everyone I have spoken to who is a survivor of that congregation knew something about it, most of it gossip that they were unsure about. 

Many times when young girls are abused they become promiscuous. After SD stopped abusing me I did not interact with a boy physically for about a year. It wasn’t anything big, just normal puppy love stuff. Over the years I started to become more physically involved with the boys I dated and when I was 16 I had sex for the first time. I think I was chasing the feeling of friendship and closeness I had with SD but all of these encounters only left me more hurt and disappointed. Chasing my father and my abuser would be my pattern with men even going into my adult life. Both SD and my father were often unavailable and would disappear for a period of time and then come roaring back into my life. This led me into so many relationships with unavailable males. I always felt abandoned and my self-worth sank lower and lower with each relationship. Most of my relationships involved controlling and angry men. Men who would cheat on me and sex was always something to check out of. I just went away somewhere else in my head. Probably because I was having sex with men who were distant and who were not really connected with me emotionally. I wonder if all of this could have been avoided if I had received counseling about both SD and my father. I did not have any female role models to really show me how to value myself. Every woman I knew seemed to have to grovel for male attention. I grew up under the teaching that a woman should be submissive and I internalized that to mean a man can do whatever he wants and you just have to love him until he straightens out. 

I learned the hard way that things can always get worse.. Soon after I spoke with pastor Grant I received a very unexpected phone call from SD. He spoke in a clipped way, “I have to leave town, it is not your fault.” That was it. I said nothing but held the phone for a long time after he hung up. I wasn’t super surprised that he was leaving town, I figured his wife was probably pretty upset with him. I think I was surprised by how little he gave me in the end. No apology, no remorse, and no comfort. I loved him much in the same way that I loved my mom and dad. My family had its faults but my parents always told me they loved me. Within the church telling people you loved them was common. “I just love you so much!” Bleh. I had once told SD that I loved him and his response was to say, “I know.” It was cold and at that moment it stung. I was alone again. As bad as the abuse had been, it gave me something to look forward to. An escape from my home and the constant arguing and poverty. Don’t misunderstand me, the abuse was scary and wrong but it wasn’t the whole time we were together. Remember he fed me and talked with me, or groomed me, and that part felt good. 

Soon after the phone call was our midweek service. I went and I was worried and again alone. I had no idea who knew and what people would say to me. Why my mother would allow me to go back there without an adult is beyond me. I faced it like I faced all things in my childhood, like a brave soldier. Being assaulted for two years, being heartbroken, and traumatized was no reason to miss church. No one said anything except for SD’s wife. She was waiting for me. She looked stiff and angry. She pulled me aside as soon as I walked into view and she growled in my ear, “We need to talk right after church.” I was really freaked out and how I made it through that service is beyond me. It felt like the shortest service ever.

After the service was over she found me and led me down into the basement of the church. She was in her early twenties and I was 12 or 13. She led me into one of the Sunday school rooms and turned on the light. She clearly did not see me as a victim, she saw me as an adulteress. She told me she had always believed she could trust me with her husband and that she was very hurt that I would betray her this way. She insisted that we pray for my forgiveness. Other than a quiet, “I’m sorry” I was silent during this whole encounter only being able to eek out a mumbled prayer through my tears. She, on the other hand, started to pray loudly and spoke in tongues in a way that scared me. She was having an experience but mine was completely different. She laid her hand on my shoulder and pushed me back and forth much like the women did on the night I got baptized. When her frenzied prayer ended we both silently went upstairs. She never spoke to me much after that. I had lost a friend but I really couldn’t blame her. Now when I look back on this I see her in a different light. I feel for her but what she did to me was wrong. I was a child. I know I keep repeating this but I have to for no other reason than to remind myself. 

DD has three sisters, One older and two younger. Her older sister attended church now and then but I never got the impression she was a true believer. Her younger sisters still lived at home with DD’s parents a couple of hours away when I first met them. One day I was driven out there by SD and DD. SD was already abusing me at this point and so the whole situation was pretty uncomfortable. I’m pretty sure DDs parents lived on a farm and they seemed to be pretty poor. Both SD and DD thought her sisters and I might become friends and we did. Both of her younger sisters would write me letters and we became pen pals. In those days it was all colored scented pens and stickers. I would always get excited when they came to visit or when SD would take me and other girls out for a fun day. Eventually, AD, the youngest sister, came to live with SD and DD. I don’t know the reasons why but at the time I was very excited. My friend was coming here to stay and she was planning to attend the same school. AD was always shy and quiet but friendly. Once she arrived in Madison she seemed to change. She became cold and standoffish. I was heartbroken and I could not understand, had I imagined that we were friends? To make matters worse she started hanging out with the kids who were kind of mean to me. I’m sure some of it was the age difference. She was 3 years older than me. When I would speak to SD about how sad I was about AD and I’s friendship seeming to vanish he would just smirk and act as if it was just girls being girls. He seemed to enjoy the tension between AD and I. He never tried to mediate but would actually throw us together and then laugh at our discomfort. 

This is where things take a turn for the weird and unexpected. OK yes I know that sounds funny, my whole childhood was weird and unexpected, despite that this next event shocked me. I have debated how to tell this part of the story or if I should tell it at all. I have decided to tell these events as I understand them. Some of this was told directly to me and some of it was pieced together from scraps of information I have discovered doing research. On the night of or close to it that DD pulled me down into the basement, that first night I was back at church after SD left town, I found out why SD was gone and also why AD seemed to be nowhere in sight. I was standing in the vestibule and someone whispered in my ear that SD was caught in bed with A. I cannot remember who passed this info onto me. This shook me to my core and I had this feeling that SD was not driven from the church because of me but because of AD. You’re never supposed to bring the police or social services to the church’s door. Those in authority seek to protect the church and its image at all costs. I believe they thought I was under control, but AD had parents outside the church, who knows what they might do. They might call the cops, they might bring a scandal, plus DD’s older sister had not drunk the kool-aid so she could be trouble too. This is all my opinion but it makes sense to me. I have not been able to speak to anyone who has the whole story. I have only heard bits and pieces from people who heard something or maybe spoke to DD. My 12/13-year-old self had so many feelings about this. Part of me felt abandoned. If he was going to flee, why did he leave me here with my depressed mother and impoverished life. Part of me was shocked that he was molesting my friend and I was angry thinking that he might have been the reason I lost her as a friend. I was confused, all this time he made me think that it was all about me and my impossible to resist sinful body when in fact he was obviously struggling with other impossible to resist sinful bodies. I wondered how long it had been going on, and if there were more of us. I wondered If AD knew about me. All I knew for sure is that SD and AD got out and I was left to bear the shame and stain of everything that happened. I got up the nerve to ask one of SD’s friends where he had gone. He told me that SD fled to Vegas. He was still in contact with some of the men in the church. He was seeking restoration, now I wonder if he was seeking a quickie divorce. I don’t know where AD went but I was told eventually she was allowed to go be with SD. They are married to this day. They got married after she turned 18. The church allowed SD and DD to divorce because SD committed adultery. Adultery was the only reason you could get divorced within the United Pentecostal Church. Let that sink in, adultery not pedophilia. She was 15 and I was 12 or 13 when this all blew up. Together the two of them, SD and AD pastor a church in Oconto Wisconsin. Yes, you read that right, dear readers, SD is a pastor. 

I’m not going to say much more about AD. In my eyes, she is a victim whether he married her or not. Her story is not my story to tell. I only hope she is ok. SD is not ordained through the UPC organization but he still socializes with them. It is very complex. For a while, he was pastoring a daughter work of a UPC church but now he is independent. My guess is that they would not ordain him because of his divorce and remarriage. What I do know for sure is that he has been welcomed back into fellowship with UPC ministers and members. That is very uncommon. UPC people do not associate with people outside of their organization, they are very insular, but SD is an exception. He has had UPC ministers at his church to preach which is against the rules of the UPC, but again somehow he gets by with it. On social media, he is friends with people who attend Calvary Gospel and who attended when he was molesting me. These people know what he did but they say he is forgiven and so that makes it all ok. No one talks about what he did to me in terms of child molesting, they call it adultery and so does he. To this day I have received no justice. No one from Calvary Gospel has apologized to me for not reporting the incident and for not offering me any help. When confronted they claim that they did report and have always reported but the police have no records of them ever reporting anything. I am not the only victim who had crimes against them covered up by Calvary Gospel, I’m just one of the oldest. I see myself as a test balloon. They covered up SDs crime and no harm came to the church. After my situation came many other young girls, and boys too. They were not victims of SD but of other men. SD was not an exception; he was part of a systemic problem that has infected the UPC organization. When the choice is to protect the church or the young life of a victim Calvary Gospel will always choose the church. 

My day to day life at home did not change much, my mother eventually got over it. My life at church and school changed a lot. The adults around me started to give me a knowing side-eye and I knew they were talking about me. Adults withdrew from me and I could feel the silent judgment. No one offered me help or compassion. These adults who saw me day in and day out never asked why I was so thin or so sad. I tried to make friends with the church kids and I was able to establish some friendships. Most of my friendships with peers were with other kids on the margins. Race played a big role in this. They were on the margins due to being children of color and also due to being poor. I had friends whose parents were considered more “in” but my friendship with them could only get so close. Their parents always looked at me as if I was dangerous and I wasn’t invited over for dinner or sleepovers. I never felt the same after what happened between SD and I. So many things caused me to have to grow up so fast and the abuse SD inflicted on me only sped this process up even more. It was like he threw gasoline on a raging fire. I was never the same. Now I fully understood how my mother felt at church. Silently judging eyes and smiles that seemed so forced and fake. I could be in the same room with these people but somehow there was an invisible wall between us. When I look back on it now I think that maybe they thought the sin that had come into my life through SD might be contagious. The UPC church teaches God’s forgiveness but in practice, Calvary Gospel never really forgave me for being a victim. From what I have observed they tend to have an easy time forgiving men but women are another story. Once your reputation has been ruined in some way you cannot ever be truly restored. At 12 my reputation was obliviated and no amount of hard work on God’s behalf or asking for forgiveness would ever remove the stain left by SD’s abuse. I spent my teen years striving for transcendence. To this day I would say that transcendence is a goal of mine. I set my sights on being and feeling worthy both in God’s eyes and the church’s but I never got there. It wasn’t until I was well into adulthood that I realized that only I could grant myself worthiness. My parents bear some of the blame for my feelings of worthlessness and it would be unfair to say otherwise that being said when SD decided to abuse me he set in motion a terrible storm. His acts against me caused me to seek relationships with males as an escape from the pain of my life. Those relationships always had a price and always left me alone to mend my broken heart. His actions made me feel like a Jezabel like I could never get clean or be good enough to rise above what happened between us. His actions left me alone to bear the stain of what he had done to me and his wife. He moved on to another city and I was the living reminder of what had happened. His actions caused the church to view me as damaged goods. Within these sorts of churches once you have been used by a man or even choose to be sexual and they see your purity as damaged you become something less than worthless, you become a temptress and something to be feared. 

C-PTSD, Childhood, Sexual Abuse, Shame, Stress, United Pentecostal Church

Darkness

***Trigger Warning*** Child Sexual Abuse. This part is heavy and I would not recommend reading it if discussion of child abuse upsets you. I have chosen to be rather graphic because I feel we often want to look away from these things instead of really seeing them. Looking away is how these monsters thrive and get away with so much for so long. I am not seeking to be salacious but I am trying to show the step by step process of grooming.

Everything changed between the ages of 10 and 11. We moved, my parents divorced, I started a new school twice, and my mother started dating a new guy. The end of elementary school seemed to mark anything resembling childhood drifting away. For so long it had been my mother and I against the world and then everything changed. She became someone I did not know and suddenly there was a gulf between us. 

I believed my body was the worst part of me. It bloomed and bloomed out of my control. It was curvy and full in a way that seemed unseemly for a 10-year-old. Men started to notice me before I even made it out of elementary school. As soon as I required a bra, around age 8, my babysitter’s husband started to touch me. I would often sit on his lap and watch movies while we shared a snack. He was way past retirement age and so he acted as a grandparent figure in my life. I remember the day I told my mother, who to her credit tried to do the right thing. It was a gray day in the early spring when my mother and I went to see Delma. Delma was a very large woman, warm and always ready to provide a listening ear for my mother. This wasn’t long after my mother was in the hospital. Delma had helped her through that time and I was aware of how high the stakes were on that day. We sat at the Formica table in Delma’s kitchen and my mother explained what I had told her. Again I felt that tightness in my chest and time seemed to stand still. My mother asked me to explain what happened in my own words and I did but I wanted to melt into the floor. I left the room and sat quietly listening to the two women talk in the kitchen. Delma did not believe my story and my mother became very heated. Delma insisted that if Archie had done those things it was an accident. He was an alcoholic and so he probably just did not realize what he was doing. It wasn’t long before my mom pulled me out the door and down the steps and back into the car. That was it for her and Delma’s friendship. My heart sank for my mother. I knew what a lifeline Delma had been for her. I knew free babysitters were not easy to find and I felt guilty. By this age, I already knew that women’s bodies were a trap that men could fall into. Men fell into sin, women just sinned. Later when I asked my father why he did not confront Archie as he told me he would do if anyone ever hurt me, he said he did not want to ruin an old man’s life. To this day those are some of the worst words I’ve ever heard. They have stayed with me like a scar that never really heals. Over and over again my father, who I loved greatly, would throw the punches whose impact would never end. 

Looking back I have to ask, why did my parents leave me with these two? They both knew that Archie was a drinker and would at times say inappropriate things when joking around. Who knows, they were trying to make their marriage work and needed those date nights. 

Things continued to happen which caused me to distrust my own body. When I was spending time with my father he would often take me to Aladdin’s Castle. It was an arcade and I loved it! The only real light inside came from all of the machines. The church would not have approved even though there was no hard and fast rule against it. They might have suggested that the money I was spending should have gone to God, or that they played ungodly music, or that the people inside were drug dealers. I knew they would disapprove but this was one of those things I just could not resist. My eyes lit up whenever I walked in! All of those pinball machines with their bells and flippers. To this day a good pinball machine can make me happy for hours and take me back to a time in my life that is so specific and pure. My dad would load me up with a stack of quarters and I would play until I ran out of money. Usually, this could take a while because I was pretty skilled at the games. I would walk the long narrow aisle until I found the perfect machine. After slipping my quarter in I would get lost in the fun of it all. I loved the way the buttons felt when I kept the ball in motion. I could really let go of all my worries when playing pinball. My parents and all of their problems along with all of my other concerns seemed so far away. The bright lights and colors were a pleasant distraction from all of the seriousness of life. 

My father almost never joined me inside. He would sit just outside and chat with other adults. My father was a very social creature and could make friends with any stranger who happened by. That particular day I was playing this game with cowboys who shot each other and ducked behind cactuses to hide. It was one of my favorites and one of the few games I played that was not a pinball machine. Lost in my happy moment I was not aware that a man had crept up behind me. All of a sudden his hands were on my chest and once again my body had caused me a problem. I felt sick to my stomach and I abandoned my game, jerking myself away from the stranger. Running out as fast as my legs could carry me. I searched the adults for my father. Out of breath, I told him about what happened. He said, “That just happened in there?” pointing to the arcade. Together we went back inside and looked for the man. The problem is I did not get a good look at him because he was behind me. My father talked things over with the manager and that was it. My father did try to comfort me but in the end, I did not see any justice. 

This part of my story is the hardest to tell and the one I have kept the closest to my chest. It makes sense given my propensity towards minimizing and excusing my parent’s abuse and bad decision making. As you already know I spent much of my childhood alone. Always checking to see if the deadbolt was locked and if the chain was in place. My mother had taken a job delivering pizzas at night just to make ends meet. This meant we often had pizza for dinner. It wasn’t healthy but it was better than being hungry. Sadly we did not get to choose our pizza, she brought home what was leftover or never picked up. In my part of Wisconsin, we have a pizza place called “Pizza Pit.” It’s a very iconic business in my area. The logo features the silhouette of a devil’s head that takes up most of the box. As silly as this might seem, many Christians in my area would not order from this pizza place because of the logo. And as you can imagine the image on the boxes coming into our home every night also frightened me. 

