Fight or…No, Just Fight: Part 2

In families where there has been domestic violence, children often grow up, go their separate ways and never look back. I was the first to leave, joining the Army at 17, with my mother’s signature and a camouflage farewell cake topped with plastic army men. I wanted to pay for college. I wanted to escape a small town history. But mostly I wanted to fulfill my personal mission: To be strong enough so that no one could ever hurt or threaten me again. It was an illusion, this external pursuit of power. Everything twisted was on the inside.

My military intelligence unit was flush with immature, aspiring alcoholics like myself. My boyfriend was always that guy that would get drunk and bust his hand punching the wall near my head at a party. He was the one who quickly reverted to calling me a whore or bitch when I looked at him wrong or didn’t leave with him when he insisted. I had re-created home. I could spend six months out of the year out in the field, drink grown men under the table and haul heavy gear with the best of them. I was tough. But I was very afraid and very alone.

Change cannot be dictated – it comes in tiny shifts of consciousness. In 1987, a little girl named Elizabeth (Lisa Steinberg) Launders was killed by her adoptive father. She was 6 years old and her picture showed up in a lot of magazines. She looked a lot like me at that age. I kept a picture of her in my journal. I began to have vigilante dreams. Occasionally I would gun down my stepfather in a gory fight. Sometimes I was a superhero, stopping muggings and beatings. When I saw the movie “Prince of Tides”, I had a panic attack during the dysfunctional family dinner scene. The fear and the violence was leaving my brain and getting into the rest of my body.

I started to run. If Forrest Gump just popped into your head, well, that was in my head, too. I ran and ran, getting stronger, giving up smoking every other day and giving up drinking entirely. Little choices for positive change on my behalf yielded to bigger decisions – moving, changing jobs, shaking off relationships. Sometimes, it seems a mystery to me how I got here from there. Each step was so small, so incremental.

I met and married a good and honorable man. I had a beautiful child. But becoming a parent had awakened a sleeping giant. I began to dream about the first time I ever saw my mother beaten, when I was 7. I feared that I would not be a good parent for my daughter. I went to therapy for a year. I went to parent education classes. I did what I needed to do to fix myself.

Three years ago, I decided to become stronger, not tougher. I hired a trainer. I got a membership at the local Y. I began to workout regularly and strenuously. Two and a half years ago, I started training in taekwondo. And that brings me to my current black eye.  Getting hit has a way of tapping into my personal rage against powerlessness. I feel it at the edges of my brain – this desire to cause pain. I feel it whenever I read a news story about another hurt child. It’s there and I don’t think it will ever go away.

There is no neat bow to tie my story up. Violence taught me to lie to avoid getting hit. Violence taught me to hate perpetrators. It did not teach me discipline or self-control. Desire to be something more than a victim made me whole. Love made me whole. Love of myself, love of the life I wish to live. I’ve found ways of dealing with the rage that lurks within. Sometimes it’s humor. When my daughter acts up, I’ll say “Alright, it’s time for a stick beating”. She runs away laughing, a child who has never had a hand raised against her. I channel my frustrations into a pounding run or a session on the speed bag or sitting down and writing it out. Rage and violence informs my life, but so do love and compassion and self-control. It’s a fight I can win.

16 thoughts on “Fight or…No, Just Fight: Part 2

    • I am proud and grateful as well. Sometimes writing it down makes me all the more thankful, because I forget, at times, where I started. I know there’s more to learn – we can never completely shake off our beginnings, but I feel good about getting to this point.

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  1. Awesome; just awesome! And again words don’t seem very adequate. I think sometimes the best lessons are those we learn through pain and sweat and even blood. You have a warrior’s heart; I think you always did. Blessings on your house and your continuing journey.

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  2. Your story is a perfect example of how dynamic life can be. When you are in a rough spot it seems like you will never get out, but slow and small changes add up and make us into different (sometimes unrecognizable) people with the ability to inspire change in others.

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  3. My brothers didn’t have kids because they worried about what they might do to them. The rest of us did a good job with ours while struggling with our baggage.

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  4. So eloquently written, thanks for sharing your story! I’m so glad you’ve managed to come out on the right side of things, it takes a strong person to process a childhood such as the one you’ve described.

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  5. Pingback: Charity Case | Jerod Brennen – Multiplatform Storyteller

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