Saturday, November 26, 2011

Seventy Times Seven

I recently had a new abuse memory of something my father did to me when I was little, at what age I'm not sure--it probably happened more than once. It surfaced completely unbidden one Sunday morning a couple of weeks ago. I was taking a shower as I was getting ready for church, and I was wondering why taking showers is still so difficult for me, even though I've remembered what he did to me in the shower when I was two. It just seems like it shouldn't be so hard for me if I've already remembered everything I need to know. As I was thinking about that I started seeing these pictures in my mind's eye of my father making me take showers with other men besides himself, and making me do bad things with them and to them. It was like I was a baby prostitute. As the pictures came surging into my consciousness and I began to understand the gravity of what he had done to me, I started to feel kind of nauseated, and I began to cry.

I was in shock. My feelings were a confused jumble of sadness, betrayal, rage, and pain. I hated my father, and I felt incredible shame that he had used me in this way. I had always thought the only time my father used me with other men was during the gang rape when I was three. This new memory showed me that I was tragically and horribly wrong. All I could think of was, how could he treat me like that?!? Children are a gift! A GIFT!! He treated me like trash, and so did his friends. I felt unimaginable grief for the little girl that I was, knowing that I was treated in such an unspeakably horrible way.

Whenever a new memory surfaces for me, one of the first things I consider once I've begun to calm down is forgiveness. I'm sure that probably sounds terribly pious and holier-than-thou, but I really do think like that. God loves my father just as much as He does me, regardless of his behavior towards me--or anyone else for that matter. In addition, forgiveness in the Bible isn't a suggestion, it's a commandment. God says that if we don't forgive those who sin against us, He won't forgive us when we ask for His forgiveness (Matthew 6:14-15, Mark 11:24). That sounds pretty scary to me. I very definitely want my sins to be forgiven.

Aside from all that, on a purely personal and practical basis, holding unforgiveness against someone is bad for your health. Studies have shown that when someone holds unforgiveness against another person, over time bitterness builds up and it can actually make you physically ill. Things like arthritis, ulcers, and cancer can have roots in unforgiveness and bitterness. I don't know about anyone else, but I want God to forgive my sins, and I certainly don't want to be sick.

What I'm coming to realize however, is that the person I need to forgive more than anyone is myself. The problem is, the person I have the hardest time forgiving is myself. Even though I know logically that I was never in anyway responsible for what happened to me, I've never been able to get past blaming myself and hating myself. I've always had this overwhelming feeling, belief even, that there must have been something inherent in who I am that brought the abuse on me. The result is that I expect absolute perfection of myself, I think because I'm trying to control my world so that no more abuse will happen to me if I'm good enough. Of course there's no way I can be good enough, much less perfect, so I get into this vicious circle of making mistakes and then punishing myself--literally. I hit myself across the face. Hard. I've given myself black eyes before.

I've also come to realize that I still have areas of unforgiveness against my mom, mostly because she never protected me throughout my childhood. During all the years when I was being beaten, raped belittled, berated, denigrated, disparaged, derogated, ad infinitum, ad nauseam, and told by my father everytime he did all this terrible crap to me that he had to do this to me because God hated me, and that I was as ugly as if someone had thrown acid on my face, not once did my mother stand up for me, or try and stop my father, or in any way try to protect me from his abuse. I've told her about what he did to me, and her response has always been that she saw bruises, and that if she had known it was sexual abuse the divorce would have happened a lot sooner than it did. And if that weren't bad enough she abused me as well. I've remembered a number of times when I was a baby (yes, an infant) where my mother tried to kill me. She would try to drown me in the bathtub or suffocate me with a pillow, so one of my alters, Deadsally, would come out and make her think she'd succeeded, so she'd stop trying.

It's always been a little easier for me to forgive my mother for her abuse, because I'm just about positive that she's multiple. I'd be very surprised if she actually remembered any incidents of abuse if I confronted her with them. I realize that her denials could just as easily be her attempt to remain in denial, but I'm also fairly positive she was abused when she was a child, though she says she wasn't. But she's told me about times when she was a teenager where she and my Uncle Frank, who's seven years younger than Mom, came home from school to find my grandmother (their mother) drunk, passed out in her own vomit on the floor. Mom would find her first and would keep Uncle Frank from coming in and seeing her. Then Mom would clean her up and put her to bed, and only then would let my Uncle Frank come in the house. That's a clear example of abuse in my book, and I have a feeling it happened with a fair amount of regularity, because Mom has told me innumerable times that both her parents were alcoholics.

Another reason I think Mom is multiple is because as far back as I can remember, she's said things that are the kind of things someone who is multiple would say. Things like, "Gremlins hid my keys..." or whatever it was that she couldn't find at the moment. She said that ALL THE TIME. She was constantly putting something down, and then two minutes later she wouldn't be able to find it or remember where it was.

So the upshot of it all is that I have more forgiving to do than I had originally thought. It's not something that I dread doing, or that will be impossible to manage, or anything like that. The Bible says that with God all things are possible, and that's certainly true in this case. I've already forgiven both Mom and Harry for so many other things. This is just more of the same, and I'll be able to do it with God's help. Sometimes I wonder, though. Will it ever end? Will the time ever come when I have nothing left for which to forgive them?

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Which Came First the Chicken or Lily, Or, God's Love Gave Me Jesus Gave Me Lily

I've been having this feeling like I should write about Lily. So here I am...

It seems that the way I love Lily is a metaphor for the way God loves me. When I actually contemplate, cogitate, and truly THINK about that, however, my brain kind of tilts on its axis just a bit. If truth be told, it makes me want to run away! But I won't. I'll just sit here and think about it, and write what I think.

I love to just sit and observe Lily. She's absolutely fascinating to watch, especially when I'm in the bathroom. She always follows me in when I go there, and she loves to bring me wads of paper to throw so she can retrieve them for me to throw again, and again, and again...

I get the feeling when she brings me the paper wads that she's bringing me little gifts, because she's very selective in choosing which ones to bring me. And sometimes she brings me a long, multicolored shoelace that she wants me to wad up and throw for her.

I think the thing that feels like a metaphor for God's love is that it fills my heart with such delight to watch her, to just observe her and be around her. I love to study her, to think about her behavior and how pretty she is. I could think about her all day long and not think about anyone or anything else. I could do nothing else all day long but thank God for giving her to me, because I feel so grateful to Him for her. I'm constantly aware of how awesome a treasure she is to me, and it occurs to me that God might wish that we found as much delight in Him as she seems to find in me.

I say that because she constantly seeks to be near me, something that I absolutely love. She wants to sleep on me at night, and take naps at my side during the day when I'm at home. She greets me at the door when I return home and follows me around the house no matter where I am. When I get up in the morning she helps me get dressed and clean out her litterbox, and by "help", just think of how a two-year-old would help. She brings me her toys, which are always wads of paper, and wants me to play with them with her. She never does any of this alone, but always with me. Always with me, never without me. And it fills my heart with delight and joy.

It seems to me that God would cherish such a relationship with His children, where they would want to spend all their time with Him, would want to have Him close when they sleep, would want to bring the things that delight them to show Him, as children do with their parents ("Look at my new toy, Daddy..."). It seems to me that that's why Jesus gave His life, so that we could have just such a personal, intimate relationship with God. Obviously it involves much more than that, but when you boil it all down, that's where it's at: Jesus Christ went to the cross, a sinless man, to bear the sins of all humanity, so that, once He was resurrected, all humanity would have a connection to God, if they chose to receive it.

That God could love me that much...

Such a thought is too wonderful for me to contemplate!!