One night I was alone and already in bed when my dad showed up. My mother was working her second job at Pizza Pit. I often slept with my mother because I was so afraid she would be raptured and I would wake up in the house alone. On this particular night, I was asleep in her bed waiting for her to come home with our late dinner. The chain was not on the door because my mother needed to be able to get in when she returned from work. I awoke to my dad sliding into bed next to me. He smelled bad. It was booze but at that time I was unaware of his drinking. No one I knew drank and I couldn’t have told you what liquor smelled like. My mother later told me about his drinking and gambling, both things she disapproved of. My mother never drank, not even a drop, no one in her family did. Once next to me my father started talking to me and I was happy to see him. Looking over at the clock on the nightstand I knew my mother would be home soon. It was not uncommon for me to sleep next to my father so I was not initially alarmed. Not long after crawling into bed he grabbed my hand and placed it on his groin. He explained that he wanted to show me something and started to move his hand over mine. Again with the tightness in my chest I pulled myself away and rolled off the other side of the bed. He laughed at me and fell asleep. I sat in the darkness of the living room waiting for my mother to return. My heart was beating so loud it felt like it might burst through my chest. I did not know much about sex but I knew enough to know that you were not supposed to touch another person’s private parts, I knew in my gut it was wrong.  I did not have to wait long. She let herself in and I ran to her, I could hear the whoosh whoosh of my blood pumping. I gripped her so tight I nearly pulled her to the floor. Whenever she would recount this evening she would describe me as appearing white as a sheet. Breathlessly I informed her about everything that happened and she became enraged. She went with me into my bedroom and along with the dog, we barricaded ourselves in the room. She pushed my dresser in front of the door and we stayed there all night. I don’t know why she felt we needed to have the door blocked. It could have been because I told her that when my dad was laughing at me he looked just like the devil. It could have been because she wanted me to feel safe. It is hard for me to believe that she was afraid of him but at that moment maybe she was. The next day he had no memory of what had happened and my mother was angrier than I had ever seen her. I was afraid of them both. He said he thought it was her in bed with him, but that makes no sense given he seemed to know he needed to explain what he wanted. He told me he was sorry and would never hurt me, tears running down his face, he looked tired. I was angry and scared. Through my tears, I told him to stay away. This seemed to break him. Trembling, I stood there resisting the urge to comfort him. My mother stood behind me. After what seemed like forever he left. Things were never the same between him and I. He never tried anything like that again. I believe it is because he was afraid of my mother. My mother characterized my father like a dog, weak, and beholden to his masculine impulses. This and the other experiences and my parent’s reactions to them shaped my view that I held all the responsibility. Men were helpless to fight off their urges when it came to my unruly body. My sinful body was a walking honeypot waiting for the next old man, stranger, or even my father to fall into. 

My whole being, my mind, my heart, and my body were hopelessly sinful. The message was inescapable. When my mother would watch Jimmy Swaggert on television he would cry and wipe his brow as sweat poured off his face. He would talk about sin and about how even he was a terrible sinner. In my child’s mind, I wondered how I could ever be good enough. I did not cry and pray as Jimmy Swaggert did, I did not preach and win souls. The message of God’s grace missed me completely. God did not seem to care that we often had no food, electricity, or shoes without holes. My mother would lock herself in her room for hours after dinner praying and speaking in tongues, hoping for a miracle to save us from our poverty. She thought her depression was due to some sin in her life, a teaching of our church, and therefore if she could just get her life right with God the depression would go away. Her family also thought that she just needed to get her shit together. They would never say “shit” but you get what I mean. They saw her depression as a weakness. Even my father would tell me that my mother was weak. She was seeing a psychiatrist and she tried to explain to me what depression was. I tried to understand, on my own, how God could allow men to abuse me the way they had. Not to mention why would he not help me out with my depressed mother and wayward father? I internalized the message that it had to be me. My sinful body was somehow drawing these men in, I must have some unconfessed sin in my heart. I would pray sitting on the floor outside my mother’s bedroom while listening to her pray. Please God find the missing piece, the sin I cannot see, and wash it away so I can be a better person and save my family and myself. Finally, at age 50 I can say that I no longer believe any of it was my fault. Logically I have known that for decades but some parts of my traumatized mind still held onto the belief. 

I was eleven when I met a man at church. At this time I was attending Calvary Christian Academy, the Christian school our church had started in the basement. In the space of a few months my family moved to a new rental and I had switched schools twice. We moved away from the neighborhood and friends I had known for 11 years and now I felt even more alone. I was bullied at my new public school for being half-Mexican and ended up being beaten up pretty badly. Because of this, I begged my mother to move me from the public school to the new school that Calvary Gospel had started.  The church school was a huge adjustment. My parents had been divorced for about a year and my mother was seeing a new man. For the first time in my life, I felt her pull away from me as she became swept up in this new romance. It had been about a year since my salvation experience. This is when my life took a devastating turn for the worse. What happens next would change my life forever.

I did not know much about SD (this is how I’m going to refer to him for my own safety). I knew he was fairly new to the church and also newly married. I kind of knew he and his wife but only to say hi and nothing more. They were a part of a group of young couples who all hung out together. I often tagged along with these couples because they gave me rides to church and other activities. I looked up to these young adults who seemed to have things all figured out. SD and his wife DD mostly sat near the front of the church and they seemed to be a part of the “in” crowd. They were very involved in all aspects of ministry and I wanted to be like them. My mother was only coming to church sporadically at this point. She was caught up with her new man and some people in the church did not approve. Her divorce from my father was considered permissible by the pastor due to the fact that my father had committed adultery. Not everyone agreed with his reading of the scripture. Outward disapproval would not have been tolerated but that did not keep the whispers at bay. 

Pastor Grant did not want my mother to marry Jim, her new boyfriend, because he thought Jim had not been in the church long enough. Jim was a recovering alcoholic with no job or place of his own to live. He lived with a young couple who belonged to the church. To this day I have no idea what she saw in Jim. He was definitely a project and she did love projects! They could sense the church’s disapproval of their relationship and so they avoided the church for the most part only attending when the guilt became too much for my mother. I feel that Jim used my mother to get out from under the thumb of the people he was staying with. They were putting pressure on him to change and become more godly. My mother was his ticket out. My mother hated to be told what to do and it was natural for her to want to rebel. When it became clear that most people thought they had no business getting married it drove my mother towards Jim and they bonded over bucking the community’s wishes. They snuck off and got married without telling me about their plans. They just came home one day and announced they got married. I was hurt. Why wouldn’t my mother want me to be there when she got married? Maybe it was because she sensed that I could really see her. Maybe she thought I would disapprove. One night we talked about her getting remarried, just as a hypothetical, and I expressed to her that I only wished for her to be happy. I suspect that she wanted to break away from her old life and I was a big part of that. At this point, she changed. I felt abandoned. My father did not approve of my mother’s mean streak and so while they were together she had to keep that in check, Jim was meaner than my mother. Now the constraints were off and I became a target of ridicule or they ignored me. My mother only reverted back to her old self when she was fighting with Jim and needed me to listen to her misery. She would blame him for why she did not spend time with me. She would claim he was very jealous of her time as if she had no choice in the matter. She told me all about what was wrong with her relationship with Jim just like she had with my father. The difference being that when she was with my father I had the benefit of some of her time and love, now she only interacted with me to gain support. 

One Sunday after morning service I was standing amongst the group of young adults who often gave me rides. I asked them if someone would give me a ride home from Sunday morning church. SD was standing among this group of adults and he offered to give me a ride. He explained he did not live far from my house and since all of the adults I knew and trusted seemed to think it was a good idea I said ok. By this time I was very accustomed to riding in cars with men from the church. No one batted an eye at it. I believe my parents always assumed that if an adult was part of the congregation they were good and could be trusted. I certainly did not feel I was in any danger. 

Once we were in his car he asked if I needed to be home right away. At this point in time, both of my parents were pretty involved with their own issues and so there was no need for me to come right home. They were also accustomed to me going out after church with other adults to have lunch before returning home. SD asked if I wanted to go for a drive. I said that sounded nice and off we went. His car was clean and pretty new, not like my parents’ old beaters. The sun was out and the sky was blue. It was a fine day for a drive. I smiled a lot that day. We drove all around the city and he bought me some ice cream. He was funny and he made me laugh. He told me all about himself and asked me about my life. People did not talk to me like this. Even the adults I socialized with did not seem all that interested in my life, we mostly talked about church, witnessing, and things like that. We ended up in my old neighborhood. My elementary years were spent on the Northside of Madison and I missed being in that neighborhood. I showed him my old school and where we lived before. He made me feel important, special, and interesting. In other words, he started grooming me immediately. I was hungry for any kind of attention after being lonely for so long. I was innocent and trusting, I thought I had just struck friendship gold. Then things took a turn in a direction I would have never anticipated. While he drove he reached down and grabbed my hand. I stared straight ahead and did not make eye contact with him. He just went on chatting and acting as if this was the most natural thing in the world. I remember looking out at the blue sky and wondering how I should react. When my father came around he would hold my hand the same way and so I thought well maybe he is just trying to be a father-like figure to me. It never occurred to me that he would want anything else. He was around 29 and I was 11 years old. I had never held hands with a boy much less anything else, so the idea that he might want something more adult and sexual in nature seemed impossible. Afterall he was newly saved and had shared his salvation experience with me. He was newly married and seemed to be a pretty happy person. Why would he risk his walk with Christ to commit adultery with me? I came to the conclusion that it had to be innocent, he was just trying to be nice. I feel like I had to explain that this did not feel like the other experiences I had with men. I felt safe with SD. He did not appear to be a creep and so like a frog in boiling water I was unaware of the danger coming for me. 

It did not take long for things to escalate. SD’s job was selling church pictorial directories for Olan Mills and he was often on the road. I became friends with his wife and she and I hung out often. I liked his wife. DD ( Again not mentioning names for my protection) and I would go rafting on the lake every once in a while. She worked a lot and seemed much more aloof. Not long after that first day, SD asked my parents if he could take me along on his long day trips to keep him company and to get me out of the house. Sometimes he would take DD, his wife, and other times he would take her younger sisters, and then sometimes he would take me. We often did not have electricity during the warm months and so there wasn’t much for me to do around the house. None of the adults around me thought this arrangement was odd, or if they did they did not communicate it to me. My mother and I were growing apart and my dad was off doing his own thing. I believe it was easier for both my parents to not have to worry about me. They used the excuse that I was bright and never got into trouble to discharge them of their parental obligations.

Living without electricity was hard. We always had it in the winter. The electric company finally turned our electricity back on for good after my mother became pregnant and a social worker intervened. Before that, we used oil lamps and they gave me a bad headache. My mother and Jim would sit out on the porch at night and I would try to read in my room. Because there was no electricity there was no refrigerator or stove. My mother bought a big styrofoam cooler for us to keep some things in. We had a small container of milk and bologna in there. My mother and Jim would fish for food and cook it over a grill. I hated the fish but I had to eat it or be hungry. Sometimes we would have Kool-Aid. I tried to spend as much time out of the house as I could. I would ride my bike during the day and sometimes go to the library. Once my mother and Jim married their relationship did not take long to go sour. My mother would not tolerate laziness and Jim seemed unconcerned about finding work. Every job he found was too hard for him to maintain. He had hammertoes and being on his feet was not easy. My mother suggested he find a job where he could be seated but he did not seem to be able to find one. He had her right where he wanted her. She supported him and he watched television and smoked all day. My mother hated smokers but somehow before I knew it he was filling our home with smoke and my mother was crying or raging depending on the day. 

I traveled all around Wisconsin with SD. I enjoyed this very much. My family never took vacations and I had only really seen the area between Madison and Platteville. Sometimes he would ask me over to his house under the guise of helping him with some work project. The tasks never seemed hard or necessary. I would organize index cards and help him find things on the map. Even as a kid I understood that this was not about him needing help, it was about him not wanting to be alone. He loved to talk about himself and he talked a lot about his days playing trumpet in a band. He told me all about the music he played. He traveled as part of a swing band and was very proud of his time playing with them. He showed me photos of those days and seemed to long for them to return.  He also told me about how hard he partied and about all of the women he “dated.” SD was average looking, certainly not someone a young girl would swoon over. What he lacked in looks he made up for with charm. He was gregarious and charismatic. He had a big bright smile and a good sense of humor. He was very popular within the church and before long he was playing trumpet at every service. He was always around. When I went to Bible camp in the summer he would be there playing trumpet for the worship service and then again for the choir portion of the evening. All of the camp music directors treated him like he was some kind of a musical genius. They were mostly women and he knew how to wrap women around his finger. He and his wife DD socialized with all of the other young adults I hung out with. His wife often had to work in the evenings so many times SD would be on his own. 

At first, he told me all about his life and that was actually pretty interesting. I’d never encountered anyone who had the adventures that he had had. Although he did not talk down to me I could tell he was bemused by how innocent and ignorant I was regarding the world outside of the church. I was kind of embarrassed about how little I knew about the world. After the hand-holding incident, I saw him again, another ride home, and another step towards getting what he really wanted from me. When I look back on it now it seems weird that neither of us ever spoke about what happened on the day he first held my hand. He acted like nothing ever happened and so I shrugged it off. This time he bought me lunch, this happened often when we were together. At home, we were eating from a cooler for part of this time and so I believe providing me with the food was a part of grooming me. I was very thin except for my chest which made me look like a comic book character. You can tell from photos taken at that time that I was malnourished. Along with being skinny I always had dark circles under my eyes. We almost never went into a restaurant to eat unless we were out of town. This made it possible for him to have alone time with me without having to drive. We would sit in the car and eat, he would talk and I would mostly listen and try to understand the world he was describing to me. My big takeaways were that he was passionate about music and God.

He told me his salvation story over and over. Now I wonder if it was just a big con, his way of seducing me into trusting him. He often alluded to his conversations with Pastor Grant. He would tell me about how he asked the pastor about this or that, giving the impression that he was trying very hard to be holy. 

One day, he announced that he wanted to kiss me. It wasn’t like he was asking permission, it was more of a statement. I’m not sure why I said yes. Maybe it was because he was so nice to me, always telling me how pretty I was, which meant a lot to an eleven-year-old girl with acne. I never felt pretty. We were poor and so my clothing was not as nice as the other girls at church. Most of it was second hand and ill-fitting. My skin was brown. Being half-Mexican in Madison Wisconsin at that time was enough to make you very different. It made me different at church too and this added to me not feeling good about my body. There was a fair amount of giggling on my part. I had never been kissed before. He pulled me close and he kissed me gently on the lips. I could smell his cologne and breath mint. As a side note, offering me a mint was often a sign that he wanted other things. He was always making me laugh and I was not taking any of this seriously. When he released me I pulled away and laughed nervously looking down and away from him. I felt myself leave my body as I started to dissociate. I don’t know when I learned this coping mechanism but I knew how to mentally fly away when life became too hard or scary. Immediately he asked me to kiss him back. Part of me wanted to give him what he was asking for and part of me was afraid to get too close. I could feel his intensity but I had no language to understand it. Now I understand that it was sexual tension I was sensing. He was my friend and he held the key to my escape from my home and everything that was wrong there. I could feel my stomach knot up as I summoned all of my courage and kissed him on the nose. It was quick and I pulled back as if the feeling of kissing him had burned me. He laughed at me saying, “No, that is not the kind of kiss I want, let me show you.” He pulled me close and kissed me deeply on the lips. This went on for a while and I felt both confusion and comfort. Affection was not easy to come by at this point in my childhood and it felt good to have someone I trusted hold me close, I missed my father and worried about him all the time. When I was with SD I could forget about being hungry, not feeling accepted by the church school kids, my mother’s depression, and even God. I had no experience with boys. I had never kissed or held hands with a boy. I was only in the 6th grade, so just out of elementary school. SD seemed so kind to me and I believe a part of me was willing to do whatever weird thing he might ask me to do if it meant I could keep my new friend. At age 11 having someone put their tongue in your mouth seemed pretty weird to me. At this age, I did not have a vocabulary to explain what was happening between us. My parents warned me about strangers but SD wasn’t a stranger and he wasn’t hurting me, at least I did not believe he was. It would be a long time before I knew what he had really done and that it did hurt me just not in a physical way. When he finally dropped me off my cheeks were red from his stubble and I rushed to my room just wanting to hide from the world. I felt guilty but I wasn’t sure why. 

I started to notice that when I saw him at church he would mostly ignore me. He would not make eye contact or act like we were especially good friends. Then other times he would wink at me and try to charm me, usually this meant he wanted to spend time with me. Sometimes out of the blue he would ask me if I wanted to travel with him for the day or if he could drive me home. Sometimes if he saw that I was looking for a ride he would offer. This only added to the chaos of my life. I never knew how he was going to interact with me. When I did see him I would be willing to do just about anything because I missed him. He reeled me in like a fish on a hook. He used the neglect happening at home and my need for love against me. 

God would not stay out of mind for long. I knew what SD was doing to me was wrong especially after things started to escalate. Every time I would see him I would rush up to my bedroom and pray to ask God to forgive me and help me figure a way out of the situation. Getting out my King James Version Bible I would read Psalm 51 and sob. SD told me to read and pray these verses. He said that is what he prayed after he sinned with me. By this point, he was acknowledging that it was sinful. He saw it as adultery and started to swing wildly between pushing me farther and farther and then pushing me away. He never addressed the age difference. 

“Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy lovingkindness, according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions.” Psalm 51:1

I was feeling massive amounts of confusion. I felt like I needed him. He was an island of happiness in a world where I felt rejected, ignored, and uncared for. As many survivors will tell you, I enjoyed some of what happened between us, mostly the affection part of it. The other parts were mystifying to me. Guilt hung over me like a dark cloud that would not go away. I felt responsible for all of it because of my ever-evolving uncontrollable body. He kept me unsure of myself. At times he would tell me how beautiful I was and at other times he would critique my body. He would tell me none of it was my fault and then other times he acted like I was the cause of his downfall like he just couldn’t stay away from me. 

“Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.” Psalm 51:2

He began to tell me how unhappy he was in his marriage. He was lonely and his wife never gave him sex. This was tough to talk with him about. DD, his wife, was my friend and he was driving a wedge between us. He told me about how she would fast for weeks at a time and during that time she told him sex was a no-no. I encouraged him to talk with the pastor and he did, or at least he told me he did. He said that the pastor just kind of shrugged it off. He complained about how she worked all the time and he never saw her, and that when she was home she was cold. I felt bad for him, much like I felt bad for my mother in her loneliness. I was ill-equipped to know how to help him but I could listen and be his friend even if that meant enduring all of the other stuff that came with that. I think that part of me was unsure how to be his friend. Did being his friend really mean doing all of the physical stuff he claimed that he needed? He described his physical need as something essential and painful to go without. Could we just hang out and laugh together? Would that be enough? 

“For I acknowledge my transgressions: and my sin is ever before me.” Psalm 51:3

One might ask why I was so affected by Psalm 51? It was a prayer that David prayed and David was a hero of mine at that time. He was a humble shepherd boy who was elevated by God because he loved God and God loved him. He was a flawed hero and God accepted him anyway. He was a musician and poet and I really wanted to be involved in the music ministry when I grew up. I believed that if God loved David that was proof that he might also someday love me. Guilt started to get to SD. I would watch from my pew as he went down to the altar and prayed and spoke in tongues. Sometimes he would kneel at his seat face buried in the pew, I could clearly see his struggle. At least I thought I could. Sometimes I wonder if it was all theater for an audience of one. There was so much I did not know at this point. I was so confused by what I was seeing compared to how he interacted with me. It took any joy out of church and Bible camp. I was filled with guilt and self-hatred. I watched him and he seemed so good and holy, but when he was with me he seemed so overcome with a drive I did not understand. This led me to think it was me. I was the cause of it all because just look at him there speaking in tongues. I would do my best to turn my eyes towards God and let it all go into His hands and then all of sudden SD would be there with an invitation. Once alone he would tell me how much he missed me and how he had just been so busy. 

“Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight: that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, and clear when thou judgest.” Psalm 51:4

We would drive out to the airport to “watch the planes land” and he slowly took what was left of my childhood away. Each trip brought him closer to the “big sin” and once I was on that runaway train I had no idea how to find the brakes. I could tell he was starting to come unhinged. At the beginning of our “friendship”, he seemed very much in control and loving his role as an older guy with so much life experience. He seemed happy, but now he seemed manic. He never asked permission. He just took what he wanted. Even when I would tell him that I had my period it did not matter. I did not know how to react when he opened his pants and put my hand inside. I was shocked when he finished himself off into a tissue. Soon this became regular, he would always unbuckle his pants and I knew what he expected. He put his hands under my bra often pulling both of the straps down. None of that was as scary as when he started placing his hand inside my underwear. At times it was painful and at this point I could tell how serious and forceful he really felt about what he was doing. When he had bucket seats he would put his seat back and crawl on top of me. He started to call me baby and would encourage me to respond to him. I just remember burying my head in his neck, like maybe if I wasn’t looking at it it wouldn’t be happening. I feel it is important to remind you, dear reader, that at this point I am 11/12 years old. 

“Behold, I was shapened in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive me.” Psalm 51:5

Things started to get ugly between us. One day as soon as I got into the car he said to me, “Today things are going to be different. We (as if I was the driver here) are not going to be physical in any way.” He went on to explain that what we were doing was a sin and he was not going to continue to sin in God’s eyes anymore. That declaration did not last the whole day, and after he was done succumbing to his desires he started to beat the drum again. He wasn’t going to spend time with me anymore. I never fought with him about any of this. I was passive and really felt I had no control over the situation. Towards the end, I do remember us arguing some but I couldn’t tell you what it was about. I just remember riding beside him in silence staring out the window. 

“Behold, thou desirest truth in the inward parts: and in the hidden part thou shalt make me to know wisdom.” Psalm 51:6

He made me feel like it was my fault by acting as if he was powerless. He never said those words but what he did say led me to that conclusion. He did spend time with me again, and again, and again. He gave me the same speech over and over again without the promise of not seeing me again. Now it felt like he wanted to keep spending time with me and somehow overcome his desire to sin. Like he really needed this personal victory. He made me feel like I was some kind of Delilah that he was helpless to keep his hands off of. When I look back at pictures from this time it makes me very sad. I was so little and innocent, so not yet a woman or even a teenager, still singing with a hairbrush in front of the mirror. I had no power in this situation and yet he was placing all the blame on me and my overdeveloped body. I never knew when I would see him or how long it would be between encounters. At times he would give me lots of rides home and approach me after service to see if I needed a ride. Then it might be a long time before I would be alone with him again. Suddenly one day he would call me on the phone to see if I wanted to go on one of his day trips with him. I did not try to avoid him. I wanted his friendship and hoped things could be different between us.

“Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean: wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.” Psalm 51:7

He preached to me about the sin we were committing and then took me slightly farther sexually each time I saw him. I already had so much fear of hell, God, and missing the rapture. Now I had to contend with him and his ravings along with his urging me to go deeper and deeper into his blackness. He robbed so much from me. My first kiss, my first everything. I knew it was getting very dangerous and I started to get scared when he took me to his house. I never thought he would physically force me to do anything but I did feel unsure of what he might try next. This was all new to me and his moods seemed to be becoming more and more chaotic. One night I was helping him with his work and we were sitting on opposite sides of the room. There was no hint of what was about to happen and I was surprised to be brought to his house without anyone else being there. He asked me to come over and sit on his lap. It seemed odd considering things seemed to be going so well, meaning he was keeping his hands off of me. I went over to him and sat on his lap. At first, he just joked around with me, and then he started to touch me all over in earnest. After a short time, he jumped up and grabbed my hand leading me to another room. He seemed to have tunnel vision, he did not really speak to me or even make eye contact, it was like he was in another world. This was a room of the house I had never seen before. It was their spare bedroom. It was dark in the room and I could not really make out any of the furnishings or decor. He laid on the bed and patted the spot next to him. This is the first time I can remember being really frightened. I think up until this time everything that was happening with him seemed a little unreal, but this moment felt very real! This was a real bed, and a real man, with his pants open and it was really dark in there. He removed his clothing and beckoned me to lay down next to him. He started touching me and trying to remove my clothing. I didn’t make a sound, I can still feel how stiff my body went at that moment. I was not playing along at this point I was disassociating, my brain checked out. SD became more and more manic in his touching and started to grind against me and urgently whispered into my ear, “Come on baby, come on.” At the time I had no idea what he wanted me to do. It wasn’t until I was older that I understood those words to be words of encouragement. He wanted an adult response but I wasn’t an adult. He wanted me to react like a lover, but I wasn’t his lover, I was his victim. 

“Make me to hear joy and gladness; that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice.” Psalm 51:8

The tenderness and slow seduction were long gone and all that was left was a man who wanted what he wanted and he was done waiting for me to want it too. After this when he would rave at me about sin and adultery I would grow silent and sink into the seat of the car. Sometimes I would lash out at him with anger and this would make him even more heated. When I think back to that time, what I see in my mind’s eye is a girl with second-hand clothes, frizzy uncut hair, acne, and low self-esteem. I don’t see an evil temptress or seductive woman. I cannot say how I hoped this situation would end. I know I was living in fear of someone finding out. SD said it would ruin our lives if they did. I did not see myself as the other woman or as committing adultery, I do not think my mind was that sophisticated yet. I had to compartmentalize to survive.

My worst day with SD happened again at his house. His sister-in-law was there and even that wasn’t enough to stop him. He made me wait in the car while he went inside to talk to her, then he led me in through a side door off of the driveway. We never entered through that door, it led right down into the basement. I had never been down in the basement. It was not a big room but it was big enough to have a sofa. He sat me down on the sofa and started to assault me, again I went stiff as he maneuvered my clothing off and to the side. He said very little and the affection of previous encounters was completely gone. He had a goal and he was driven to hit it. At that time I was very naive. No one talked to me about sex except to say it was a sin worthy of hell. In 5th grade, we had the “My changing body” day at school where the boys and girls went into separate areas to have the “talk.” I had no idea how the mechanics of sex worked. Even with everything SD had already done to me I wasn’t mature enough to put it all together. It wasn’t until I was in my early twenties that some of what happened between us started to make sense. I believe I often checked out when he started to touch me. It was a price to be paid for his friendship and up until now, I had been able to handle it. 

“Hide thy face from my sins, and blot out all mine iniquities.” Psalm 51:9

He tried to have intercourse with me that day. I was stiff and bewildered as he stabbed at me but was unable to actually penetrate. I don’t believe he used a condom so I am very grateful that I did not get pregnant. My body was not providing any lubrication. I was too frightened. He seemed to be somewhere else leaving me alone at this moment, staring at the ceiling and waiting for what would happen next. I was pretty dissociated but I do remember wondering if it was going to hurt. He had pulled my pantyhose and underwear down around my ankles and just hiked my skirt up around my waist. It was a pretty uncomfortable position.  Eventually, he asked me if he could finish and I nodded my head as if I knew what he meant. He barely said two words to me until he dropped me off at home. I felt like I had disappointed him. This was one of my last encounters with SD. Soon after he would be whisked out of my life and I would be left trying to figure out what had just happened to me. I’m not sure how I survived that encounter. I don’t remember leaving the house or what I did after I got home. I think I was in shock. It felt the same way the experience with my dad felt. Scary, with my heart in my chest. 

I have to wonder why he would take that risk? Why would bring me to his home when someone else was there? Why would he risk impregnating me? He must have been pretty sure I would not make too much noise or start crying. When I was with him I did my crying on the inside. 

I believed for a very long time that SD did not see me as a child. Maybe in his haze, he lost sight of how young I really was. But then I look at my school photo for that year and looking back at me is a little girl. I know now that I was just trying to give him cover. I did not want to admit to myself what he had actually done to me. He did not just fall into sin he chose me, groomed me, and abused me in a very strategic way. At times he would treat me like a peer as if I had any idea of what he was asking of me or encouraging me to do and feel. He wanted a responsive lover and at times seemed unaware that an eleven-year-old could not give him that. He would laugh at my inexperience and how naive I was, another slash in the “Of course he was fully aware you were a child column.” He seemed in awe of how mature my body was and would say things like, “How can such a young girl have such a large chest?” My 50-year-old self knows that he was a child molester. I know that none of what happened to me was my fault, I was his victim. Along with that, I know that even in the telling of this dark tale I am softening what he did to me. I’m telling you he was nice to me, but it wasn’t real right? How could it be real niceness when what was really happening was he was grooming me? He was preying on my loneliness, hunger, lack of experience, and lack of adult protection. At one point he traded in his beloved Honda Accord and bought a bigger car without bucket seats. I remember listening to him tell other adults how he enjoyed the luxury of the new car. He told me he bought it so I could sit next to him without the middle divider of bucket seats. Now we could hold hands and cuddle so much easier! Everything was a setup and I fell into his trap. Sadly I spent most of my childhood believing I was the trap when really I was the prey. 

C-PTSD, Childhood, Pastor John Grant, Salvation, United Pentecostal Church

Salvation is Fleeting

Part 8

I can remember the night I got “saved” like it was yesterday. I was wearing a blue jumper and sitting close to the back of the sanctuary. Boys were starting to notice me and a couple of boys sitting behind me kept trying to pass me notes. I had to be very careful because my mother did not tolerate playing around in church. I took one note and read it listening to the boys giggling behind me, the note read, “You’re a fox.” Now I had no idea what that meant but I knew those boys were always grinning at me and trying to get a seat as close as possible. Little did I know how many times those two boys would throw me a lifeline of friendship. Both of them became very close friends of mine and understood me better than most. When I asked my mom later what the note meant she was not pleased. After that, she gave those boys the side-eye for a long time. It was 1980 and I was 10 years old.

Things turned dark when the pastor lumbered up to the podium. I was afraid of my pastor. He was a big man and kind of loud. It was not uncommon in our church for a preacher to yell, stomp, and pace while preaching. This was one of those nights. I couldn’t breathe, I couldn’t move and it seemed as if his eyes were drilling into me. His words rang out through the auditorium sending a sick feeling into the center of my chest, “Your name is written on the gates of hell until Jesus takes it off!” Pastor Grant painted a picture complete with flames, demons, and gates waiting to open for me. At the end of his terrible tale came an altar call. Just like in The Shining when Danny is staring down the long carpeted hallway, I was staring down the long carpeted aisle that led to the altar. My body felt like lead and I couldn’t stop shaking. I was too scared to stay in my seat and too scared to start the long lonely journey to the front of the sanctuary. Self-preservation won out and I willed myself to move forward. I was more afraid of hell than I was of making that long lonely walk. My knees hit the carpet and I started to ask Jesus to forgive me for all of my sins, whatever sins a ten-year-old could have, immediately I was surrounded by women, they appeared like vampires seeming to come out of nowhere. A cacophony of voices speaking in tongues and loud music was all around me. In my memory, this plays like a 1970s horror movie. The women’s faces appear like images in a funhouse mirror, all distorted and clownlike. My body was being pushed back and forth and words of encouragement were being urgently whispered in my ear. The fact that I was sobbing uncontrollably was not a reason for alarm, it was a sign that I was broken and that was exactly the desired outcome. They say I spoke in tongues but I have to wonder how much of that was just me sobbing and no longer being able to form coherent words. Their encouragement got louder and louder, “Yes Yes Yes! Talk to Jesus!” Once I calmed down, probably just due to exhaustion they told me that I should get baptized. I had been taught that this was required for salvation and so I was not taken off guard. The women were all smiles, like alligators grinning from ear to ear, they told me I could choose which minister would baptize me. I think this was supposed to make me feel less afraid but it did not. My father would often take me into the water at lake Mendota not far from our house. He was unafraid and would put me on his back and carry me out into the waves. My mother, on the other hand, was terrified of the water and would sit way up on the beach near the bathrooms. So yeah, tending to feel my mother was slightly more trustworthy than my father, her fear won out and so I was a little afraid of being dunked by a stranger. 

Before I knew it I was being shuffled off to a room to change into a baptismal robe. The robe was heavy and way too big for me. Everything after this point is kind of a blur. I was very scared but determined. My heart was pounding in my chest and I now recognize that feeling. It is the same feeling I get when I’m in the midst of a panic attack. Our church had its own baptismal tank. It was situated behind the choir loft so it was easy for folks to gather all around it. It was loud, people were singing, clapping, and speaking in tongues. I was helped down the stairs into the deep water. Women were motioning me to squat a little so my robe would get wet and not float up and expose my legs. Brother O’Neal extended his hand to me and before I knew it he was saying the words and my body was headed back down into the water. My body felt the shock of the cold water as it hit my chest. Once I came up out of the water the watching crowd exploded into singing and clapping. The music and the sound of many voices speaking in tongues and clapping was so loud. I just prayed for it to be over. Soon I was out of the tank and dry, back in my own clothing. 

My feelings about speaking in tongues are complicated. For much of my adult life, I felt pretty unsure about what I had experienced. The human brain is hard to understand. I can only speak from my personal experience. I see it like this, I was a child and so I looked to the adults around me for guidance about behavior and community norms. Children mimic adults all the time and so I feel that some of what I was doing was the result of mimicking. Then you add to that the hyped-up environment that puts your brain into a very suggestive state. It feels hypnotic, all of the pacing being done by the worship leader and the repetitive choruses. I feel when you blend all of that together you create an experience for people and then the UPC just slaps a label on it. They call it speaking in tongues, I call it manipulation.

After being baptized, I felt relief for a little while, for about two weeks. Jesus loved me and saved me from hell and now everything is going to be ok. Then the fear started to creep back in. Did you know that you can backslide and lose your salvation? Just because you are saved today doesn’t mean you are saved tomorrow. God doesn’t send you official warnings that you are about to go too far or that he is coming today, so you never know for sure, not really. Believing this started a near-constant cycle of repenting and chasing salvation, never feeling clean enough and always worried about slipping up. I had to be vigilant. The rapture could happen at any time and almost any infraction could cause you to be left behind to suffer the tribulation. 

“For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night.” 1 Thessalonians 5:2. 

The fear of this event and going to hell stalked me like a hungry lion. My childhood was marinated in this fear. My mother passed her terror onto me like a virus. The church injected me with weekly and then daily doses. I would not find the antidote until well into adulthood. The idea of a wrathful god slithered through my veins winding its way into every nook and cranny. Of all the awful things that happened to me during childhood, being exposed to this idea had the most devastating effect. Starting when I was a toddler my parents exposed me to the Mark IV film series starting with “A Thief In The Night.” It made such a huge impact laying the groundwork for years of fear.  I cannot remember a time in my childhood when I did not worry about my mother disappearing into thin air and me being left to face the guillotine alone. To make matters worse I was about to experience something that I thought might be an unforgivable sin. 

