Sunday, October 12, 2014

When love is a minefield of triggers

Love is complicated for me. It stings. It’s dangerous. The people who taught me love were injured. Their scar patterns unique, as with most people.  Carrying the violations upon our forming selves driving everything we do. Wounds we can’t see; can’t remember; can’t acknowledge.

Maybe I see them everywhere because I know them, or because they are everywhere. We hurt one another. We are hurt by our parents, who were by their parents, and so on. We inevitably hurt our children with what remains unresolved.

Sometimes the hurting is overt, sometimes insidious. Emotional bondage, oppression, dependence. Furtive emotional violence. A hand brushed over tiny genitals; perhaps kissed, or just one little finger. Maybe worse. Much, much worse.

Violations of human boundaries just as the soul is knitting itself to the physical body, creating gaping wounds that we can’t understand, but others of our kind can see and hone in on. To weaken us. To bring us down, because we are animals. Hairless monkeys. Less compassionate than cats. By far.

Until there are enough voices saying the same thing; crying in the same agony. Like soldiers. Soldiers who fight an entirely new battle once they leave the battlefield. One they’re not trained for. One inside their souls. The casualties have been great—one suicide a day for active duty personnel; one an hour for veterans.

Once every hour, a U.S. military veteran commits suicide. 1

After generations of being told to suck it up, to stay strong, to bury it, to let it go, to “be a man.” How much of this buried agony from past generations has transmuted us; our race, our beings from birth? We can't know. We can only know it is enough.

Now we want to help, but we’re sure how. Psychological counseling is practiced by cats. They toss labels at your wounds like they're a beach ball instead of a hand grenade, and you’re supposed to accept them as if it doesn’t hurt to get blown apart.

“Love addiction.

“Low self-esteem.”

“Attachment disorder.”

“Post traumatic stress disorder.”

And… “You’ll get over it.”

“It’s in the past.”

"Let it go.”

“That shouldn't bother you”

“It’s all in your head.”

It is in the head and the body. Molecules shift. Cells behave differently. The brain rewires to see and feel danger everywhere. Every person is a predator. Peace, contentment and love are impossible.

The mind doesn’t understand, runs away and buries. The body keeps a ledger like an accountant.2 Accounts come due. The body won't let the mind get away with ignoring it forever. The body remembers everything, from the brutality of war to the little finger in the crib.

I’ve wondered if that was it; what happened to me there in the Immanuel Deaconess Orphanage, Nursing School and Home for Aged, where young women were taught by men how to care for the broken as if they were not. What happened there?

I don’t know, but I stopped crying before the people who would parent me took me home. My mother said I did not like to be held, and never cried, except for when my leg was broken and no one realized to for weeks.

Did I really tumble in my walker, or was it that child’s rocking chair pinning my body to the floor while my diaper was being changed? I don’t remember falling in my walker. I remember that chair, it’s rockers on either side of my body.

Could she really have done that, the sweet resilient and tiny woman I now know as my mom? She was younger once, and different as we all are when we’re younger and our wounds are still raw with ragged edges.

She was raised with wolves. Wolfish people, hard and deprived. Always looking to survive by taking out all competition. Predators at the core, confused and injured themselves.

It just takes a split second to revert into what we know; to what our cells have been wrought. I know, because I was once young like her, easily provoked, oversensitive to threat. I still can be. It shocks the unversed.

She was once young girl whose half-Cherokee father left when she was a baby, leaving her mother to beat rugs for bankers’ wives in Depression-era Kansas. Children without fathers are easy prey. Poor, mixed-race children are as vulnerable as they come.

I have a picture of her at maybe eight or nine. Her eyes are too old, wise, needful and threatening. I can only suspect what’s buried there because I’ll never ask. It was enough that she lived through it. She may or may not have hurt me that day. I know she wouldn’t have meant to. She would have been terrified to realize it.

I do not blame her because I am her. My wounds resemble hers. I’m sure of it. But she was German-Cherokee, blood of iron. All personal violations were locked in a vault. I am said to be Scots. Blood of fire. All things are felt. All the pain running through generations like poison.

