Scariest Time Of My Life – Part I

This is a reposting of a series of posts I wrote several months ago.  It is about my stay at a state run psychiatric hospital.  Several people had asked me what it had been like there, so I decided that it would be easier to repost what I had already written.  Please keep in mind that this was written several months ago, when I was in a different frame of mind. 

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Not all of this story can be or should be told in one sitting.  There is too much that happens and is also very difficult for me to talk about to even attempt to put it all in here at one time. 

I have been on medication for my major depression and anxiety since I attempted to commit suicide at the end of May.  I also have been seeing a counselor once a week.  My counselor warned me up front that it could take several months to find the proper medication for me.  She was correct.  I took three different combinations of medications before we found a combination that we thought was working.  I was feeling very encouraged and thought that things were finally headed in the proper direction.
For whatever reason, there came a week when I was not seeing my counselor.  It was sometime in August.  I think all of her appointments were filled for that week or something and things had been going well, so neither one of us were worried.  She did say that if I ever needed her I could call her and she would work me in some how.

Without me realizing it my depression symptoms started sneaking up on me again.  I became very angry, too angry.  I was too sad, crying, and just was not able to maintain myself.  I had not experienced a set back like that so I did not realize that what was happening was that my medication was not working.  Things went on like this for four days.  Then one day things just seem to suddenly seemed to take a major turn for the worse.  I felt the same way I did when I tried to commit suicide.  It happened to be time for me to take my other medications, and I found myself thinking that I could just start taking extra medication, over a few hours like I did when I tried to kill myself.  Doing that way is fairly effective because the medication has tmie to get in your system and they cannot pump your stomach to remove it, also it prevents you from vomiting it back up.  I opened up my first bottle of medication, it happened to be my Beta Blocker.  I took what I was supposed to and then took ten extra.  I was getting ready to take my other medication and do the same thing, take a few extra.  Then in about an hour repeat the process. 

Suddenly it dawned on me what it was I was doing.  I mean really and truly in the forefront of my mind, I realized on every level that I was trying to kill myself again, that something was horribly wrong, and even though I wanted to die, I knew that I really did not want to.  I did not take anymore medication.  I made the decision to call my counselor and talk to her because I knew that she would be able to help me get side tracked onto something else so that I would not continue through with my suicide attempt and plans.  I was thinking as I dialed the phone and it was ringing that I was doing what she told me to do and calling her when I was having trouble and that everything would be OK. 

When the receptionist answered the phone, I let her know that I needed to speak to my counselor.  That is when I found out she was not in that day.  I explained the the receptionist that I did not have an appointment with my counselor that week but I have run into some problems and would she please set up an appointment for me to see my counselor the next day.  I told her the truth about everything, I have told my family that I would always be honest during my treatment/recovery process, and the receptionist said that my counselor did not have anything available for the next day.  However, she could transfer me to their crises line and they would be able to get me an emergency appointment.  I was still feeling like everything would be OK, because I had called for help and that I would be able to see my counselor the next day. 

After a few minutes on hold someone from the crisis line picks up the phone on their end.  She asked me what was going on.  I explained to her that I had not been feeling “right” for several days, and that a few minutes ago I had taken extra of my beta blocker and had planned to take extra of all my medications and repeat the process in an hour and keep on until I had committed suicide.  I also explained that I had tried to call my counselor and get in to see her, but she did not have anything available, and that I was told that the crisis line could set me up an emergency appointment with her.  I believe the fact that I told the crisis line lady the whole truth, about my suicide plans caused her a great deal of worry. 

She let me know that she was very concerned about me, since I had already started implementing my suicide plan.  She let me know that she felt that I needed to have their crisis team come to my house and assess me.  Of course I told her no, that I was fine, I just needed that appointment with my counselor.  She then gave me another option, I can allow the crisis team to come to my house and assess me OR she could send an ambulance and a sheriff deputy to my house to take me to the local emergency room against my will.  I chose the crisis team. 