I think of getting saved as being like your wedding day. Your wedding day is usually filled with wonderful memories of people wishing you well. You are the center of attention and love fills the air. There is music and dancing and hope for the future. You are wearing a dress you will probably never wear again and life feels fresh and new. You might even gain a new name. Marriage is long and often hard and it is unreasonable to expect that every day will feel like your wedding day. Now imagine if all the people in your life were constantly reminding you that you might lose your husband or wife. You better cook the right meals and earn enough money. Make sure even your thoughts are always in line with your partner’s thoughts or they might know and leave you. This is how salvation can be expressed within the UPC. You will probably never feel as good as the day when you get baptized. So you chase that feeling of freshness. You can get close if there is a rip-roaring service or a hellfire sermon that breaks you down into tears, but you will never duplicate that first high. 

I was an early bloomer and people often assumed I was older. This is kind of funny because now people often assume I am younger. I found out recently that my pastor is telling people that I was “always was a loose child.” I do not believe that children are capable of consent or being “loose.” It shows the lengths they will go to protect themselves from accountability. Starting at an early age most of my friends were adults. At church, I hung out with kids close to my age but I also spent a lot of time with twenty-somethings. Once baptized I threw myself into service for God. I was a very devoted child, devoted to God and devoted to my church. I never experienced the love of God. I only saw him as a scorekeeper and a wrathful judge. I feared God, my pastor, the government and the devil all in the same way. Salvation did not lessen these fears because I had been taught that I could lose it. 

I was a weird kid. I took the Bible very seriously and I also took my responsibility to share the gospel very seriously. I wanted to please and know God. My grandma would always say that when you stand before Jesus on judgement day you will be held accountable for all of the people you encountered on earth. Jesus would ask if you shared the gospel with them. Things would not go well for you if your answer was no. After going through my salvation experience I decided that I needed to get to work. I asked my pastor if there were any ministries I could get involved with. He recommended I start working on the Sunday school bus route. On both Saturday and Sunday, my day would start early. Rain, shine, snow, or freezing cold would not keep me from doing God’s work. On Saturday we would visit kids in impoverished neighborhoods and invite them to Sunday school, on Sunday we would start early and pick them up on the Sunday school bus. Almost always without fail I was around men. Men were the bus captains and so that’s who I worked with. The same would go for all of the ministries I became involved in. Men lead the nursing home ministry, campus ministry, and the Bible quiz team I would become captain of. They would give me rides to church and to other activities. It was normal for me and no one around me seemed to bat an eye. I don’t think they saw me as a child. I don’t believe they saw any of us as children. When I look back on it now it seems so inappropriate. I am a mother of four and I would have not wanted my children to spend so much time alone with adult men who were not members of their family. It isn’t like I was alone with them at church either, I was alone with them in cars and buses. Anything could have happened and eventually something did. 

Being responsible for staying on God’s good side was a monumental task for a 10-year-old child. I had to be sure I stayed within the dress code at all times. I had to be sure to never cut my hair, listen to the radio or watch television. I could really only read the Bible because I was too young to discern other content. I had to be watchful of every thought, action, and emotion. A minor slip up in any of these areas could give the devil an open door. We were taught that there was a war going on. 

For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.” Ephesians 6:12

While engaged in this war we also had to be seeking souls we could win for Christ. I was taught that when I stood before Jesus at the end of my life I would have to account for every soul I ever came in contact with. Did I share the gospel with them? This is a heavy load for a child. It is hard enough to be ten and have to deal with school and growing up. Add on my parent’s divorce, our poverty, and my mother’s depression and you can start to see how overwhelmed I was. I was a bright child, very thoughtful and sensitive. This made me fertile ground for all of the church’s teachings. I took my responsibilities very seriously. I took everything very seriously. This led to depression, insomnia, and pretty severe stomach issues for much of my childhood. 

I wanted to serve God because I wanted to follow his word and I wanted to win his love. I was unsure if winning his love was possible. Another big part of my motivation towards service had to do with just loving to be of service and help to those in need. I would wash the hands and faces of the kids riding the Sunday school bus because I cared deeply about them. I understood being poor and not properly tended to. My heart broke for some of those children. 

One message that came through loud in clear is that every part of me was sinful. I have always felt wrong in the world. I have never felt a sense of belonging or of fitting in. Unconsciously as a child, I believed that every part of me was infected and broken. The devil was always lurking and trying to trip me up and deceive me. This led me to believe that I could not trust my own mind. 

“And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” Genesis 6:5. 

I became rather neurotic and filled with worry about whether my good works were even good. What if I was an awful evil person but so deceived that I was not aware of it? In my child’s mind, I had so much evidence to back this fear up. If not a sparrow falls without God knowing and caring then why did he seem to not care at all about me? 

My heart was no better. A line from “A Distant Thunder” , one of the Mark IV films comes to mind. “Well just because you have an understanding of the Bible in your head, doesn’t mean you have Jesus in your heart.” Maybe this was my problem? Within a childhood filled with hunger, poverty, mental illness, and trauma I looked to myself to create change. When I could not move mountains or pray solutions into existence I began to question whether Jesus was in my heart and whether he accepted me. Does faith grow from the mind or the heart? Where do good works and compassion grow from? Again it was Pastor Grant who gave me insight into my unworthy condition. Often when he spoke during a sermon it felt like time stopped. 

Almost like an in-between space, everything slipped away and all that existed was his voice and the pounding of my heart. His voice boomed out, “Your righteousness is as filthy rags!” In my mind’s eye, he is like a dog foaming at the mouth, snarling out a message meant to shame and remind me of how unworthy I am. All at once it hit home that no matter what I did, good works coming from my heart, it was all filth, none of it was worthy of goodness or God. My heart was garbage unless Jesus shined it up, and Jesus seemed to be absent. I never felt like I was created in his image. I always questioned how it could be so because I am a female and God is male. Eve brought sin into the world and I felt more in touch with her than with Christ. 

C-PTSD, Childhood, Devil, Family, Fear, racism, Rapture, Trauma, Uncategorized, United Pentecostal Church

New Church

Part 7 ***Trigger Warning*** Some discussion of end times material and suicidal tendencies.

One afternoon my mother was standing in the kitchen talking on the phone attached to the wall. She seemed scared. I had no idea what was going on but I understood that it wasn’t good. With tears in her eyes she explained that my father was in the hospital. He had taken some pills and we rushed to be at his side. When we arrived my mother was hysterical with worry. She asked to see him and after a minute they told her she could go in. Because they would not allow children into the emergency psychiatric rooms I waited alone. It was all very institutional looking. Sterile green, hard plastic chairs filled the room. In the ’70s hospitals were not very inviting. No one spoke to me as I waited, it wasn’t very long until I saw my mother. She flew through the doors crying and yelling. My father had asked for his girlfriend and did not want to see my mother. This is where things went very wrong. She grabbed my hand pulling me through the halls of the hospital and out to the car. Tears rolled down her cheeks as she wailed and yanked me into the car. She was in no condition to drive but that didn’t matter. We drove around for what seemed like hours. She cried and recounted the story to me. At times she was driving on the sidewalk. “I have no one who cares about me!” “I’m all alone in the world.” “I wish I were dead,” she said. “But you have me and grandpa and grandma!” I tried to comfort her. Finally, after what seemed like forever I convinced her to go over to a friend’s house. She barreled into his driveway startling him. He was sitting in a lawn chair having a drink. John, a friend of both my parents, would sometimes watch me if they had to go out at night. My dad had done some work for him and through that they became friends. John listened to my mother’s story and did his best to calm her down. I stood at the end of the driveway frozen, not recognizing my mother. She had been upset before but nothing like this. She sat in the chair next to him crying and talking about dying. She wailed and screamed. At some point, he went inside and called an ambulance. When they arrived my mother started to yell. He had betrayed her by calling them and there was no way she was going to get into that ambulance. By this point, random neighbors had stopped to watch and John had to try to explain why there was a crazed woman wailing in his driveway. When the ambulance arrived somehow they convinced her to get in and I rode along clutching her purse in my tiny hands. I felt kind of guilty. I was ashamed of her behavior, scared about what would happen next, and also excited about riding in an ambulance. No one talked to me because they were too busy trying to keep my mother in check. She fought them and refused to lay down, finally they sedated her. She was much quieter by the time we got to the hospital. She told me to hang onto her purse and I immediately spilled it all over the emergency room floor. Tampons and money went flying. I was mortified. I wasn’t sure what tampons were but I knew she wouldn’t want everyone to see hers. That day is one of the saddest of my life. When I left the hospital she was calm and cuffed to the gurney. I went and stayed with John. He brought Muffy over to keep my company. Eventually, my aunt, Wanda, and Uncle Mike came to get me. They tried to comfort me but neither of them knew how. They were childless and everything in their house was white. It was not a kid-friendly environment. For the few weeks my mother was in the hospital they took me to see her and made sure I got to school. The hospital would let my mother out for a couple of hours to have lunch with us. I hated to see her go back. Living with my mother was hard but living with my aunt Wanda was worse. My aunt Wanda had money but she was a very cold person. I knew her and my mother did not get along and so I could never really let my guard down around her. I also knew, because my mother had no filter, that my aunt Wanda strongly disliked my father. There were many reasons to dislike my dad but one of hers was his race. Knowing I was half Mexican made me wonder if she hated me too? Soon my mother and I were back in our little apartment but nothing would ever be the same. Abandonment is one of the worst things a kid can experience. I almost lost both my parents on the same day. The dangers of the world became very clear to me. I understood that there are so many ways to lose your parents. You can lose them due to something like the rapture, or suicide, you can lose them through divorce or depression. Loss doesn’t always have to be physical, it can be emotional or mental. To this day I’m not sure which is worse. I felt guilty for being embarrassed by my mother’s behavior. I felt anger towards my father for hurting her so badly but I also wondered why he was so sad he wanted to end his life. Later he would tell me it was an accident. Neither of them ever wanted to talk about it even as the years passed and I could have better understood. All the adults around me, teachers, and neighbors looked at me with pity in their eyes but no one said a word. I could tell things were different now. 

Sometime around age 7 or 8, we moved to Vera Count. It was just a couple of blocks away from School Rd. We now had a bigger place but it was definitely a step-down. We lived at the top of a circle and next to our building was a big field and wooded area. There was plenty of room to play outside and the school playground was just behind the building across the street. Just a couple of blocks can make a big difference. I could feel our poverty and the poverty of our neighbors after we moved. My mother would point out to me the good buildings and the bad buildings within our low income block. “At least we don’t live over there” she would say. 

The older I got the more scared I became. During this time my mother was also becoming more and more unhinged. After her suicide attempt, she was at least being treated for depression. Later we would find out that she was bi-polar.  My dad was in and out of our home, as usual,  and stability was nowhere to be found. My mother was upset with her pastor because she felt he did not help her enough when she was in the hospital. She called some other pastors around town and wasn’t happy with their response either. This left us without a church and that was uncomfortable for her. She had gone to church every Sunday for her entire life and she feared for what would happen to her salvation if she wasn’t going somewhere. My aunt and uncle would invite her to go to church with them and we did for a while. That church was tiny and it reminded me of the church in the Thief in the Night series. The one they were taken to when they were about to be executed. Behind that church was a movie theater that my dad would often take me to. The theater let the church members park in its lot. When getting out of our car I always wished we were going to the theater instead. When we returned after the Sunday morning service you could smell the movie popcorn drifting through the air. 

My mother used God, the rapture, and hell a lot when she was upset at me. I remember one incident when she turned the shower on for me and I was complaining that it was too hot. “It will be a lot hotter in hell if you don’t get in that shower and start listening to me! Any normal childhood sassiness or conflict could warrant a warning about missing the rapture or burning for eternity. God was her enforcer. She and my grandparents talked often about how he could see and hear everything I did and thought. Not only could my actions send me to hell but my thoughts. It’s weird to grow up having no privacy, not even within your own head. I felt like God and the devil were following me everywhere all the time. God with his book of life ready to scratch me out or write me back in and the devil just seeing if he could trip me up. 

When I think of the 4 years we lived on Vera Court what stands out the most to me is how unsafe I felt all the time. The older you get the more you understand why the world is dangerous. My mom would go over the rules with me all the time, don’t answer the door unless you know the person knocking, lock the door, and deadbolt the door whenever you are in the apartment. When you are inside make sure to use the chain lock. My mother had some OCD tendencies so she would have to check the door multiple times, along with the windows, and lights. Bedtime could take awhile. After that man broke into my room she was always worried it would happen again. I was more worried about other monsters. No amount of locking things would keep Satan or God out for that matter. 

When I was around 4 years old my father took me to see Snow White and the Seven Dwarves. We went to see it in the theater near my aunt’s church, the one that always tempted me with the smell of popcorn. It was pretty magical. The old theater had twinkle lights in the ceiling and I was impressed! The seats felt scratchy and heavy curtains hung down in front of the screen. Now that venue is mostly used for music and comedy performances. Whenever I go there I feel the warm memory of that first movie outing with my dad. It is still just as magical as it was in 1974. I loved the movie but the evil queen really terrified me. Soon after someone bought me this lovely gold edged Disney storybook and on the back cover was the old scary witch from Disney’s Snow White. Every night I would have to make sure the back cover was facing away from me so her evil eyes would not stare at me as I slept. Really she was the least of my worries. 

In the darkness, I could never be certain that the devil would not grab me. He could be anywhere. Under my bed, in the closet, or under a pile of clothing. I would worry about men coming to get me and chop off my head or make me take the mark of the beast. I always slept with my face and right hand covered in hopes of keeping someone from giving me the mark when I wasn’t awake. Silly really but it was kid logic. All these fears fed into other unrelated fears, or maybe regular childhood fears. I was afraid of this character on Sesame Street and to a greater level Mr. Yuck. Whenever the character came on or the Mr. Yuck commercial came on PBS I would hide under our coffee table until it was over. All kids go through these things but I had no adult around to talk me through it so the fears got bigger and stronger. I can still remember how my heart pounded. My mother was oblivious to it all until she was home on vacation one week and witnessed me cowering under the coffee table. We talked about it but I don’t know if it made me feel any better. I was very fearful of UPC symbols on products because I had been taught that the mark of the beast would be just like those symbols. Each UPC symbol already had 666 embedded in it just waiting to be activated when the Antichrist came into power. Add to that all of the things that had Mr. Yuck stickers on them and even things like cleaning products under the sink became diabolical. I would turn the labels in the refrigerator and cupboards so the UPC symbol was facing away and if I was in the bathtub or shower I would do the same. As I write this my thoughts are that I sound nuts, and then I remember that I need to show compassion to myself. Children should be taught healthy fear of some things because otherwise, they may not survive childhood. The problem is my childhood was awash in all sorts of unhealthy fears. 

Not long after we moved to Vera Ct we were invited to ride the Sunday school bus to a new Church. At first, when the Sunday school folks would knock on the door my mother would hide. She did this whenever someone came to the door unexpectedly. She hated when people would try to sell her something or the Jehovah’s Witnesses would stop by to chat. She would pull the shades and put her finger to her lips to signal to me to be quiet. She would peek through the shades in order to judge when they had left the building. Only then would she tell me it was clear. These new unexpected guests were from the United Pentecostal Church. At first, my mother was reluctant. She did not agree with how they baptized people, but after a while, she gave in. She was a church hopper and I think she was tired of trying to find the right place. She also really enjoyed their worship style and I think that kind of grabbed her. My mother loved music more than almost anything and if there was one thing she hated it was dry worship services. Calvary Gospel United Pentecostal Church did not have dry worship services, in fact, it was quite the opposite. It was not unusual to see people loudly speaking in tongues, dancing in the spirit, or running through the aisles. It could be pretty entertaining for a kid to watch, it certainly wasn’t dull. It seemed a lot like the Jimmy Swaggart services my mother would watch on television. He would sing and speak in tongues. He sometimes danced on stage a little. It wasn’t that foreign. I liked the church at first. The people seemed friendly and the church itself was a nice facility. As an adult, I can look back and see there was a fair amount of love bombing going on. These people appeared friendly on the surface but there was an edge there. I enjoyed the worship services along with my mother. The clapping and upbeat music were fun to sing along to. At this point, I was too young to really understand what we were becoming involved with. There is no way I could have known that there was no room for childhood within this church just like there was no room for childhood in my regular day to day life. I was a stressed-out kid and this was about to get much worse. They say His burden is light but the burden of his church almost killed me. 

Before I go any further I feel I should say that I believe The United Pentecostal Church to be a cult. I believe that they engage in brainwashing and use cultish means to keep people in line. I know that not everyone who reads this will agree with me. I can only speak from my experience and from what I hear from fellow survivors. 

I liked riding the Sunday school bus! We would sing and when they dropped us at home I would get to pick a piece of candy. Sometimes my mom did not want to go and she would force me to hide with her. It never mattered if I wanted to go or not. My grandparents were very unhappy to hear she was attending a “Jesus Only” church. They gave her a lot of grief about it. They did not live in town and the church people saw her more, I think in the end the church won due to proximity and persistence. My aunt Wanda did not approve either. She would tell my mother any chance she got which drove them further apart. 