I did not let that continue. I knew when I was two that I would not have children. It was not her fault. It was no one’s fault. I was a foundling. She raised me. Gave me more than she ever had. But the echoes of unsaid things bouncing off the walls of that house lacerated me.

Sometimes I hear,“stop being a victim,” as if the generational ravages that formed me can be reversed on the spot.

“Rewire you brain,” chirped a veteran psychotherapist when I spoke of my struggles. She, who grew up with her own blood, in her own tribe, affluent enough for college, after which she married her high school sweetheart and had a family. As if she had a clue how to understand what I was. As if she had a clue about how utterly difficult it can be to rearrange cells formed in unpredictable volatility.

Her kind subjected me to years of recounting my horrors and then counseling me to intentionally alter my internal dialog, reinforced by the the years of recounting.

All along I needed witnesses. Witnesses who revered me for what I survived, instead of condescending to me in psychological jargon. Witnesses who see within and beyond us, and how we came to be this way. No explanations required. Compassionate.

I’ve had two. One is dead; one is dying. Almost everything is forgivable when you’re dying. That’s how Spike evolved. He let things go inside, but still wouldn’t tolerate many people. Forgiveness is easier when others become abstract.

Spike was just one of the men who hurt me, even though he saved my life. He hurt me because he’d been hurt like me. His wounds lined up with mine.

Others since have been the same, all shattered boundaries and gaping wounds. Men who don’t know they’re hurt. Left fragile from being told for generations to suck it up. Stop crying. Stand up. Be a man. The man of the house.

No wonder there is a rape culture. No wonder men are angry. No wonder they hurt others; go to war, leave their children—either emotionally or physically or both. Their pain transmutes to anger, rage and violence.

Those in my adult life, I can forgive once I’ve made them abstract. The one who abused me throughout my childhood, I can forgive. Perhaps even the one in the orphanage, if indeed there was one.

But not so much the adult men who took advantage of my wounds when I was a teenager. They should be in jail. Instead, I was labeled a slut because they perpetuated the violence of others before them. But that was OK, because men are supposed to be sexually aggressive. It’s part of being a man.

A damaged one.

I remember one in particular who looked me up when I was in my 30s, working my way through college as a landscaper. He thought we might be friends. I was horrified and nauseated.

He was surely injured by someone. He was left alone with his mother, who never remarried after his father abandoned them. He was probably set up as the “man of the house.” He deserves compassion. He deserves forgiveness. But not from me.

I’ve heard it said that what we don’t forgive only hurts us, but that’s not true. Not forgiving can protect you from getting hurt again.

“We cannot throw anger out the window and don forgiveness as if it were a costume, “ Karla McLaren says.2 It’s messy, difficult and ongoing.

I’m trying to forgive someone now. I fell in love. I don’t know why. I was unimpressed when he showed me pictures of his car and his motorcycle. The neon insecurity sign. Later, when we talked, there was a real person. I walked away and had an unbidden intuition that he would be my husband. I’d never had that before. I let myself believe it. I don’t know how love works, so why not? People talk all the time about how they just saw each other and knew.

He was disastrous. Destructive, mean and seemingly unconscious about it. He made a mockery of my feelings; exploited my vulnerabilities. If this person was my match, what was I? I was Somerset Maugham’s Philip Carey. It was hard to comprehend. I was sickened by my own vulnerability; my own weakness for him. It took some doing, but I finally drove him away.

Why would I feel so strongly about someone so utterly without compassion for me? Welcome to my scar pattern. His matched mine precisely, and reignited the traumas McLaren says must be healed by witnesses; with a welcoming back to the tribe.

Like what those wounded soldiers are doing. Witnessing and welcoming one another back into their own tribe. In this way, they are still fighting for the rest of us also cut off from the larger tribe, but in my case and that of many others like me—we can't find each other.

The support group community erroneously lumps traumas together. Soldiers are not going to see themselves among survivors of early sexual abuse, and vice versa.

Further, survivors of early sexual abuse don’t often relate to each other, because the wounds are as specific in characteristics as a person’s relationship to the abuser. Father-on-daughter, stranger-on-child, brother-on-sister, mother-on-son.