The crisis team shows up to my house.  There is a psychologist and a security officer.  My daughter is very confused and concerned about what is going on.  We live so far out in the country that we do not get visitors often and under normal circumstances I would not invite two men I did not know into my house.  I ask my daughter to go to her room, while I talk to these men.  I repeated the whole story.  I had been experiencing a bad four days, I took extra of one of my medications, and had planned to do that with the others, and then I was going to repeat the process again in an hour.  However, when I realized what I was doing I tried to call my counselor so that she and I could talk and figure out what was going on.  And all that I really felt like I needed was to be able to get in to see her the next day.  I was convinced they would see things my way, because after all, I had called for help before I finished implementing my whole plan.

The next thing I know, the psychologist is letting me know that he feels I really need to be in a hospital setting.  That he feels my medication is not working properly and that he is afraid to let me stay at home since I have a “plan”.  I gulped.  I said “no”.  I said “I am fine”.  I said “you can leave now”.  Then they pulled out their trump card.  They are obligated by law to make sure I went to the hospital and I could go one of two ways.  I could get a family member to drive me there, with them following, or they could call an ambulance and a sheriff’s deputy.  All the time they are saying this, I am thinking that all I had been trying to do was get help from my counselor, how in the hell can this be happening?  I was in shock and I really did not understand what just happened, except that for some reason these people think I need to go to the hospital.

I called my husband and told him just a very little bit.  I called my grandmother and asked her if she could take me to the hospital, I talked to my daughter and told her t
hat “these nice men were worried about me and think I need to go be checked out at the hospital”.  I still remember being in shock.

My grandmother got there as I was packing a few things in a bag.  I was still in shock.  She wanted to know what was going on and all I could say was that these men felt like I needed to be checked out at the hospital.  I could not articulate anything else.  I asked her to just drop me off at the hospital, and that I would be taken care of.  I was still in shock.

The  crisis team followed us all the way to the hospital.  I got out of the car and the psychologist got out of their car.  I remember my grandmother going up to him and telling him that he better take care of me.  I think she was crying or was very close to it. 

He walked me into the hospital and left me at the front desk with the lady there.  I guess I had to have someone supervise me.  He went back and talked to a nurse or doctor, or both.  Within five minutes I was called back to triage and then taken to a room in the emergency department.

To be continued….

Scariest Time Of My Life – Part II

Beginnings – Part V

By the time I was eighteen, I had run away from home twice. On one of those occasions, the reason I ran away is that my mother had told me she did not want me around.  So it made sense in my head to leave.  When my mother asked me why I had run away and I told her that, her response was something like she had said that a few days before.  The impression I got was that since she had said it a few days before I ran away that by the time I ran away she thought I should have been over it.   I am not sure if she was truly not aware of the impact that her words had on me or if she was deliberately acting as if it should have been no big deal.

The first time I ever tried to harm myself was after the slapping episode with my mother.  That was the first time I had ever tried to stop her when she was doing something to me and I was filled with an enormous amount of guilt afterwards.  To punish myself for slapping her back, I took a curing iron and held it on the back of my left hand until there was a horrible looking burn there. It was also around that age that I had some wisdom teeth pulled and was given some pain medicine. I took several of those thinking that would be enough to kill me.   My family never knew about that incident and for whatever reason made no comment about the burn on the back of my hand. 

Based on what I know now, I think I was extremely depressed through part of my high school career.  There were times when I was very cranky and short tempered with my other class mates, my lack of interest in my school work, and except for Lee, I isolated myself from people.  I had a fatalistic attitude about my life.  I assumed  that I would not live to see my twentieth birthday. I did not have any thing specific in mind that would be the reason that I would not live to twenty, I think it was just an over all view that I had about my life.

I was an angry and bitter person for many years. Like many young women who feel unloved and rejected I acted out inappropriately with men who were more than willing to take advantage of my vulnerabilities.  As a result, I have felt a great deal of shame for many years.  I do think I have reached a point where I understand that being angry and bitter are exhausting and a waste of time, and that it is time to put the shame aside.