In reality skipping church was not that bad. The Sunday school bus was fun but my Sunday School class was another story. When we skipped church my mother would make homemade cinnamon rolls with me and she would watch some television preacher while I did whatever I wanted. I thought she was an amazing baker, she wasn’t, but she could turn that dough into something so delicious!.

My parents and my grandparents taught me from the cradle that giving money to the church was very important. My mom would press coins into my hand before leaving me at Sunday school so I would always have something for the offering plate. Weirdly my mother did not feel that tithing was important, she would always say God understands and so we give what we can. Calvary Gospel Church did not agree with that. God may understand but Pastor Grant did not. Sunday school was ok. I really did not enjoy being around other kids that much so I just tried to get through it mostly for the cookie and juice. I’d much rather be upstairs where the action was happening. We would hear the same stories over and over again all told with little felt people on a felt board. We had two older ladies who taught our class of 7 and 8-year-olds. One would tell the stories and the other would glare at us so we would not get too squirrely. Whenever we were allowed to be in the adult service, usually during the holidays, it was so interesting. All of those ladies in their fancy dresses and big hair. Part of me wanted to be just like them and another part of me wanted to be like the pastor. Whenever I played church at home I was always the pastor and I didn’t know yet that women couldn’t be pastors. I wondered how they chose which verses to read? Do they practice a lot? Maybe when I was a grown-up it would all come to me. I made little hymnals out of paper and handed them out to all of my stuffies. When I got older I would have my Barbies dress up in their best dresses and there might even be someone dancing in the aisle. I created a little church using books and blocks. Lots of Barbie weddings happened there. I believe what drew me to the idea of being a pastor was a desire to care for others. I knew that the adults in my life placed great importance on the church and so if I wanted to impress them, and I did, the church would be the best way to accomplish that.

I made a few friends when we started to go to more than just the Sunday morning service. I always felt a little on the outside of things because we were attending but not officially “saved” and therefore not totally in. My mother eventually gave in and got rebaptized so she would be considered saved by their standards. This only made the pressure on me greater. Adults would always ask, “When are you going to get the Holy Ghost?” The United Pentecostal Church only believes you have the Holy Ghost if you speak in tongues. I have spoken to many adults who grew up within the UPC church who fully admit to faking speaking in tongues just to get the pressure off. Of course, this doesn’t remove the pressure of worrying about going to hell. The UPC believes that you must repent, be baptized in Jesus’s name by immersion, and then speak in tongues to be saved. If any part of this formula is missing you will not be allowed into heaven. It can be heartbreaking to watch people struggle through waiting to be filled with the Holy Ghost. They would often repent and get baptized and then not speak in tongues for a long time all the while their salvation hangs in the balance. Our pastor taught a hell where you would burn forever but never die. It is a terrible idea for most adults to grapple with and for children it is the stuff of nightmares. Being separated from God is sad but for a child to be separated from every adult in your life is even scarier. Abandonment is a huge worry for all children. They ask the question, “Am I safe?” “Can I depend on the adults in my life to be there?” The church I grew up in would answer, maybe not. Children are exposed to these messages long before they can handle the content and are expected to make decisions about faith long before they can really comprehend the message. My childhood understanding of salvation went something like…I’m bad, Jesus is the only one who can save me so I have to do what he says, or His father will send me to hell if I don’t comply. Not really much of a salvation message. 

My favorite part of church was the worship portion. I loved to sing and when I sang I felt close to God. If the worship service was really hot we might not even have a preaching portion. It all depended on how the “spirit moved.” I loved those services, all-singing, and no scary parts. Once the preaching started, who knew what you might get. 

My mother had a hard time making friends even after they considered her saved. She never thought she was good enough and always thought people were gossiping about her. She just seemed to lack the ability to trust. In the end, there were a few kind souls who tried to be friends with her and for a while, this church looked like it might be a good thing in our lives. She still had her good pal Gail and my mother even invited her to church. Gail did not seem as impressed as my mother was but she would still come from time to time. She always came if they were showing the “Thief in the Night” films. Yep, this church showed them too. No matter where we went I couldn’t get away from them. Strangely, my mother never had trouble making friends outside the church. It is only within the church that she struggled. 

As a side note, it turns out there was a lot of gossip going on within the church so my mother wasn’t totally off in her concern. She would have never fit in there for the long haul. She was too working-class poor and eventually divorced. Plus they considered her marriage to my father to be interracial and that was a big no-no. The church taught that if you were in an interracial marriage when you became saved you should stay in that marriage. Over the years I watched how people in interracial marriages were treated and it was racist. My mother can be difficult to understand. As much as she was worried about missing the rapture she was also a bit of a free spirit. I think those parts of her core personality were always at odds with each other. She never gave up her pants or stopped cutting her hair even though the church taught strongly against these things. Compliance was not strictly necessary for salvation but then it kind of was. If you sinned by not following God’s word about your hair then you might miss the rapture or lose your salvation. Salvation was something we were always fighting for and it could slip through your fingers in a moment. I felt like I was always one mistake away from being lost. As a teen, I would envision what it would be like to be in heaven if my mother ended up in hell. I could never figure out how I could be happy knowing she was suffering forever, how could that be heaven? The church would say that God and heaven would be so wonderful and pure and therefore you would have no concern for such things. 

C-PTSD, Childhood, Crime, Dad, Family, Fear, isolation, Parents, Poverty, Stress, Trauma

This is Five

Part 6

During kindergarten and first grade, we were lucky enough to live only two buildings away from the elementary school. It was a great place to live because I could walk to school easily and it created a cozy environment. Our block was mostly middle-class homes mixed with apartments. About a block and a half from our building was a tiny store where I bought ice cream and popsicles. I learned to jump rope and ride a two-wheeler when we lived there. When everyone had gone home for the day and the parking lot was empty I would go and hit tennis balls off the school building. I got pretty good at returning the ball with my huge adult man-size tennis racquet. Even at the age of 5, I was already a free-range kid. I played by myself and most of the milestones of that age like getting the chickenpox or learning to ride a two-wheeler I experienced alone. Jerome was my one friend. He lived next door and would often come over to play in the backyard. He was kind of an odd duck and he was bullied at school. We got along ok even though he would never let me play Spock when we played Star Trek. Spock was a boy and I was a girl so that was a no go for Jerome. I always admired Spock because to me he seemed to be the most intelligent. He is still my favorite. 

My parents bought me a red bicycle. It came with training wheels and I kept asking my dad to put them on for me. Of course he did not do it and one day I got tired of waiting. I drug my bike out to the driveway/parking lot of our building determined to teach myself to ride. Because it was the middle of a work day there were no cars in the lot, thank goodness for small blessings. I hopped on my bike and attempted to balance and move the pedals at the same time. I spent the whole afternoon trying to bike up and down the long driveway. I fell often and my pants now had holes in the knees. By the end of the day both of my knees were skinned and blood ran down my chins and into my socks but on the other hand I was riding my bike! I was so excited to show my mom and dad when they returned home at the end of the day. My mom was really upset when she saw my knees and her and my father started to argue about how he was supposed to put the training wheels on my bike. On this day their fighting could not dampen my spirits. I could ride my bike and I learned all by myself. For many years, really up until young adulthood, riding my bike was an escape for me. I loved the speed of it all and how far it could take me from home and my everyday hell.

Before I learned to ride my bike I wanted a Big Wheel! Other kids had them and I was glued to the commercial every time it came on the television. My parents eventually bought me one, but not really. They purchased a knock off version that was actually better made and more sturdy but it was just not the same. It was rusty brown in color and had real tires. It left me longing for the red, yellow, and blue plastic that the other kids had. Fitting in was hard. I just wanted what the other kids in my neighborhood had. 

My father is Mexican and that created some hurdles. We did not know any other Mexicans and no one really looked like me. Poverty and religion did nothing to help. We were dirt poor for much of the time we lived there. The cracks in my parent’s marriage were already starting to show. I have always wondered why at times we had no money but then at other times we seemed to be doing pretty well. I can remember times when we would go out to dinner on Friday nights and my mother would take crafting classes. Neither of my parents could really manage money but the swings in our fortune seems to swing too wildly for money management to be the only cause. 

My father came home one day with a brand new red Firebird with black leather seats. I have no idea how he was able to afford this car. When he first brought it home my mother was not pleased but eventually she made peace with it. Once in a while, my mother would drive his car when we would travel to see my grandparents. She learned to love the car and received many speeding tickets while driving it. I know there were times living in that apartment when we had no food, so I’m not sure where the money came from. After infidelity, money was always the hot topic of my parents’ disagreements. We were often one bad week away from having our lights turned off or having no food. At this point, my dad was still mostly living with us at home but before long that would all change. My father was a bit like a feral cat. He wanted to be able to come and go with the assurance that he would be welcomed back with open arms when he needed a place to come home to. Even in his happiest relationships he cheated. He couldn’t bear to live the sedate life of a middle class married man. He wanted to mix it up with different people. He craved novelty and despised feeling caged. I think he had a deep hole inside of him that he could never fill. He was always seeking women and praise and no matter how much he received it was never enough. He was always on the make and I’m sure his red Firebird helped him feel more confident when out looking for women. I have no doubt that my father loved my mother, I’m sure he loved me too in his own twisted way, but he loved himself more. He felt entitled to be unfaithful and resented being questioned. He led two lives, one where he was married and had a child and then another where he was single and had no responsibilities. When he was feeling beat up by the world he would come crawling home to my mother but when he was feeling high on life we were on our own. 

After he and my mother split I took her place. I would see him when he was between women and then not when he was dating someone. I grew up resenting this and always seeing myself as second place in his affections. I felt disposable. I have always believed that one of the biggest issues between myself and parents is the fact that I could really see them from an early age. I think I made them uneasy. They never hid anything from me so I couldn’t help but see it all. I tried to hide from what I saw. I wanted to believe the best about them. I needed to be able to trust them. It was easy to see that they did not understand each other. At this point I still wanted them to stay together, but it would not be long before that opinion changed. 

Several major things happened while we lived on School Rd. First, a man broke into my bedroom while I was asleep and my dad had to chase him off.  The man managed to get one whole leg and the top portion of his body through my window. I can still remember my dad standing in the doorway of my room holding a flashlight and yelling. He is wearing a white T-shirt and boxers. The wind was slightly blowing and the curtains on my window moved in the breeze. By the light of the flashlight, I could see a figure with one leg dangling over my windowsill. Before I could really register what was happening he was gone. My parents called the police and I remember the cops trying to get prints off my windowsill. They also looked for footprints outside but it was raining and so nothing could really be found. This event made my sleep issues even worse. I think it also fed into my mother’s fears and may have triggered her worries about locked doors and windows. It gave my father something to brag about. My dad was a golden gloves fighter in his youth and he always saw himself as tough. Now he could tell people how he scared this guy away and saved his little girl. Experiencing this made it even harder to be a kid home alone. There were periods when I had a sitter and then periods when I did not. Just like with the money issues I have no real grasp as to what caused the lack of childcare. 

I started kindergarten when we lived on School Rd. As usual, something that should have been focused on me was focused on my parent’s drama. My mother couldn’t or maybe wouldn’t take off work to take me. When I think of my own little ones going to kindergarten it fills me with bittersweet memories. As a mom, you are both proud and sad. I think I cried with all four of mine making sure to do it once I was in the car so they couldn’t see. I do not remember it being much of a big deal for my parents. My father had his own business and so it wasn’t hard for him to take me. I was so excited because he told me we were going to go out to breakfast beforehand! This was a big deal! I was such a daddy’s girl. He took me downtown to eat which was kinda far from my school and when we arrived at the restaurant my dad introduced me to a woman. She sat down and had breakfast with us and much to my surprise, she and my dad had a long conversation in a language I did not understand. I knew my father could speak Spanish but I had no idea he could speak French. So what I thought was going to be a special first day of school breakfast with my dad became the day I realized he was cheating on my mom. At this age I had heard them fight about his infidelity but I did not really understand what it all meant. I did not have the language for it but I knew something was off. After breakfast he took me to school very early, I was the first one there, and I had to sit there with this awful feeling in the pit of my stomach. I feel some part of me thought I had done something wrong, somehow participated in his wrong simply by being there. After school, my mom and I talked about the highlights of the day. I finally broached the subject with my mom. She was mortified and more than that she was furious. I told her everything I knew, which wasn’t much. I did know the woman’s name, it was Jennifer and she was a French professor. Of course, my father tried to pass her off as just a friend but my mother wasn’t buying it. After that things were never the same, she always suspected him and he always gave her a reason to. Jennifer had an apartment on the lake and my father took me to visit with her. She was nice enough but I just couldn’t feel comfortable around her because I knew the pain my mother was going through. My mother would cry and tell me that men are dogs who cannot control themselves. It made it hard to love my father. I felt guilty for wanting to see and spend time with him. She would call him a “dirty Mexican” which made me feel bad about the part of me that was Mexican. I was old enough now to understand that my father and I were different from most of the people around us. Over time my mother would become more and more unstable when the topic of my father’s infidelity came up. Once she took me with her when she went out looking for him. At this time they both worked at the same place and mother suspected my father was carrying on with a co-worker. My mother drove over to her house with me in tow. Like Karen from Goodfellas, my mother called to my father’s mistress through the door. She banged on the apartment door and finally, the woman answered. She only opened the door a crack but that was all we needed to see my father sitting in a chair in his boxers. My mother did not have the foresight to leave me in the car so I bore witness to her calling to my father and him shaking his head refusing to come to the door. I don’t remember what happened after this. I have since learned that this often happens around traumatic memory. You remember the event but maybe not what happened just before or after. This is because when in a state of trauma your brain doesn’t make a memory in the same fashion as it does when just experiencing life normally. I only imagine how humiliated my mother must have been. When she was in that state of upset she would drive like a lunatic all the while crying and screaming. I can only imagine how scared I was. To this day I know exactly where that apartment building is and which unit she lived in. It remains a landmark representing pain and the ghosts of the past. 

The last major thing I can recall from School Rd is hunger. I don’t think my father was around much at this point. He had a key and would come and go as he pleased. Home or not he couldn’t really be relied on for financial help. When I was in grade school we had the option to walk home during our lunch hour and have our lunch at home. I never made this choice unless I had no other option. It was a warm spring day when I dashed home over my school lunch break. Feeling for the key around my neck and using all of my strength to turn the deadbolt. I didn’t have much time and so I raced to the kitchen and found the peanut butter and a butter knife. I didn’t bother to sit down but instead scooped as much peanut butter as I could onto my knife. Grinning, I licked a huge chunk off and felt the emptiness of my stomach subside. I continued scraping and scooping the almost bare jar until it was time to go back to school. Hunger was with me for much of my childhood and the peanut butter was all we had on that day. No bread, no jelly, and no milk to wash it down. At this age I really loved peanut butter so at least I really enjoyed the one food we had available. There was some shame with this act. It felt wrong to only be eating this one thing for lunch and it felt wrong to be licking it off the butter knife. We had learned all about a balanced diet at school and I knew this wasn’t going to cut it.  One day our next-door neighbor asked me why I was home in the middle of the day. When I told her I had nothing to take for lunch she took pity on us. She met my mother at the door later with groceries. My mother smiled tightly and said thank you. Once we were safely inside our unit she let me have it. I learned that day that I was never allowed to talk about being hungry or anything else with other adults. My mother warned me about this thing called social services and how they could take me away if I complained too much. She also talked about God and how we should always look to him and not the government for help. Very early on she instilled in me a fear, fear of other people, fear of the government, fear of the rapture, fear of God, and lastly she taught me to fear her. There were other times when we had enough food and I would end up in conflicts mostly with my father. It seemed to me I had no control over what I put in my body. Much of the time there was very little to choose from in our house. It wasn’t very often that my mother would let me pick things from the store because we were always on a budget. This meant there wasn’t much variety to choose from at home and then my father had very strong ideas about food. One night after sitting at the table taking too long to eat my peas my father decided he would force-feed me. I was about five years old. He held my mouth open and made me eat all of the peas on my plate. I was out of control sobbing and almost immediately ran to the bathroom and threw up all of my dinner including the peas. This involuntary action earned me a spanking. From then on I almost never felt good about food, either because we didn’t have enough or because I felt judged for what I did and didn’t like. My father liked to preach to me about eating and exercise. Every choice I made equaled me being good or bad, the stakes were always so high in my family. Both my parents were very judgemental but my father was more judgemental about food. I am much more relaxed about food now but I feel like it has taken me a lifetime to overcome my anxieties around food. I cannot bring myself to put a pea into my mouth. 

As I grew older I questioned why God did not provide for us and then I would remember that to suffer was to be like Christ so I should be happy to have this struggle. When I would ask people at church about why bad things happened to us they would always say so that we can help others later on. They would remind me that God has a plan for all of us and his ways are not our ways. My child mind was too little to understand the ways of the almighty God. Through all of this, I developed the idea that money was bad and wanting it was worse. There were higher things to be concerned about. Focus on heaven and maybe you will forget being hungry or being bullied for being poor. I had one horrible tormentor who was worse than the rest. One day she and her lackey discovered me riding my bike after school. I was wearing a new off brand puffer vest my mother had purchased for me. It was ugly. Lime green and yellow. It wasn’t a cool color like the other kids had, but my mother had tried and so I wore it. My bully stepped out in front of my bike so I would have to stop or hit her. When I stopped she spit all over my vest. Then she and her lackey laughed and made fun of me as I cried. I biked home to clean up my vest. I felt terrible because my mother was home and she would see the mess. But yeah, focus on heaven and forget being worried about your off-brand clothes and no food. 