I’ve met two women who experienced what I went through growing up. It can only be whispered once, in a drunken moment, when it can’t be fully felt. But you know immediately when they are one of your kind.

Our pain has been denied. Our healing has been denied. Because everyone who was around at that time is culpable, and they can’t bear the truth. They tell us to forget, move on, let it go. As if we can just “rewire our brain,” and suddenly live safely in a world we know as inherently unsafe, because those charged with protecting us when we were completely helpless left us broken and wounded.

So we carry the weight of their transgressions throughout our lives, spending on it the energy we might otherwise have to fulfill our potential. And we are blamed for that, too.

How, then, do we heal ourselves, in the absence of witnesses and without a tribe? I know of only one thing. To tell our stories. So I’ll tell mine.








  • Harper’s, October 2014, p. 58, “You Are Not Alone Across Time; Using Sophecles to Treat PTSD,” by Wyatt Mason
  • “BodyMind,” by Ken Dychtwald
  • “The Language of Emotions,” by Kalra McLaren
  • Friday, July 11, 2014

    On the space aliens among us

    Let's say a "tesseractal" is the three-dimensional being's generic for a fourth-dimensional being.

    A tesseractal would see the three-dimensional world clearly but not be perceived entirely by its inhabitants. As with Edwin Abbott Abbott's A Square in "Flatland," whose two-dimensional mind is blown by a close encounter of the spherical kind.

    I'm explaining this to a friend who asked me over lunch if I believed in extraterrestrials. He was making indignant noises over "billions of dollars" being spent on SETI, the club for radio astronomy nerds who decipher space noise. And why would "they" do this when there are already extraterrestrials right here, he said conspiratorially.

    I'm guessing "they" is the government. The government of the United States. The one made up of some lawyers, the occasional car salesman, a doctor or two, a few businessfolk and a lot of spoiled rich dudes who pretty much repeat what their 24-year-old aides tell them to say. These are the people covering up the existence of alien life forms walking among us here on Earth.

    He is giving "they" way too much credit.

    Even cursory observation suggests that bungled coincidences outnumber actual conspiracies by a ratio of about 1,000:1. Most actual conspiracies are really a string of small, coincidental farces. Conspiracies reside primarily within people's hindsight, but we love them.

    My lunch date is a guy who will say anything in a confrontational way just to see what he gets back. He just finished telling me how he intentionally incensed the wife of a mutual friend by ripping women of a "certain age" just within earshot of her. She takes herself too seriously. Instead of shooting him down with a single Viagra crack, she came unglued.

    He said she was scary.

    I said don't sleep. Ever.

    As for extraterrestrials, I told him that few things, for me, were matters of "belief," but rather of deduction. And because we keep receiving and decoding new information throughout our lifetimes, deduction is a continuing versus a conclusive process. For me—a single unit of a known species of 7 billion living on a tiny wet clod in the solar system, itself a miniscule dust spec in the galaxy, itself a infinitesimally small dust bunny in the universe, itself one of an infinite number—to presume I can achieve conclusive knowledge of anything other than my own experience and maybe not even that seems not merely the height of hubris but also insanity.

    But he really wanted to go there. I searched his features. He was kidding but he was not. He certainly didn't want to be dismissed as a wackjob, and I knew if he was, he'd persist until I said anything just to get him to shut up.

    Him: "You don't seem to feel very strongly about aliens walking around right here."

    Me, looking directly at him: "Not at all. All people seem oddly alien to me."

    It never occurred to him that he might be A Square, so I told him about it. Between dimensional and string theories, it seems more logical than alarming that other sentient things we cannot perceive of are walking around us. Why not? People talk about experiences with angels and ghosts all the time. Ever have that experience where it seems like you should have just had a car wreck but the vehicles seemed to kind of pass through one another? Me, too. Perfectly sober. Who's to say?

    Our propensity to vilify everything we don't understand is more curious to me than those mysteries themselves. It's one thing when there's evidence of malfeasance; another when there's none. There seems to be more malfeasance in human nature than in nature itself. Nature is one indifferent mistress. Humanity it scared of its shadows.

    It's always a good idea to question one's way of seeing the world as much as questioning what one does or does not see in it.

