It was me, all along.

by Kyeli on April 3rd, 2009 @ 8:05 am in How To Be Awesome
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Another Friday, another epiphany from Iron Pentacle class.

This time, my Iron Pentacle epiphany comes with a big, bold warning. I’m focusing on the Sex point, and this one really packs a loaded punch, so there will be landmines and triggers all over the place. In fact, I frankly and openly discuss rape and sexual abuse, so if you want to opt out, no feelings will be hurt.

A long time ago, back before I was aware of my own gayitudeinal gayosity, I dated boys. There are three in particular we’ll be discussing today: Adam, Bart, and Chester.

First, let me say that I led a very sheltered childhood. I knew that girls dated boys, so when I got to be of dating age, that’s what I did. Never mind that I didn’t really like dating them, nor did I have any interest in anything they wanted, but that’s what my friends were doing, so I did it. (I used to be something of a quiet follower.)

My first real boyfriend was Adam. He was “dark” and “mysterious” (mean and closed-off). He taught me that boys got to do to girls what they felt like doing, and girls let them. I certainly wasn’t comfortable talking about sex with anyone – anyone at all – at that time, so I wasn’t comfortable asking if that was the status quo. Adam said so, so I went along. Fortunately for me, Adam was also “gentle” (a coward) so he never actually managed to do anything other than emotional torment – not for lack of trying, mind, just for lack of being quick enough: he tried to rape me. Twice. Twice, he was prevented by the timely arrival of my mother coming home. Twice, I didn’t say anything to anyone. Twice, I took him back. It wasn’t until he grew tired of failing that he broke up with me and went his own way.

Then there was Bart. Bart was a step above Adam – he was “dark” and “gentle” from the get-go. He was pretty “mysterious”, too, but in a more deceptive fashion. I often felt like Bart was being open with me, especially since he was so forthcoming with his very urgent needs. All the time. He pressured me into giving him head on a pretty regular basis, and it was only my intense fear that kept him from pressuring me into more. And again, I was too uncomfortable to talk to anyone, so I didn’t. No one knew that he was coercing me into blowjobs in my own bedroom with my mother asleep some 80 feet away.

So, during all this, I was madly crazily in love with my best (girl) friend, Dora. I had no idea it was love-like-the-real-thing-love, because what did I know of love, and besides, girls love boys and that’s that. (Yes, I was weird. No, I didn’t talk to anyone about that, either.) I wrote her sappy sweet teenagery poems and did anything and everything she wanted and followed her around like a whipped puppy for years before I realized, hey, I think I love this girl.

It was about this time that Bart found the poems in my room. To anyone other than me, they were obviously love poems – from his girlfriend to another girl.

Bad things happened.

Here’s where things get weird – the roads diverge. The story becomes two: Story A and Story B.

In Story A, Bart raped me. I wound up in my room alone with him and he forced himself on me to prove that I was his, because no girlfriend of his would be loving on girls.

In Story B, Bart did not rape me. I wound up in my room, alone with the poems he’d shredded after freaking out at me and breaking up with me and threatening to tear all my friends from me one by one.

Let’s step away from the Big Bad Thing for a moment. Let’s go with Story B. Bart ripped up all my poems, all my unsent love letters, and yelled horrible things at me, broke up with me, and proceeded to carry through on his threats by turning all my friends against me, one by one. The hows of that I’ll never know, but I certainly lived through it slowly and painfully enough to remember that clearly.

Sometime during this crisis – which was pretty epic – I turned to Chester. Chester and I had been friends for a few weeks, and he was the sweetest, most open, honest boy I’d ever met. He was gentle and sweet and funny. We hit it off smashingly and spent a huge amount of time together.

After the screaming display by Bart, I wound up in Chester’s living room. In my car, two suitcases held everything I cared about. I was on my way out of town, driving north til I ran out of road, but I stopped off to say goodbye to the only friend I had left. We wound up talking til dawn.

We wound up dating a few weeks later.

After our relationship had grown and intensified and survived many trials, Chester raped me.