“And Jesus said unto them, Because of your unbelief: for verily I say unto you, If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing shall be impossible for you.” Matthew 17:20. 

I was not moving any mountains which meant I did not even have faith the size of a mustard seed. My mind was failing me. I could not believe hard enough to save my family and I couldn’t control my doubts. Doubting God was a big no-no and I was failing big time in that department. At this point, I never put any blame on God but took all of the blame on myself. I must be doing something wrong if I could only figure out what it is! I wish that I understood why I took on so many adult ideas when I was so little. I suspect it was because I was never allowed to be a child and my parents always spoke to me like I was an adult. Oversharing caused me to consider things only an adult should worry about. 

Around age five is when many of my worries and fears really kicked into high gear. I worried about my keys and setting my alarm and on top of that, I wasn’t really sleeping. I don’t think I was ready for this responsibility so it took a lot out of my 5-year-old brain. I would lay awake at night thinking about the rapture and the ticking of the clock would remind me of the beginning of “A Thief In The Night.” As a side note, to this day a ticking clock can trigger me. I will start to feel like I cannot catch my breath and my fight or flight reflex will kick in. 

I wore two keys around my neck. One for the outside apartment building door and one for our unit lock. I can remember struggling hard at times to turn the key in the lock and I remember asking adults in the complex to help me if they were passing by. Not the safest plan. If my mother was running late for some reason I would worry. I would often get to school very early because I was worried about being late. Before leaving the house I would check my lunch box multiple times to be sure my lunch was in there. Through all of this I learned to be very responsible and also a little neurotic. When scary things happened, no matter how big or small, there was usually no adult around to help. 

Sometimes when my parents fought it was just screaming and yelling. My mother would get in my father’s face and he would shut down. Often it felt like violence could break out at any moment.  I know pushing and shoving happened between them. My mother would make some pretty scary threats and I believed she was capable of carrying them out. Now I am not saying that my dad was innocent. He was awful with money and his source of income was not always the most reliable. He left my mother to pay all of the bills and carry all of the stress of working and raising me. Add onto that all of the cheating and it is easy to understand why she would get upset. She would cry and rage and I would be in charge of comforting her and helping her to cope. This was a big job for a little girl. This job would often leave my stomach in knots. So much to be concerned about. Money, cheating, my mother’s mental health and then just regular kids stuff. I was made fun of throughout my young childhood. I never had the “right” clothing. My mother would shop for me at Prange Way and fashion was not the consideration. Her concern was getting the most bang for her buck. I begged for Garanimals when I was really small but I don’t recall her buying them often. She once bought me these knock off Nike’s and for the rest of the school year this one boy named Mike called me “Polish Nike’s.” My mother tried to get me what I wanted but it was always a little off and so I was often the butt of the joke at school. My mother was a very hard worker and I don’t fault her for not having money, at least not when I was young. Her work ethic was stellar, it was just her mothering that needed some work. 

One fight I remember very clearly involved my mother raging at my father after finding evidence of his cheating in their car. I crouched in the lowest part of the hall closet and watched through the barely cracked door. She was pushing and shoving him and he was raising his arms to defend himself. Her words rang out through our apartment, “If you ever do this again I will string you like sausage from the trees!” At the time I couldn’t really understand what her words meant but once I became old enough to understand, her words chilled me to the bone. She even went so far as to grab a sharp kitchen knife. As she brandished it at him my father looked like a little boy. He never forgave her for those moments and would bring it up often as an excuse for why he left her. Hiding in the closet I cried and wished that they could figure out how to get along. In those moments I tried to make myself as small as possible, something I still do today when I’m confronted with very angry outbursts. They both seemed unaware of how their fights impacted me. They never attempted to hide any disagreements from me. My father would always leave and tell me to watch over mom. When I would go off to spend time with my father my mother would tell me to love him and be kind. No matter what they did to each other and no matter how they spoke about each other to me, at the end of it all would come the admonition to love the other parent. They both reminded me it was my duty to honor my father and my mother. It was like they could not love each other properly so they used me as a surrogate. My father knew my mother needed watching over so he tasked me with that. She knew he needed acceptance and love, so she tasked me with that. No thought was really given to what I needed. When he wasn’t staying with us he would arrange to see me. My mother would dress me up and I would wait by our big picture window for his car to pull up. Sometimes he wouldn’t show. He would later tell me they had been fighting and he did not want to risk my mother coming out and making a scene. This left me standing at the window for hours. Each hour washing more and more of my hope away. I needed a break from her and I missed him so much. She never pulled me away from the window. I remember one day he was supposed to come to get me at lunchtime and I waited for him by the window until my mother forced me into bed. I was in the second grade. 

I could never understand how my father could leave me with her. He always claimed to be afraid of her and the violence she threatened but then felt fine not only leaving me with her but tasking me with caring for her. As I got older I would challenge him on this topic and he would always say he never believed she would hurt me, but how could he be so sure? In my father’s narrative everything was my mother’s fault. He cheated because she was mean and he left because she was violent. He couldn’t come around to help with finances because he did not want to fight with her. In other words, in his mind he bore no responsibility. I suspect my father was fighting demons no one knew about. He never wanted to talk about his past and when he did his stories never added up. I always felt like he was hiding something from me. They were just really bad for each other. While I was still in elementary school they both tried to commit suicide on the same day. I stayed with a family friend and then my aunt until my mother was able to leave the hospital. It was on that day I decided I just wanted them as far away from each other as possible. 

Anti-Christ, C-PTSD, Childhood, Fear, Rapture, Uncategorized

Apocalypse Comes Calling

***Trigger Warning*** Rapture, Endtimes, TITN

My parents were married around 1968. They appear miserable in all of the photos from their wedding day. In each one, they stare back at the camera with somber expressions made all the more depressing by the black and white color. They don’t appear to be at church. It’s just the two of them standing by a Formica table. Some of the photos include a small cake. My father is wearing a suit and my mother is wearing a simple white dress. They both appear to be there against their will as if someone is holding a gun to their backs just outside of the frame. My father, Amando, seems steely and looks to be clenching his jaw tightly. My mother, Marla, seems sad and resigned. Neither of them ever talked about their wedding day or courtship but they did seem to love each other even if that love was toxic and almost killed them. It may have been the time period. There are photos of my aunt from the same time and she appears equally unfriendly and gloomy. My aunt is probably not the best example because she is gloomy and unfriendly by nature. I was born in June of 1970 and luckily there are some photos of my parents smiling with me. My favorite photo from that time period features my mother in a summer dress, hair wrapped in rollers, cradling me in her arms. She looks relaxed and happy. My father remains serious in most of the photos from that year but there are a few from time to time where he looks like his guard might be down, in those moments a smile creeps in. Like many little girls, I adored my father. I think I spent most of my childhood chasing after his love, time, and acceptance. I loved my mother too but I saw her as fragile and in need of someone to look out for her. I could never really be a child around either of them.

I have lived in the Madison Wisconsin area all my life. It hasn’t been until the last couple of years that I could really imagine living anywhere else. Now I dream of Colorado or somewhere in the desert. There is a lot to love about Wisconsin. There are beautiful parks and lakes. I am a nature lover and so I would miss this for sure if I ever relocated. I am an empty nester and it almost feels like I’m starting a new life filled with all sorts of possibilities. I have a love-hate relationship with my home town. While it is a great place to live it also holds some truly awful memories for me. Part of me knows that these memories will follow me wherever I go because they live inside of me, the other part just wishes to not be reminded every day of my past. For now, most of my children are here and so this is where I intend to remain. In the wee hours of the morning when I’m staring at the ceiling, I have to wonder if the ghosts would continue to haunt me if I slipped away in the middle of the night. Madison has and always will be a haunted place for me, filled with the monsters of my childhood.

When I was very little my parents lived on Main St. I can see the street in my mind’s eye but I couldn’t tell you which house we lived in. My earliest memory is from the time when we lived there. I was sitting in a highchair. I’m in the kitchen and people are bustling around me. I am watching the dust fly around in a sunbeam streaming through the window. This memory, although brief, is warm and vivid. When I think of that memory it makes me feel peaceful inside. When I close my eyes I can still see it. 

The next memory is shrouded in darkness. My father is quickly carrying me out of the church sanctuary. I’m around toddler age. I am crying hard and he is trying to quiet me. The noise coming from the sanctuary is loud and there is screaming. Our little Assemblies of God church is screening a movie and the congregation is emotional. The screaming could have been from a congregant or from the film. The film was “A Thief in the Night.” I remember looking down through my tears to my black patent leather shoes. That church had a soundproof glass viewing window and a speaker out in the vestibule. This way parents could take their children out if they needed to without missing any of the services. So even though my father took me out I could still hear the scary sounds coming from the sanctuary. To this day whenever I think of that church it sends chills down my spine. Now, as far as I know, I have no other reason to be scared by that church other than the spanking I might get if I wasn’t quiet during the services. Even now when I drive by the building something in the pit of my stomach clenches. In my mind, it represents the rapture, being left behind, and everything that comes with that. My parents thought the whole incident was humorous. They liked to brag about how I never cried or misbehaved in church. My father would brag about spanking me until I learned to be quiet. “We never put our child in the nursery”, they would boast. That one night was seen as an oddity when I cried so hard they had to take me out. Thankfully they did not spank me for being scared. My parents loved that church but before long they felt they had to leave. Their beloved pastor left and they did not like the new pastor.

In 1972 A Thief In The Night was released. It is the granddaddy of many of my childhood nightmares. It is also the first in a long line of rapture themed films. I see it as the scarier, more traumatizing version of the Left Behind films. It has not waned in popularity over time probably due to how effectively it delivers its message. A Thief In The Night was never shown in theaters but it was passed around from church to church. This made it possible for the film to skirt the rating system. It has been shown all over the world but it is best known in the American south and midwest. You could find it at Sunday night church services, youth groups, Bible camps, and Sunday school classes. Because it was shown in churches parents could expose their children to it’s dangerous message with no oversight. From what I’ve heard it seems that many churches used these films to target teens in particular. I am so glad streaming from the internet was not a thing when I was a child. Now parents do not have to wait for their church to gain access to this series, they can stream it from the internet for free and bring its horrors right into their living rooms. I have C-PTSD for multiple reasons but I believe the seeds of it all lie within this series of films. 

This film series was written by Russell S. Doughten Jr. and directed by Donald W. Thompson. Russell S. Doughten also worked on “The Blob” in the 1950s and has a producer credit. The  original film was made in Des Moines Iowa and snaked its way through the Bible belt. The imagery and the theme song created an unforgettable experience. To this day the theme song of that film lives in my head. All I need to do is read a snippet of the lyrics or hear a tiny part of the melody to have it stuck in my head for days. Even as I’m writing this it is playing in my mind and I will have to try to do something to dig it out so that I’m not riddled with anxiety later. My mother liked the theme song, “I Wish We’d All Been Ready” and would play it on her accordion. She would sing it over and over. I was surprised to learn that song was really popular at the time and a big part of the Jesus movement. For me, it is like hearing the chimes of hell. 

There are four films in the series, A Thief In The Night, A Distant Thunder, Image of the Beast, and The Prodigal Planet. The first was released in 1972 and the last in 1983. I saw the first one when I was a toddler, probably around age 3. All of the churches we attended following that first church showed these films. My mother would sit on the bed and sing that song not understanding the trauma she was causing in my young mind. Every year following our viewing of these films I would go through a period of time when I could not sleep alone. I would have nightmares about government officials coming to get me to be beheaded. I would go through periods when I was afraid to be alone and that was a problem because I was almost always alone. If you watch the films now having had no experience with them they might seem dated, campy, and just plain weird. If you see them as a young child and all of the people in your life believe that these things are actually going to happen you will most likely be traumatized. The internet is full of people who were traumatized during childhood because they were made to watch these films in school, church, camp, or at home on video. Many horror fans embrace them as true horror films and consider them to be classic B movies. I have also seen people write about them being a gateway to their love of the horror genre. I experienced them as truth and a certain future. 

As horror films, they might be fine but as tools to scare children into salvation, they become something much more sinister. As a side note, these films are often still used for evangelism but I feel their true purpose is to keep people who are already Christians in line. Patty the main character is a Christian throughout the whole film but she isn’t the right kind of Christian. She believes in god’s love but not all of the rapture theology people keep trying to tell her about. Its message doesn’t focus on God’s love, it focuses on fear and keeping yourself on the right side of an angry vengeful god. Being a Christian is not enough. That lesson followed me through my whole childhood. The reach of these films is greater than you might think. It has been estimated that over 300,000,000 people have viewed these films. It can be a hard thing to get good estimates about because they are not shown in theaters but in church basements. One thing is for sure the memory of this series haunts the dreams of many adults who grew up in the ’70s and ’80s to this day. 

My mother believed the message introduced in these films wholeheartedly. It bled into every part of my life. Believing her heart was never quite right with god she would spend hours shut away in her bedroom crying and speaking in tongues. I would stand by the door and worry about whether or not she was going to be ok. She didn’t want me to make a lot of noise while she was praying so I couldn’t even use the television to drown out her wailing. I recall those nights as being very lonely. If she came home and couldn’t immediately locate me she would worry that I had been raptured leaving her behind. One day I was playing with my plastic sled and I fell asleep under it. She came home and searched the apartment high and low for me and when she couldn’t find me at home or at the neighbors she started screaming and that woke me up. I jumped up from under the sled and saw our neighbors and my mother standing there looking down at me. She grabbed me and held me tight to her chest. I could feel her heart racing and her face was wet with tears. On that day I got a very clear idea of how real all of this was to her, and it became even more real for me. From that day on the thought of being left behind haunted my dreams and my waking hours. I worried about what small sin or act of childhood would keep me from flying up to heaven with my mother. I constantly asked Jesus to forgive my sins even asking him to forgive sins I might have forgotten about. In my mind, Jesus was a scorekeeper. He was keeping track of every thought and action, and he had no problem at all with sending a little girl to the guillotine. 

Even after my parents moved on to other churches we lived within eyesight of the little Assemblies of God Church until about 1979. For much of my early childhood, I could see it from our front picture window. We had neighbors who attended there and my mother was close with them. Whenever they showed the “Thief in the Night” film my mother and I would go to service with them. My mother had a weird fascination or maybe obsession with the film. She and her best friend Gail were always excited to see that it would be showing again and they would pack up us kids and drag us to it. Afterward, we would all enjoy a meal together and my mother and her friend would recount everything that happened in the movie and talk about how close to the end times we were. I have never been able to understand how someone who feared the rapture so much would want to torture themselves by volunteering to watch that movie. As sequels came out we went to see all of those as well. My mother would complain about my fears, my fear of the dark, of being alone, and especially of sleeping alone but she never seemed to really get what she and my father had done by exposing me to that series of films. There were so many nights when I would lay awake worried about missing the rapture. I would dream about being chased by soldiers and being beheaded. I would flee to my mother’s bed and she would let me sleep with her but not without being pretty grumpy about it. Over the years these fears grew. I feared loud noises, especially anything that sounded like it might be a horn, white vans (because of the movie), bar codes, and men in uniforms. Later when I was older that fear would spread to credit cards, computers, and anything automated. I even grew to fear the television. My mother and her family would talk about how someday the government would be able to watch us through our television set and even see-through walls. They would talk about how after the rapture there would be no place to hide. Even as a very young child, I took their words very seriously. I would lay awake at night making sure that my right hand and forehead were covered by the blankets at all times. 

Revelation 13:16-17 King James Version (KJV)

16 And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:

17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.

I am sure this all sounds very strange to you if you have never encountered these beliefs before. I am also sure that some of you have shivers running down your spine right now because you know exactly what I’m talking about. The fears caused by all of this would only get louder as I got older. It wasn’t until I was in my 40’s that I figured out how to deal with them. Even then I can only deal with them, the CPTSD makes sure they are never far away.