Unfortunately, habits and behaviors that you have grown up with are very difficult to put aside.  I started off my life with the glass always being half empty and that is how I looked at things when I became an adult.  The constant worry and anxiousness I felt growing up, had become such a part of me that up until recently I did not realize that there can be days, weeks and even months where I do not wake up with a knot in the pit of my stomach and waiting for the other shoe to drop.

Beginnings – Part IV

All three years of middle school were pretty much the same.  I had poor grades, I was constantly in trouble, I was fitting in much better now, and the relationship with my mother was, well it was, still pretty crappy.  If anything it was worse.

It was time for me to start high school.  I was so excited about my first day of high school that I did not sleep at all the night before I was to start.  I fully intended to keep my grades better in high school than I had the previous years.  That did not happen.  What happened instead is that the teachers would hand out the books and I would go ahead and read everything in the literature book on the first day of school, I would look at the list of books we would be required that year and I would discover that I had already read most of them and went ahead and read the ones I had not yet.  I even read the stupid vocabulary book from cover to cover, and most of the time if I chose to, I could repeat the definition of the vocabulary word, word for word with no mistakes.

My high school was so crowded that the freshman and sophmores had to start much earlier than the upper classmen did.  When class time hit, I was bored because I already knew the material or could learn it really fast, and tired from having to get up so early.  I did what most teenagers would have done in that situation…….I slept through class.  That meant I hardly ever completed my work, and of course my grades were awful.       

This was the time in my life when I actually was able to have a “best friend”  We had lived in Georgia for a number of years and as far as I knew we would not be moving anytime soon, so it was a safe time to get close to someone.  Lee (name changed since I do not have her permission to use it here) never knew how much her friendship meant to me.  The neighborhood she lived in was right next to mine and I spent a lot of time with her and her family.  I spent most of my high school career grounded.  The only thing I could do was ride my bike.  Whenever I could I would sneak off on my bike and go to her house.

I know my parents wanted the best for me.  I know they did the best they knew how when I was growing up, it is unfortunate that their best was not sufficient.  I think they were at a loss in some ways as to why I would do so poorly in school and had such poor social skills, when in the past the opposite had been true.  Doing poorly in school was a choice on my part, I was certainly more than capable of doing what I was supposed to do.  The lack of social skill was mostly because I was still choosing self isolating behavior.  I lacked the full understanding myself as to why I changed like that and I think even if I had the understanding, I still would not have gone to my parents and told them.  It was not until I was an adult and was carefully examining my childhood that I was able to pin point why I changed into someone who did not care about much that was around her.   The change began the moment my mother did not believe me about the creepy old guy feeling me up.

The pervading feelings I had all through my teenage years were that I was unloved, dis-liked, rejected and a disappointment to others.  For the most part those feelings are associated with my mother.  She was still very easy to set off, she still said humilliating and cruel things, and often when I was around her, I felt as if she did not want me there.  My father was still gone most of the time.

Life continued to get worse in my house.  My mother was trying to keep up appearances with her friends, so the person she portrayed to them was not the person I knew at home.  The person I knew at home was the one that told me I would never be anything, that I was stupid and while she was saying these things, have me sweep the floor and tell me I would grow up to be nothing but a maid.  She was the woman that slapped me so hard and so many times in a row, when I had braces on that I felt the only way to make her stop was to slap back.  I know I was angry that she was so good at hiding what she was really like and people just thought I was a “bad seed”.

I think it was when I was around eighteen that I did my first self destructive act.