    Here's an alien kitty:


    Friday, May 16, 2014

    Beware of grief

    I take a break from my impressive wine habit before the year turns. I look tired enough without being mildly hung-over.

    I feel better physically. But it took me away from the inside of myself, which may be the reason for the habit in the first place, like a psychomotor Droste effect. When you break the cycle, you're left with what's behind it, typically grief or something like it.

    Grief or something like it does not take "no" for an answer. You can't just say, "No, I'm not having this grief. I'll distract myself. I'll focus on work. I'll rave in Ibiza. I'll eat this chicken pot pie and watch 'Spongebob.'"

    Fine.

    Grief will wait, like a cougar, watching its prey get fatter and fatter. The longer you wait to let it take you down—and it will—the longer it will chew through you.

    Grief comes in waves. It physically hits the body like a wall of water. It leaves you like a cartoon coyote flattened by a giant steam roller. You sort of unstick your flat self from the ground and try slowly to get 3D again. It's hard to breathe when you're 2D because your lungs are flat. That's how you know it just happened.

    I can see why people don't give up wine habits alone, but the handful of people who understand me are farflung and occupied. And I don't do confessionals except for ones like this, where I can say whatever I want without someone interrupting to tell me what I'm trying to say or what's wrong with me.

    So I sit alone in a cloister with this stuff that's stuck keeps fucking me up and say, "Fine. Here I am. What the hell do you want?" And then wait, because of course it can't be like a round of antibiotics and a two-day nap. It's more like Cato Fong dropping from the ceiling when everything's almost perfect inside of you.

    There are other things to do in the cloister. Push-ups. Art. Any kind of art. Anything the body considers art. The mind has to stay out of it and let art take place. Which is why I am not too concerned about sentence structure here. A small rebellion of the consciously dying.

    Art is in my lineage. My mother and her friends spray painted six-pack rings Kleenex pink and blue and twisted them into hyacinth blooms for table centerpieces. I don't know what your mom and her friends did. Mine did that. I find it to be not merely perfectly legitimate "art," but Renaissance-like Americana that will one day adorn a plaster half-pillar in the National Art Gallery. I say this in all seriousness because I saw a perfectly pressed men's dress shirt pinned to a wall in the National Art Gallery as part of an "installation."

    I have ironed, and I have dealt with plastic six-pack rings. Ducks get caught in them. I know, because I freed one once from a six-pack ring. With another guy I had a crush on that makes me wonder if I hit my head. That's not to be as un-nice as it sounds, because he was a perfectly nice drug dealer who was shorter than me but drove a nice car. And I think he had a pet snake.

    See, I told you.

    Thursday, May 15, 2014

    E-blog with kitty

    I find a blog site I've registered on who-knows-when and it just sits here with my name on it not doing anything. So I start typing these words, and almost type "styping" instead of "start typing" because it's a logical portmanteau and who says we can't just make up our own? So I styping (maybe that's why) and I wonder really just how much of a waste so much of what's posted online really is, like this, meandering off into no place in particular but seems at least to be amusing me.

    I mean, I'm shooting electrons all over the surface of the planet doing this, which presumably one does with ones own thoughts as well, but thoughts don't travel the energy grid and flash-fry coal, hydrogen or a petrolforms and spew more carbon into the atmosphere and melt the ice caps and drown strangers along the coast. That I know of.

    So that's what I think about now as I activate a blog on a site I registered for who-knows how many years ago, for whatever unknown reason.

    Sometimes I want to say things that makes no sense to anyone but me in the moment and that's enough.

    So it works for me, unless I'm killing the planet. What then? Should I take to a notebook with a pen? Same problem. Killing trees for paper or polluting the wee amount of drinking water we have left for our exploding numbers by recycling paper we've already used for, oh, say, the California Tax Code? No, that doesn't work.

    Recycling is like this collective self-delusion that makes it OK to spend $100 at Trader Joe's and come home with $70 worth of packaging that we then dutifully put in "the recycling" that ends up being processed with what little potable water we have left to drink. There will be blood, but it won't be about oil. It will be about water.

    But who wants to read that? We burn up fuel cruising the Internet for cute animal pictures. So here is a kitty: