
Linda's Story
Hi. How to start? (Ive just got to get past this
first line!) There, Ive done it!
My story begins when I was a small child. By the age
of 4, I knew to listen for my fathers footsteps coming towards
my room to tuck me into bed at night. I learned young how to cope
with Daddys game. Many a night I spent having a
tea party in my mind while we played his game.
I dont know what to say. My father abused me for
most of childhood. He made me feel special and dirty and terrified
all at the same time. Sometimes I secretly yearned for his attention.
Always my skin crawled as he touched me and my mind and my emotions
left as I touched him.
As I write this, Im stepping so far away from
it that once again it seems like it happened to another person and
not to me. I became so adept at distancing myself from his abuse as
a child that as an adult its difficult to stay present long
enough to talk about what he did. I feel as if it happened to someone
else and my mind took a video of it for me to take out and look at
it from a safer distance.
My father first raped me when I was 8 years old. The
abuse ended when I was 13. No one in my family believes that my father
could do such a horrendous thing. After all, hes always been
so disgusted by child molesters. And hes always
so insistent that his girls be modest in his presence. How could such
a man ever, ever molest one of his own children?
And the fact that I repressed the memories of my abuse
for years only adds to my familys disbelief. They dont
want to accept the awful truth about the man they love. They would
rather believe that somehow, Lindas psychological and emotional
problems come form some other unknown and less threatening reason.
Im the sick one in the family who needs to be treated
with kid gloves lest I slip off the edge of sanity never to return
again.
Its so ironic that they all feel that they need
to be careful of me and protect me as an adult. For so many years,
when I really needed protection, no one was there to help me. I had
to learn to help myself. I learned how to protect myself as a child
and in the process I became stronger than anyone realizes. I survived.
Today I still struggle with self-esteem issues, depression,
anxiety, and an inability to maintain close relationships. I say I
struggle. I am not defeated. I grow slowly and heal one
step at a time. Life is good some days and not so good others. Whats
important to me is that I continue growing and that I remember to
be good to me.
We all need that self care. That positive self love.
The child in each of us was devastated and we, as adults are the only
ones that can bring our inner selves out of the shadows and into the
light. One, gentle, self-caring step at a time.
Linda J