To be continued

Beginnings – Part V will be out tomorrow

Beginnings – Part III

The little town in Spain that we lived in was great from a child’s perspective.  There was sort of a pack of us kids that wandered around and had fun together.  We were good kids, the biggest trouble we got into was when we stepped on the grass in the park.  The grounds keeper was very protective of his grass.  Most of our weekends were spent hanging out at the ice skating rink, where the boys practiced their hockey and their girls practiced their figure skating.  When we were not skating we  were getting topas off of the topa bar and playing video games.  Even our school bus was fantastic compared to the school buses we have here, it was a tourist bus, nice soft seats, a bathroom, and was very big.  We  could walk to the movie theaters on our own, they did not sell refreshments at the movie theater so we would stop at the corner candy store and load up.  I saw real gypsies in the court yard of the local church.  For the most part, I have good memories of living there.

Next to the park we used to play at, there was an old abandoned mansion that the kids loved to hang out in.  There was a huge flag pole that had a long rope hanging down.  It had been tied in a loop at the bottom, and we would sit inside the loop and swing, each of us taking turns pushing each other.  Sometimes a few of the mothers would get together and all of us kids with the mother’s would go to the park together.  On one of these a outings, as usual we all decided to head over to the mansion and swing and hang out.  When we got there we saw an older man near where we liked to swing.  As much as I had traveled, I was a very naive girl in a lot of ways.  Nothing about the scene appeared the least little bit wrong to me.

The older man started talking to all of us kids, we talked back, he seemed very nice.  He offered to push us as we swung.  I must have been the first or one of the first kids to go.  When he pushed me, he started touching me in places that adults should never touch children.  I knew that was wrong, so I got off of the rope, tried to get the other kids to leave with me, only my brother did and went to where my mother was.  I can remember not really knowing what words to use to express to my mother what happened to me, but I finally was able to tell her.  She did not believe me.  She flat did not believe what I told her happened was true.  I was more devastated by that than some strange old guy touching me inappropriately.  It was not until another child came and told his mother that the same thing happened to him that she realized I was telling the truth.  I was never upset that no police were called, or that nothing happened to the old guy.  We were living in a foreign country, in a place that had an active terrorist group, none of us were fluent in the language, and even though being felt up by an old guy is completely wrong, it really could have been worse.  I strongly believe that my mother not believing me when I told her about what happened was sort of a turning point for me.  I felt betrayed. Things in my mind and behavior started to go downhill from there.    

I remember it being the first time I got in trouble for my school work not being the best I could do.  This was when I also started staying by myself during recess and reading instead of playing with the other kids.  This is when I remember the self isolating behavior started.

At some point the terrorist group, ETA, got a little upset with the Americans being over there.  The situation became dangerous for us there.  When we came back to the states and was staying at my grandparents house for Christmas break, my parents made the decision that only my father would go back to Spain, and my mother and me and my brother would stay in the States.  This was a very stressful time for me.  I am sure it was for my brother and mother as well.  I was worried about my father going back to some place that was not safe, I was worried about starting school in the middle of the year, I was missing my friends, and I was missing living in Spain.

Because we did not have a house when the decision was made for us to stay in Georgia, we stayed with my grandparents.  They lived in a very small house.  My grandfather’s personality made things tense while we were there.  I think the stress of everything got to my mother a great deal.  She was very harsh during that time.   By the time school started, I think my parents had found a house, but we could not move in right away because the people we were buying the house from still had to move out.  That meant my mother had to drive us to and from school everyday.  My grades were awful, I do not recall caring about my school work much.  Some days those car rides were a living hell.  My mother would yell, scream and insult me the whole time we were in the car, and that would be punctuated by the periodic slap across the face.  Once or twice she told me not to say anything to my grandparents. It was about this time in my life when I developed extremely low self esteem and began to fill as if I was very stupid, beliefs that have stayed with me. 

The kids in school were tough.  Because of living over seas, we wore clothes that were not the fashion in the States, yet.  About six months after we got back to the States the clothes were “in”.  The kids were cruel, and I am sure that with all I had going on at home I did not have the best attitude towards other people.  There were days where it felt like I was surrounded by cruel and mean people, both at school, and at my grandparents house, when my mother was around.  I felt that I had no one I could go to.  The self isolating behavior continued.