Anti-Christ, Childhood, Dad, Devil, Family, Satan

Lonliness and Punishment

Part 4

Violence was not uncommon in our home. It wasn’t just the big altercations between my parents but all of the little everyday things that happened. The worst spanking I ever received was when my father spotted me standing close to a man outside. He was standing near the fence that divided our yard from the grassy field above. He was watching a softball game. I was outside and when I saw him I went to say hello. What my parents did not know is I had been talking to this man for a long time. He lived down the hall from us. One day I spotted his open apartment door when I was exiting out the back door of our complex. He had just moved in and so I stopped by to say hello. Yes, my parents had taught me not to talk to strangers but I was desperately lonely. He chatted with me and was always friendly. I know I was actually in his apartment at least once. I have no idea what this man was actually like. I do not have much memory of him but I remember his apartment and I remember his figure standing by the fence watching the game. My father spotted me outside with this man he did not know and he came out to fetch me. Once in our apartment, his anger boiled over and he started to interrogate me about the neighbor. He yelled about talking to strangers and I remember crying very hard. I don’t remember what I said to him but I know that I attempted to explain and that only made him angrier. I was in elementary school at this point, maybe 7 or 8 years old. My mother seemed unconcerned until he reached for the dog collar to spank me. He was not wearing a belt and the dog collar was the closest thing within reach. I lurched to get away and my mother yelled at him. The collar had metal notches in it and a metal clasp and she thought it was too dangerous to spank me with it. He did not listen to her and started swinging at me hitting whatever he could, mostly my legs. It was expected that I would sit still when being spanked, if I moved they would hit whatever was where my butt was supposed to be including my hands. In this case, I tried to get away because I could sense the fear in my mother’s anger. He grabbed my arm and let me have it. After he was done my mother and father argued about what he had done and I cried alone in my room away from their fighting. I believe the big concern to be whether or not someone might notice and call social services. Eventually, they tried to make peace with me by giving me a flour tortilla. As weird as this might sound, they often tried to comfort me by handing me a tortilla or banana. They explained why talking to strangers was dangerous and life went on. As angry as my mother was with my father she was often the more violent of the two of them. She spanked me but she also pinched me and twisted my ear when she wanted my attention. She would pull my hair when she was really angry and that hurt the most. It amazes me that they would believe that a child left alone for 10-12 hours a day would have the self-control to not talk to strangers given how lonely I would naturally be. My mother cried over her loneliness all the time and my father sought out other women to keep him from being lonely. I feel like they did not see me as a real person. They seemed unaware that I was a human and not a doll. I had needs and emotions. I felt all the same things they did. To this day I wonder if they did not understand or did they just push away that understanding because had they acknowledged it they would have had to change how they were interacting with me. 

When you are a kid there is so much to worry about. I worried about losing my keys and being locked out of our apartment. I worried about people breaking into the house and strangers. It was the 70’s and stranger danger was a big deal. Then there was the alarm clock! I was always concerned with being late for school or oversleeping. So I developed little rituals around checking the clock and checking the locks on the doors. I looked over my shoulder when walking down the street alone and always checked the back seat of the car when I got in. The keys around my neck were like a security blanket. At various times during the school day I would feel for them just in case they might have fallen off of me at some point. I learned all of this from my mother. She was never diagnosed with OCD but she definitely displayed some of the behaviors. She drove me nuts checking the knobs on the stove and having to go back and check to be sure the door was really locked. She planted this worry into me. No amount of checking and rechecking life was enough for her. She was always preparing for doom. I would stare off into space as I waited for her to check and recheck. I was trying  desperately to be somewhere else. 

When I left for school in the morning my dog Muffy was the only one there to see me off. She was also the only one there waiting for me when I returned. She would be watching at the window when I left for school and waiting for me there when I came home. Every day I would run home after school and feel for the key around my neck. Sliding it in the lock I would fight to turn the stiff deadbolt. Immediately a walking cloud would come bounding towards me. Her fluffy white tail curled over her back and I would bury my face in her neck. The apartment was always silent. After putting my things down and taking off my coat anxiety would wash over me. With Muffy by my side, I would wander through each room checking for who might be hiding and waiting for me to come home. I checked every closet, under the beds, and behind the shower curtain. There was never anyone physically there, just me and fear. Dread would wash over me and I would remind myself that you can’t see the devil. 

The devil or Satan as he was sometimes called was a part of my daily life. He was as present as any person I could see with my eyes. God felt like light years away but Satan felt as close as the breath in my lungs. All of the adults in my family seemed to be very concerned about him. I knew one thing, he was tricky. I was taught that he and God had some kind of falling out and now he was the enemy of God. Because God created me the devil wanted to steal me away and take me to hell with him. Some day the devil was going to burn for all eternity and if I chose him over God I would burn too. In Sunday school we learned a lot about how the devil might try to trick us. He might tell me lies and I had to question every thought, action, and emotion, to see if they were of God or of Satan. This was tough because the devil was so manipulative and how would I know if I was right? The adults in my life made it sound like Satan was always lurking around every corner, under every bed, and in every closet just waiting for a chance to deceive me or worse yet drag me to hell. Later in life, I would learn about the AntiChrist and in many ways, he was even scarier than Satan. He would be in human form and as the church and my family would often say, “He might be alive right now!” There was much speculation about who he might be. The Pope was always a popular candidate but some people said that Ronald Reagan might be as well after all his name added up to 666 just like the Bible said to look out for. As an adult, I look back on those teachings with disgust. I have raised four children and thankfully none of them have had to deal with fear the way I did, I am 50 years old and it has taken me decades to let go of that fear. I cannot remember any time in my childhood or up through my 40’s when I have not been afraid. My childhood was soaked in teachings about an angry God and so much of what I endured during childhood is wrapped up in those teachings. Fringe religiosity and mental illness do not go well together and my family had equal amounts of both. I am descended from a long line of very religious people. My mother’s roots pass through both the Assemblies of God and the Church of God organizations. Eventually, she ended up attending a United Pentecostal Church. It was this church, Calvary Gospel United Pentecostal, that had the biggest impact on my life. The combination of the end-times theology of the 1970s and on through the ’80s and untreated severe mental illness created a childhood full of uncertainty, worries about abandonment, and child neglect. I did not come through this childhood unscathed but I have managed to survive and I keep leaning into the hope that I can continue to get closer to being whole and healthy. Most people who know me see me as a driven and fairly successful person. I have a devoted partner and I’ve raised 4 children. I am politically active, and I participate in volunteer initiatives within my community. Some might tell you that I am creative, a lover of furry creatures big and small, a collector of books, and driven by a desire for transformation. If they know me well they might tell you that I never sleep, have to be reminded to eat, and that at times my anxiety is crippling, and sometimes depression follows me around like a fog threatening to swallow me whole. If they know me even better they might tell you that when I do sleep I tend to be plagued by nightmares complete with guillotines and often involving me running from some sort of One World Government authority figure. Writing this book is one way I am trying to heal myself. As you continue on this journey with me, I will tell you about the other ways I am working on healing and helping others to heal. None of this is easy but it feels necessary. 

Childhood, Family, Fear, isolation, Stress, Trauma, Uncategorized

Childhood and Adventure

Part 3

Both of my parents were checked out much of the time. I was raised by television. Many of us who grew up in the ’70s had this experience. I lived my day according to what show was on next. The people on television were my friends and they kept me company while my mother was away. I would build tents out of the dining room chairs and blankets from my bed.. My dog Muffy and I would hunker down inside and eat snacks while watching Gilligan’s Island. I loved building those tents. Once inside it felt like I was in a different world. Under my blankets with my furry companion felt safe and warm. I can still feel the softness of Muffy’s fur and the way she smelled. Muffy was my only company when my mother was away. She was a beautiful white Samoyed dog with happy brown eyes. She was very easy going and always willing to play tea party with me or even dress up. To this day I love dogs and I feel I owe a debt of gratitude to Muffy for taking care of me. For the first ten years of my life, she was there. There were times when she was the only being around to comfort me and she was often the only really dependable thing in my life. She was like a second mother to me and many of the good memories I have from the first 10 years feature her. 

In the morning my alarm clock would go off and I would hear Bugs Bunny say “Eh What’s Up Dock?” I loved my Bugs clock! Alone I would get up, eat, and get myself ready for school. I knew when “Leave It To Beaver” came on it was time to go. At the end of the day when I returned home, I would watch “Bugs Bunny” and “Gilligan’s Island”. Most of the time the television was just on as background noise to keep me from feeling alone. I would bring art projects out into the living room and work on them in front of the television. When there was nothing on tv I wanted to watch I would go play in my room or I would play outside. Sometimes I would play with friends but I felt guilty about leaving Muffy alone if she had been alone all day. I wonder if she saw my being out of the house as a break, much like a young mother might relish nap time. For a little bit she would not have to be my Dressy Bessie. 

In the evenings my mother and I would watch “Sonny and Cher”, “The Love Boat”, “Fantasy Island”, and “Charlie’s Angels”. I enjoyed all of these shows. When my mother was home we would often sit on the floor, in the dark, and she would bring out a big bag of nuts from the kitchen. It was like being in a movie theater. She would crack the nuts open for me and we would have them as a treat. Sometimes we would have a generic soda too. My mother loved orange, grape, and root beer flavors so that is what we had to choose from. When I think of these times with my mother it warms my heart. It calls to mind the physical closeness I so needed and that could be hard to come by. I lived for these moments. The person I loved best in the world was finally there beside me and she wasn’t crying or screaming, she was laughing. In the dark it did not matter that we had no sofa to cuddle on or that the devil might be hiding in the closet, all that mattered was that we were together. 

I really loved Cher! She was one of the only people on television who looked like me. Certainly, she was the only woman I was aware of. She had long black hair and olive skin just like mine. I loved seeing all of her glamorous Bob Maki dresses. She was both beautiful and talented. She gave me the impression that she ran her own life and maybe Sonny’s too. She was confident and I wanted to be like her. Another woman I admired from television was Lucille Ball. I thought she was beautiful as well and so funny. Lastly, there was Carol Burnett. I did not see her as a great beauty but as the funniest woman ever! I loved her show and couldn’t wait for it every week. When it went into syndication, I could watch it in the afternoon. I never missed a show. These women helped me to develop my sense of humor. Cher was sharp and kind of dry, Carol and Lucy perfected physical comedy. When my mother would go into one of her depressive moods I would act out scenes from these shows to try to make her laugh. If that didn’t work I would dig into my candy stash to find something to make her smile. My mother loved candy so the combination of my best Carol Burnett impersonation and a Snickers bar could go a long long way. 

On the action side, I could not get enough of “Charlie’s Angels”, “The Bionic Woman”, and “Wonder Woman”! These women inspired me to be strong and athletic. I would run through the woods pretending to be Wonder Woman! I love those memories. I had a fort in the trees and I would perch on a branch and pretend to be in my invisible plane. I saw myself in these characters. They were tough, confident, and dependable, all things I hoped to be. I tried and tried to make my hair do the 70’s flip or feather, no matter what I did it never worked. 

To this day I love female comedians, especially if they embrace physical comedy. I enjoy female cop shows and superhero characters. When I get lost and I can’t find my way they help me to get back to myself. They remind me of who I was at the beginning, who I am at my core. They remind me of my mother, which can be both good and bad. They remind me of how far I’ve traveled to get to where I am now. They continue to provide comfort and inspiration! 

Television offered me predictability and comfort. Shows were almost always on when you thought they would be. I could see this extended family whenever I wanted and they would always be the same. The sounds of their voices coming down the hall from the living room made our apartment feel like it was full and not so empty. I feel the shows helped me to become more socially confident. My mother and father were socially awkward and so they did not provide good examples of how to fit in. I have always felt odd in the world but it could have been much worse. I watched these shows and learned how to interact with people and it showed me how adults should be with kids. Television helped me see the inappropriateness of my parent’s behavior. Television also helped to keep the things I was afraid of at bay. 

When I wasn’t watching television I played outside. We had a small wooded area next to our apartment along with a large hill and field. On the other side of the field was my elementary school and playground. When the weather was nice I would play in my “fort”. Wonder Woman was my favorite scenario. Those woods had the potential to be so much. They could be my invisible plane when I climbed the tree and sat on a branch that overlooked our street and the low brush was my fort or secret lair. The large rocks made great chairs and an easy to move low hanging tree branch served as a secret invisible door. In the summer it wasn’t 

unusual for me to waste the afternoon running through the tall grass having spectacular adventures. Even in these happy times fear followed me around lurking behind every tree and waiting for me at home. When I think of that fear now I can feel it in my chest. I can imagine it is not unlike what a rabbit feels when it senses danger. You become still and hope you can’t be seen. 

My dog Muffy liked to be outside when it wasn’t too hot. She made a pretty good playmate. Even though she was a big dog I managed her fine. She never ran away even when I dropped her leash. Even though I don’t think she enjoyed it much, she would climb in the sled with me and go down the hill. Well, truth be told she only made it half way down the hill before jumping out of the sled and running to the bottom to meet me. Once at the bottom of the hill she would chase after me to get to the top and do it all over again. When the weather was warmer she would play kickball with me. Which meant I would kick my small red rubber ball and she would chase after me as I pretended to run the bases. When we grew tired we would plop down in the grassy field and I would make dandelion jewelry and crowns. I was very allergic to both the grass and the dandelions so it didn’t take long for us to be driven back into the apartment to cool off. Once inside I would grab a popsicle and arrange my dandelion creations so that I could show my mother when she returned home. Often by the time my mother arrived they were very wilted. It made me sad that I could not figure out how to keep them pretty for her. 

On other days I would slip through a small trail in the treeline behind our apartment that opened onto some railroad tracks. I would follow those tracks all the way to the beach. When I think about it now it seems so dangerous. I would bring a towel, some beach toys, and whatever change I could gather so that I could buy some ice cream once I got there. I would play in the sand and water all day without any adult supervision. To this day I am not the strongest swimmer and I recognize how lucky I am that I never got hurt. Even though it was dangerous I can’t help but think of these days warmly. My childhood was not safe by any stretch of the imagination but it was filled with childish adventure. I had so much unstructured time to explore the world around me and these days at the beach are the best example of this. All I need is to hear the sound of the waves hitting the shore and I’m instantly taken back to those days sitting on the beach eating a popsicle with my toes buried in the wet sand. By the end of the summer, my skin would be a deep brick-brown making me stick out like a sore thumb. Adults and children alike seemed confused and interested in my appearance. They would often ask me about my ethnicity and when I was young I thought it was kind of a game. Later it would make me feel bad about being different. 

When I wasn’t outside I loved to create little art projects. My mother saw early on that I was a blooming artist and so she made sure I always had paint, markers, and clay to play with. My mother was an accomplished artist. Part of my desire to create was driven by wanting to be as skilled as my mother. She liked to draw nature scenes and especially animals. My mother grew up around horses. I could tell by the stories that she told me about her childhood that she loved her horses. I would ask her over and over to tell me about Dolly and the others. She would tell me each horse’s name and then describe what they look like. She would include details like which horse liked to get into mischief and which ones liked apples. I would try my best to draw them as my mother had described. I also drew my dream horse over and over again. He had a black tail and mane and was a deep chocolate color. I could never match my mother’s sketching talent and this distressed me. She bought me this large oversized book about how to draw horses and I spent many hours trying my best to follow the instructions. I became pretty good at it! But sadly never as good as my mother. It really bothered me. It took me until well into adulthood to be able to create art for art’s sake and to not be still comparing myself to my mother in my head. 

After my horse drawing stage I moved onto my fancy lady stage. I was fascinated with dresses from the 1800s and I would draw what I called “fancy ladies”. Some would have parasols and others would have very elaborate hats. I dreamed of being like them. This led me to be obsessed with the “Gibson Girl”. I loved to draw elaborate updos from that trend and I would practice them over and over. I think this phase was more enjoyable to me compared with the horse phase. My mother did not draw these “fancy ladies” and so I was not constantly comparing myself with her. I could just draw for the love of drawing. For a long time Snoopy was a subject I would sketch over and over. I always looked forward to the Charlie Brown specials mostly for the scenes that featured Snoopy. 

I tried many other crafts and it was easy because my mother had a closet full of half-finished projects. I spent hours playing with my spin art toy. It was one of those toys where you put the paper in the tray and then drop bits of paint onto it while it spins. I also learned to finger crochet and latch hook. I was not a big fan of finger crocheting but I loved to latch hook. I would sit side by side with my mother and we would make latch hook projects together. She also taught me to make little potholders with a plastic loom. When she was creating she was smiling. Right from the start, it was clear to me that she became bored much faster than I did. She would start a project and then get bored, it would go to live in her bedroom closet and maybe one day I would pick it up and finish it. This is one way in which my mother and I are very different. I hate having unfinished projects laying around. This goes for books too. I will finish the most boring books just because I can’t seem to allow myself to just not like something and then put it down. I really have no idea where this comes from. 

I possessed a big imagination and it showed through in my playtime and art. I believe that my imagination is what got me through all of those long hours of being alone. When I think of this time it brings a smile to my face. I was a vibrant child so full of promise. When I think about it a little longer my smile turns to sadness for all of the hours I spent alone. It wasn’t safe and I never felt safe. 

boundaries, C-PTSD, Childhood, Depression, Prayer

Boundaries

Part 2

As I comb through the first 18 years of my life it can be hard to find anything worth preserving. My home did not provide comfort, instead the air was thick with unease. When I drift through the memories of childhood there is a gray wash over everything. The memories that make me smile are not associated with people so much as activities and things, like the orange push-up ice cream treats I would buy on hot summer days or my neon green and yellow bike. Solitude brought intense loneliness but also some of my most joyful moments. When I was alone I was free and could often breathe more easily but sometimes when I was alone I would be stalked by the things I feared most.