To be continued…

Beginnings – Part III will come out tomorrow

Beginnings – Part II

In many ways the frequent moves were  wonderful experiences that most children do not get. In other ways each and every move and adapting to new people, new locations, and new situations was filled with so much stress and uncertainty that I felt miserable.  I do believe my mother and father did the best they knew how in trying to keep each move from causing as little instability as possible.  Most of the time we moved when school was out for the summer.  However, the draw back to that is most of the time my father had to head to the new place we were living weeks or months before we could join him.  Sometimes we did not have a house to live in when we got there.  There were times when we spent weeks and weeks in a hotel while we waited for my parents to find us a place to live.  I can remember always feeling a bit of anxiousness because things often seemed so uncertain when we moved.

I cannot be sure, but I would think that uncertainty probably caused my mother a great deal of stress as well.  It seemed that the more stress she was experiencing, the more difficult she was to be around.  She would anger more easily, say cruel things more often, and if her stress was very bad, there would be some physical abuse as well.

Since I knew that we would be moving soon, I never really made friends.  There were kids I did things with, and played with but even from a young age, I never made a friend that I would miss when we moved again.  I learned the art of self isolation at a very young age.  Any time I had to walk into a class room as the new kid, it was so hard.  I never knew if the kids in the class were going to like me, or what the teacher would be like, if I was going to know as much as the other kids did, and would I be able to find a way to fit in.  I felt this constant internal pressure.  Pressure to fit in (once again) in a new place, pressure to do well in school, a huge pressure from my parents (mostly from my mother) to adapt well to my new surroundings, and a constant pressure to not upset my mother.

Despite the fact that I spent the majority of my early childhood in “fight or flight” mode, I did manage to adapt (most of the time) each time we moved.  This is how I learned the very valuable tool of hiding what you were really feeling, and make it look like everything was OK, even when on the inside you knew it was not.  From the time I turned nine and on it became harder and harder as each year passed to adapt to my surroundings and to fake that everything was OK.

I cannot point to one thing that led to my spiraling down emotionally.  Instead I think it was a combination of some pretty drastic and stressful events that, as a child, I did not have the skills to express.  Instead what I did is intensify my self isolating behavior, no longer bothered to  try and get along with my peers, and stopped trying to adapt to my surroundings and situation. I spent more and more of my time and energy in a “fight or flight” mode. 

Around about the time I turned nine, we moved to Spain.  This was a difficult move for me even before the actual move took place.  When we found out that we were moving to Spain, we were living in Vicksburg, Mississippi.  I remember when we first  got to Mississippi, I had asked my father if we were going to stay there “forever”, and he had told me that we would.  So when the news came that we were moving and where we were moving to, in many ways I was devastated.  My brother and I were sent to stay with my grandparents for at least a month, while my parents went through all of our belongings and decided what would go into storage here in the States and what they would have shipped (by boat) to Spain.  If I remember correctly, the company my father was working for would pay the shipping costs up to a certain weight, and so the whole family was limited on what could be sent to Spain.

By this point in my childhood, I was nervous all the time.  I was constantly worried, stressed and anxious about what would upset my mother and those feelings were carried over to almost any situation I encountered.  The uncertainties in my life also caused me to be very anxious most of the time.  Sometimes those feelings would make themselves known to other people in the most unexpected ways.

Once my parents got things sorted out with our belongings it was time for me and my brother to get some vaccinations or have some blood drawn.  Either way it was something that involved needles. I do not recall being all that upset in the past about needles, but I think because of the stress of all that was going on, I become over anxious, extra worried, and even more stressed out than usual.  About the time the nurse was going to stick me with the needle, I screamed.  My brother must have been experiencing some of the same feelings I had been and my scream was a little more than his poor, little kid nerves could take.  The next thing we all knew, he was running down the hall, to get away from my mother and the nurses.  They were chasing him as fast as they could go.  However, even at a young age my brother was a very fast runner.  He probably would have made a clean get away but the elevator door was not open on our floor. 