My mother worked long hours and sometimes two jobs. She had a very physically demanding job working at a laundry where they washed and pressed uniforms and other things. F&W Means was the name of the company. The laundry was hot and working there did some damage to her hands. In the summer she would be forced to work overtime often being gone from morning until after dark. She never minded the overtime because we always needed the extra money. Sometimes, not very often, I would go to work with her. The air in the laundry was humid and it burned the back of my throat. There were huge baskets on wheels being pushed from one station to the other and music blasting through speakers. Sometimes I would go sit outside, just to get some fresh air and my mother would buy me a soda. Those days seemed so long but she did not seem to mind. The laundry was filled with mostly women employees and they smiled and joked with each other in spite of the terrible conditions. 

My mother was a very dedicated worker and took pride in providing for our family.  I understood why she had to be away but that understanding did not make the days any easier. After work, she would sometimes deliver pizzas for extra money. This only made my lonely days even longer. My father was often in and out of our home and he could not be counted on to help with the rent or our bills. He made good money but it seemed to slip through his hands easily. My father lived in the moment and never seemed to have a plan or concern for the future. He enjoyed playing cards and I think drinking was sometimes involved. They fought a lot about money and his many affairs. They had epic fights that included objects being hurled across the room and my mother lashing out physically and threatening my father’s life. My father wouldn’t hit my mother but he did try to protect himself. During these fights he always appeared to be the innocent one because he was the one being physically attacked. That being said, he was the reason my mother flew into a rage. He would play the role of “why me?” but even at a young age I knew that he was torturing my mother mentally and emotionally. In reality he was torturing me too but I was too little and too much of a daddy’s girl to understand it. I witnessed my mother cry over our finances again and again. My father was often responsible for the financial issues. He wouldn’t pay his fair share and then he would come around begging her for money. He even went so far as to support another woman with my mother’s money. You can imagine how that went over! 

My mother wouldn’t go to her family for help unless she had no other options. She was close to my grandfather but she did not like asking him for money. I got the message that her family had a pretty strong bootstrap mentality.  My grandmother and my aunt would gossip about my mother and that caused her a lot of distress. She definitely gave me the impression that her mother and sister ganged up on her. My aunt Wanda is a cruel judgemental woman and my grandmother would cover for her nasty tendencies. Even though my aunt lived in the same city as we did she could not be depended on in any way. My mother did not have many friends and the ones she did have were not in any financial shape to help us. On top of that, she was proud and believed that asking for money was a kind of moral weakness. Her family strongly believed it was wrong to go to the government for help so she would not apply for food stamps or welfare checks. She did not want social workers nosing around her business. All of her family was suspicious of the government and concerned about it being connected in some way with the antichrist. They firmly believed that someday a one-world government would come to power and following that Armageddon. All these beliefs did not leave my mother with many options. She would cry and pray for hours. I would sit outside her door wishing God would answer her so she could come out and play with me. I believe this is the age I started swallowing my pain. We couldn’t both be crying. Above all, I wanted to comfort her and fix all of her problems. I prayed to God in hopes that he would answer but for some reason, he always seemed so silent and unreachable. 

My mother was a very talented woman. I looked up to her musical ability. She had this huge accordion and she would often sit on her bed in the evenings and play it. I was fascinated with all of the buttons and the large case with burgundy velvet lining that she kept it in. She only sang gospel songs and when she was singing I could tell she went somewhere else in her mind. She played the piano and organ too but we did not have access to these on a regular basis. We sang together, pretty much everywhere, in the car and the house. She would always give me high praise when we sang together and that praise made me feel warm and loved. By the time I was three years old she was having me perform for strangers in the grocery store. I would be riding in the cart minding my own business singing some happy tune and it wouldn’t be long before a gaggle of older women would be smiling at me and asking me to sing for them. This seemed to really make my mother happy so I sang for them even though I was terribly shy and kind of scared of old people. I would sing tunes from the radio often misunderstanding the lyrics and I would sing Sunday school songs. I can imagine a world in which she could have been happy teaching music or working in a music store. If she had possessed more confidence maybe she would have sang in the church choir or even led a choir. I’m not sure she really grasped how talented she was. Maybe because her family tore her down so much or maybe it was mental illness standing in the way. When I take a minute to allow myself to gaze upon her with my child eyes I see a shining star, capable of anything, and almost goddess like. As a little girl I just knew I would never reach the pinnacle of her perfection. She could do anything. 

At a very young age I was aware that there was something wrong with my mother. She called it depression so I had a word for it even if I had no idea what it really was. During the day I was alone but often in the evenings, I was also alone because she was consumed by whatever financial crisis was upon us. Then there was the question, “Where is your father and what is he up to?” She never had security, not financially or in her relationships.  She would watch Jimmy Swaggert preach on television and then go retreat to her room to cry and pray. When she finally came out her eyes would be very red and she would be silent as a stone. I would attempt to comfort her in any way I could. Often I would try to make her laugh just to see her smile was a comfort to me. Maybe things would be ok? 

Jimmy Swaggert was a big deal in our house. He was a skilled piano player and when we watched him the television camera would often focus in on his hands gliding over the keys. He sang with a tear in his eye. My mother was enthralled. She hung on his every word. I believe she felt very connected to him and watching him on television helped her to feel less alone. She would sing along while watching and her face would soften. Those were the only times I saw that look on her face. 

I can remember so many nights when she would retreat to her room after dinner to pray. Often she would watch Jimmy Swaggert or listen to some music beforehand. I would watch television with the volume down low so I would not disturb her. As the night would wear on I would wander over to the door of her bedroom and slump down to the floor listening to her wail and speak in tongues. I hated to hear her cry and I knew she was waging a battle. She was trying to convince god to help us. She was trying to pray away whatever sin was standing in the way of us being blessed. She was fighting for her salvation because she was always afraid of missing the rapture and going to hell. It was high stakes prayer, that was the only kind of prayer ever said in our home. All of this crying, praying, wailing, and speaking in tongues did nothing to make our little apartment feel like a home. There was an intensity to my mothers religiosity that created an atmosphere of danger and fear. 

Childcare was always a struggle in our home. Working an eight hour day was hard enough but then add in overtime and a second job and finding childcare becomes impossible. I never really cared for any of my babysitters and I suspect that is because my mother did not trust or like many people and she handed that suspicion down to me. My father could not be counted on for more than a couple of hours, maybe once a week. She could never afford to take off work to be with me over Xmas, spring, or summer break. I wanted so desperately to help her so I would tell her that it was ok I didn’t need a babysitter. She would look at me so unsure. She weighed my opinion heavily too much because I was just a small child and had no idea what was appropriate or safe. I wish she hadn’t given in so easily. I wish she hadn’t let me try to solve her problems for her or be her savior. It did not help that my father was always telling me I was smarter and more capable than other children. He thought pretty highly of himself and since I was his child and in his mind an extension of him then I must be above average. 

I remember times when it felt like I held my parents’ fate in my hands. I had to keep them together and I had to help them survive. I was responsible for their emotional well being and safety. When they would have one of their knock down drag out fights my father would cry on my shoulder. After he left our apartment my mother would collapse and it would be her turn to cry. As I’m writing this I remember how small I felt in those moments. How insurmountable the problems of my family seemed to be and how these things happened regularly. In these moments I have to really focus on loving myself and cutting myself some slack. You see, I have complex post traumatic stress disorder. As I document all of this it is like watching the seeds of my condition being put into the ground one after the other. I am aware of how small and defenseless I was to stop any of it, and that realization helps me to breathe through the process of being gentle with myself and remembering that none of this was my fault. Even at 51 I need that reminder sometimes. 

My mother was more than my mom; she was my best friend and I believed I was her best friend. The healthy boundaries between parent and child would often melt away in the midst of her depression and loneliness. She overshared and because of that, I was also depressed. I worried about money, my parent’s relationship, and God. She was my mother but I was her caretaker. I cannot remember a time when I was allowed to be a child. I carried my parent’s burdens with me everywhere. They went with me to school, the playground, and then at bedtime they followed me there too. My mother’s burdens were scary. I worried for her safety and at a young age I knew that sometimes she wanted to die. 

Because of all of this worry I started to develop some pretty severe stomach issues in early elementary school. I would go to the nurse’s office with stomach cramps and it didn’t take long before the school psychologist became involved. Eventually after talking with me several times he asked my mother to come in. I sat there fearing what he was going to say to her. Had I told him more than I should have? She came into the room and sat in one of the hard plastic chairs across from his desk. They talked and I tried to pretend like I wasn’t there. I felt like I was being a problem. The last thing I ever wanted to do was add another problem to my mother’s plate. If I’m being honest I was probably a little scared of her at that moment. She always told me to never discuss things from our home life with anyone. How was she going to take the fact that I had been talking with another adult about my life?

He said, “Do you have any idea why she might be so stressed?” 

She replied, “Well her father and I are having problems and I’m having money issues.”

They went on to talk for a long time. My mother cried and told this complete stranger all of her whoas. I felt so seen. At school I tried to hide my unhappy life. Now my unhappy life was on display. Eventually towards the end of the conversation he said, “You have to find a way not to share all of your problems with your daughter. She is going to end up with ulcers before she finishes elementary school.” I recognized his tone, he was speaking to her like someone trying to talk someone down from a ledge. Telling her the hard truth but doing it with kid gloves. Soon after we went home but now I was on the school’s radar. I would meet with him from time to time but that was as far as it went. After this I witnessed my mother recount the story to multiple people. She seemed worried and put off by his expectation that she hide her problems from me. She couldn’t imagine how that would work. She hated anyone knowing what went on inside of our lives. I knew I had created a problem for her. I never received any help for my “nervous stomach”. As an adult I have struggled with ulcers, IBS, and GERD. Whenever I experience stress it shows up in my stomach first. Eventually she would have a similar meeting with another school psychologist, this time it would be my senior year of high school. The message was very much the same. Dr. Zuberbear asked for her to come in and he told her I was very depressed. By this point she was physically sick and struggling. She listened and even expressed sympathy after we left but that was all she had to give me. From the earliest of ages my mental health was mine to manage. She just didn’t have the bandwidth. 

My father would tell me that I had a nervous stomach like him. He would tell me not to worry while at the same time laying his worries at my feet. He would also tell me that my depression was a weakness and that it came from my mother’s side. She was “weak minded” and I should endeavor to be strong like him. Anytime I had physical issues it was due to my mother, at least that is what my father said. My allergies and later asthma were a result of her weak genes, he was after all healthy as a horse. I spent my entire childhood and young adulthood being worried about being “crazy”, as my father put it. I worried that I would have my mother’s mental health issues and emotional instability. This concern forced me to always be an “adult”. I strove for emotional balance and I tried to let my intelligence and logic rule. Now I struggle to access my emotional side and often I see any emotional outburst I might have as a moral failing. I’m still striving to always be an “adult.”

Childhood, Depression, Fear

Back to Writing

Hi everyone! I have been in a writing slump for a long time. I am back on the horse for the time being and I intend to share some of my pages here. I’m open to feedback either in the comments or better yet at my email survivingchurchandchildhood@gmail.com Please be kind, memoir is really hard.

This morning I find myself sitting with my coffee at my lonely laptop. I am banging away at the keys trying to pound my story out onto the page. This feels like just another new start. It is filled with hope, maybe this time will be the time when everything gels together. Fall always feels like the right time to write. There is something about the cool mornings that drives me to try again. I have been away from this work for a long time and then suddenly there it is in my face beckoning me back to this lonely task. On days like this the words burn through my fingertips, they cannot escape my brain fast enough. Being a Gemini part of my brain just wants to put words to page and part of my brain wants to craft the perfect memoir. These two parts are always at odds and through this struggle, I push this work into existence. 

I have been seeking to make sense of my childhood for as long as I can remember. Even though I recognize that there are some things I will never understand I feel compelled to keep searching for truth. Truth is wobbly when you are talking about others’ motivations and when they are no longer around to ask your questions to. I am a quintessential gen-Xer born in 1970. I was a latch-key kid with my house keys always around my neck. I grew up in  Madison Wisconsin and I’m still in the area. I wonder how many others are out there like me. Wounded souls trying to make sense of their childhoods through writing memoirs. Looking back all I see is trauma, fear, and sadness. When I look a little harder I can see moments of creativity, freedom, and joy. Those moments are much harder to reach for. I can guarantee that there will be times when my story overwhelms you, just know as you continue on with me that I am okay now, I’m a survivor. 

Throughout my childhood fear was my constant companion. It hung in the air like a thick cloud around me and its friend sadness clung to me like an old thread worn sweater. Fear was brewed first at home followed by my church and school. My mother was a very fearful woman and she passed her fear onto me the same way she gave me my freckles and my smile.  She was tough but at the same time, it seemed like she was always scanning the landscape looking for danger. On the other side of the coin, my father insisted that I be strong and fearless. He has zero tolerance for weakness unless he was the one being weak. He and my mother were like the sun and the moon. How they ever got together is beyond me. At this moment I cannot think of one way in which they were alike other than their tendency towards being fixed on themselves. My mother suffered from severe depression and her childhood was pretty dysfunctional. My grandmother was a severe parent and my mother always felt like an outsider within her family. My father has always been a mystery to me. His accounts of his origin story seemed to vary and there were many topics he had no interest in talking about. My parents never seemed happy although they did seem to really love each other. They certainly were ill-suited for the long haul and could barely take care of themselves let alone each other. Looking back on it now, I think they loved each other more than they loved me. 

My mother was pretty in a tomboy sort of way. She was dark-haired and covered from head to toe in freckles. Her green eyes were the prettiest eyes I’ve ever seen. She was not the most domestic woman in the world. She viewed housekeeping as a chore and not something to be enjoyed. She wasn’t much of a cook and had no interest in learning to be better at it. She was all about comfort food and she did that well. She felt the most at ease in nature and preferred the company of dogs and horses to being around people. When my mother was around people she could be very charming and those who knew her liked her more than she could ever acknowledge to herself. She was an artist and could draw almost anything. Her family valued music and so she learned multiple instruments and she was a gifted singer. Marla, my mother, loved to laugh and her playfulness created some of the only happy memories of my childhood. When I was in elementary school we did not have much furniture in our living room but it did not matter. She and I would snuggle on the floor, backs against the wall, and enjoy one of our favorite shows. No TV night would be complete without a bowl of hazelnuts, a nutcracker, and generic grape soda. Those nights were my favorite. In those moments we laughed together and I could breathe a sigh of relief. 

My father was short and his skin a chocolate brown color. He always seemed to have something to prove. He was a boxer and fairly ambitious. Armando, my father had a boyish smile and an impish sense of humor. He was a whistler and sang along to the radio even if he often got the lyrics wrong. People liked him and he liked them back. Depression could come knocking at his door if he spent too much time alone. My athleticism and tenaciousness come from him. He was a wanderer and philanderer and often these tendencies took him away from me. I chased his affection long after it became clear to me that he only wanted mine when he could not get it other places. I was a consolation prize, a toaster when what he really wanted was a boat. 

I loved my parents fiercely! My love for them was strong but this does not mean they were good parents. They were flawed as all of us are and they were tortured by personal demons. My mother came from a strict religious home and her upbringing informed much of her parenting style. Growing up outside of her family’s love and acceptance made it so she never felt accepted or loved. I believe this crippled her and made it hard for her to give love and acceptance. She was deeply lonely even when friends tried to be there for her. It was never enough or she just couldn’t believe that they “really” liked her. She had a dark deep hole inside and it seemed it could never be filled. Her sadness and fear permeated every part of our lives. Even the material objects within our home seemed to take on her personality. Heavy and oppressive miasma clung to everything. She could go from being jovial and childlike one minute to screaming and violent the next. I learned very early on to be careful what I said to her. If something was going to get me into trouble it would most likely be my mouth. Often her anger came from unexpected places. She always seemed to believe I understood why she was raging even when I often did not. When in a loving mood she would pour out affection on me and when in an angry mood she could be petty and mean. She would spank me but also pinch me, pull my hair, and twist my wrists. It was as if all of these little acts of violence lanced some painful wound within her. People who cut themselves sometimes say that when you do it it releases some of your pain, I think her hurting me did the same thing. It’s like it kept her from doing something worse. 

My father often spoke of being emotionally and physically abused as a child. He was generally mellow in personality but at times his anger would flare. Both my parents spanked me with a belt but my father was the one most likely to take it too far. If I did not meet his high expectations he could be cruel with his words. Weakness seemed to send him into anger faster than anything else. My mother played by God’s rules as she understood them and my father played by no one’s rules but his own. He was very unconventional and independent. At times I miss them and my inner child longs for my mother. At other times the flames of anger burn within me so brightly I could set the world ablaze. It is all very complicated and I have had to come to terms with many truths about my childhood.  If this book were about my parents it might be written from a place of more understanding and questioning what led them to be who they were, but this story is not their story it is mine. There was a time when I went through my life seeking to make excuses for their choices but I can no longer do that. I have to put myself first in a way that neither of them ever could. I find myself shouting to them from across the years, “Can’t you see how your choices are affecting me? Please get some help for yourself and for me!”