That is a funny tale about my brother, but when I look at it from my perspective now, I can see that he too, might have been experiencing a great deal of stress at an early age.  In fact if the researchers and their studies are correct, that means starting at an early time in our childhoods, our brain chemistry was being permanently altered. 

Once we arrived in Spain we spent several months in a hotel, because it took a while for our furniture to get there.  My brother and I had the run of the hotel.  The staff let us get away with entirely too much, but some of my best childhood memories are from when we stayed in that hotel.

We lived in the Basque area of Spain.  There was terrorism there, there were civil police standing on street corners with machine guns.  It was very different from life in the States, but up until something happened to me, I enjoyed living there a great deal.

To be continued….

Beginnings – Part III will come out tomorrow.

Beginnings – Part I

As you read this story, I ask that you keep in mind that it is not meant to be a “poor me” story, but instead it is me being completely truthful for the first in my life about all the things that contributed to my depression.  There will be some talk about physical abuse, emotional abuse, and sexual abuse.  Unless I feel that it is beneficial to the story and to people’s understanding, for the most part I will not be discussing in detail the actual acts of abuse that took place.  There are enough blogs, books, movies and TV shows where people can go and get the details of an abuse act that I feel that it is not necessary for me to include them here.  

My doctor, counselor, friends and family have all wanted to know “when did the depression start?”  With friends and family it is easy to say that it started three years ago when I was diagnosed with Adult Onset Asthma.  My doctor and counselor know that it is not the whole truth.  The whole truth is that I have suffered from depression on and off probably most of my life.  It is only that in the last three years that it became debilitating. 

There is a link between childhood trauma/stressors and people who develop major depression.   In fact, in the research I have done, I have discovered that many experts agree that in most cases of significant adult depression, that some form of abuse was experienced in childhood.  That could be physical abuse, sexual abuse, or emotional abuse. Early traumatic experiences, that repeatedly trigger the body’s “fight or flight” stress response can lead to permanent changes in brain chemistry.  Combine these brain chemistry changes to a genetic predisposition for depression and it is almost guaranteed that the person will end up experiencing major depression at least once in their lifetime.

Based on things I remember and my experiences now, I believe strongly that my mother suffers from her own mental health issue.  I am certainly not a professional health care worker, but there are certain things I recognize in her behavior (past and present) that are similar to my own when my depression is out of control. I do know that my grandfather suffered severe anxieties when he was alive.  Things that happened to him during World War II made them worse, but my personal belief is that the anxieties were probably there before the war.  My grandmother has anxiety issues as well.  My father has a tendency to avoid, at all costs, certain issues, because I believe for whatever reason he can deal with them better by avoiding them.  Thinking about all that leads me to the conclusion that I most definitely was genetically pre-disposed to developing depression.

My childhood was stressful.  I know that compared to many other children’s lives it was not the worst childhood I could have had, but it was stressful. I do not remember the place of my birth or the financial circumstances of my family at the time, but I have been told that we were very poor at the time.  My mother was only 19 when I was born.  I am sure combined with being a young mother in a place that was not close to her own family, and not being in the best financial situation, she was under her own mountain of stress.  I believe that these circumstances set things up from the beginning of my life for my mother and I to have a difficult and at times abusive relationship.

I base that belief on a very short conversation I had with my mother about 13 years ago. My mother had been diagnosed with non-hodgkins lymphoma.  She had to undergo the usually course of treatment, and she obviously did not feel well and I am sure was afraid she would not survive her cancer or even the treatments.  I think that she felt that she needed to “clean the slate” between us and offer some sort of apology and explanation for things that happened when I was growing up.  She shared that her pregnancy with me was not planned and when I was born, she and my father were living in a project (I think) and that they had almost no money.  That due to the stress of having a child that had not been planned for and being broke as well as a few other things, she never developed the bond with me that she had with my brother.  Furthermore, that is why she treated my brother better than she did me.  I think in her way she was trying to do something good, but instead it resulted in me being very angry.  For so many years, I had thought my brother was treated differently, slightly better than I was, but when I became an adult I decided that was just stupid childhood jealousy, and then to find out I was right all along brought up all sorts of old feelings and sadness.

Like many people who have suffered from some form of abuse, I have tried to “forget” the incidents as much as possible.  In some cases I was successful, in some not so much.  The first memory I have of the emotional abuse that I dealt with when I was a child is when we were living in Alabama.  I want to say I was four or five years old.  We had a play area, I think I back porch or something and there were toys strewn everywhere.  I believe that I did not want to pick up all those toys, you know how kids that age are.  I remember my mother getting very upset and calling me some very ugly names and if my memory is correct, she threw toys at me until I cleaned up.

Things like that happened often.  I remember feeling very stressed at a very young age.  I never knew what would set my mother off and exactly how she would react when she did go off.  That stress stayed with me all the time.  I never truly felt happy because of that constant feeling of stress.

I tried so hard when I was a kid to do things to make my mother happy.  I knew that if she was happy the chances of her getting angry with me and saying cruel things to me would be lessened.  I often felt that my overtures of affection were rebuffed and that she truly did not want me around her.  I have continued to feel that rejection from her into my adult years.

I know it seems that my mother is taking the brunt of the blame for the things that happened in my childhood.  I hold my father equally, if not more so, responsible for the things that happened.  He was almost never home.  He worked so much and it seemed that most of the time when I was growing up I only saw him on the weekends, and sometimes not even on every weekend.  I believe that when he was home he put blinders on to what was going on in the house when he was not there so that he did not have to deal with the messiness of it all.    If only he had ever truly taken the time to talk to her about the things that were going on, and not just one time, but as many times as needed to be done, I think he could have saved me from a lot of pain as a child and as an adult. I know the situation had to be stressful for my mother.  I wonder if she ever felt like she was a single parent since she was the one left to do all the parenting most of the time.

There were other family members, extended family, that were aware that things were not quite right in my childhood home.  I do not think they realized the extent of it until my family finally settled down in Georgia for several years after moving every year or two for most of my early childhood.  I was unaware that anyone outside of my home had a clue to what was going on until, as an adult, I visited my Aunt and her mother.  That is when they revealed to me that they had noticed when I was growing up that my mother was very hard on me and that even if I had done nothing wrong and my brother had done it, that I would get the blame for it.  They also told me that during the times they would watch me and my brother, if my parents had gone out of town or something, that they would not tell my mother if had I not behaved exactly like I was sup
posed to, because they knew that the fall out I would experience would be awful.   One thing I have always wondered since they told me that, is if they thought things were amiss in my home, why they never told anyone about what they saw going on and what they knew was going on?

There was one family member in my life who I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt loved me for exactly who I was.  Around that person I could be who I wanted to be, and I felt happy.  That was my grandfather.  My grandfather was not perfect by any means.  He was a bigot, he was an alcoholic, he was a grouch, he could be very mean, but he was always good to me, so I could overlook those not good things about him.  There is a story, that when I was a baby, he and my grandmother came to visit us when we lived in Kentucky.  I am told that I just wanted to be around my grandfather constantly.  When it came time for my grandparents to head back to their home in Georgia, I did not want to have my grandfather stop holding me.  I am told that when he was handing me back to my parents, I was crying like crazy and I grabbed onto his shirt pocket and would not let go.  In fact, even though I was a baby, I almost ripped the pocket off of his shirt.  From what my grandmother says, that is what created the bond between me and my grandfather.  He is the only person I can remember who ever stood up to my mother about how she was treating me.

In addition to the stress of the abuse that was going on in my house, there was the instability of our family life.  For most of my early to mid childhood we moved every year or two.  We never really had roots anywhere.  That instability led to its own type of stress, and in its own way probably contributed to some of the things I endured.

To be continued…..

Beginnings-Part II will come out tomorrow.