It started off innocently enough – we were making love. But it got too rough, started hurting, started being really bad for me. I started asking, then begging him to stop – and he did not. My hands on his shoulders, silent tears streaming down my face, but I was far too weak to stop him.

I loved him more than anyone else in the universe.

I trusted him more than anyone else in the universe.

I knew him better than anyone else in the universe – and he knew me that well.

And he did this to me.

So I blanked. I completely refused to believe it. I gave him a hundred reasons, a thousand other chances, a million excuses.

And then, weeks later, I was suddenly confronted with the truth again. Through a weird chance reading of a webcomic that was eerily similar to the abusive situations I had experienced, I was forced to look at the facts again.

But again, I needed something else to be true. Anything else. Anything in the universe else.

So I inserted myself into Story A. I made Bart the bad guy. I needed a villain, someone else to take the fall, because it couldn’t – could not possibly – be Chester. I loved him, I trusted him, I knew him – he would never, never do that to me. Of course not.

I created a world where it didn’t happen, and blamed someone else for the pain and the scars.

It sounds so simple, but I’m sure you can imagine – it’s not. It’s anything but simple. It was so convoluted, so complex, so strange and bizarre, and it happened entirely under the surface. Deep in the dark cold waters of my internal self. My memories wove themselves around these rocks, shifted and changed til I myself couldn’t see the difference.

And it gave Chester the chance to do it again, which he did. This time, there was no pretext; he was full of rage and I was there. He took it out on me, I cried and pleaded.

And again, I gave him a hundred reasons, a thousand other chances, a million excuses. And again, I buried my pain in a hundred other stories, a thousand other memories.

But this time, something vital was different. This time, I was awake. Once you wake up, it’s really fucking hard to lie to yourself. Once your eyes are open, it’s really fucking hard to close them to the truth. Once you start digging into your Self, those true memories and those false memories will eventually surface.

And surface they did. Over the past few weeks, I’ve had an ever-growing dissonance within myself. An overwhelming sense of misalignment, of some rocks where none belonged. I’ve had disturbing dreams and trouble sleeping, my nighttime rest hasn’t come easily. And tonight, it crystallized and I understood.

Until I put myself back into the story I belong in, I can’t rest. Until the blame lies where the blame belongs, I can’t let it go. And until now, I didn’t realize I’d put myself in the wrong story. Not fully. Now, though, I grok in fullness. I see things for how they were – how they actually were. And I understand.

In our society, we’re taught that we’re broken, we’re wrong, we’re sick, we deserve badness in our lives. We’re taught that, if we’re hurt, we’re responsible. We draw it to us, we bring it into our lives, we deserve it. Victims of crimes of all degree think to themselves, “What did I do wrong?”

But it’s bullshit. Bullshit. We’re perfect beings living imperfect lives, learning lessons and hurting ourselves and each other. We’re all lost. We’re all scared. We’re all waiting for someone to find us, fix us, rescue us, make it all better. We’re all waiting for someone to save us. But -

We are the ones we’re waiting for.

Chester raped me. Twice. I took it in silence, recreated my past to hide from it and to protect the man I loved above all others. My past is riddled with sexual and emotional abuse. Did I ask for it? Did I deserve it? Am I being punished for something I did wrong?

No.

I was a scared, fucked-up little girl with a scared, fucked-up boyfriend. I didn’t know what to say or whom to say it to. I stayed because I was waiting for someone to save me.

And it was only when I realized that someone was me that I got out.

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20 Comments!

#1 Posted by Dick Carlson on April 3rd, 2009 8:20 am | link

What amazing courage you have to write about this! Looks like you’re well on the road to being the one who saves you. And that’s a pretty good place to be.

#2 Posted by Joely Black on April 3rd, 2009 8:21 am | link

I’ve had similar, terrible experiences and I am deeply, deeply proud of you for posting about it.

#3 Posted by Oliver Danni on April 3rd, 2009 8:24 am | link

I have read this and I love you.

Your courage in authentically articulating the “splitting” that creates a Story A and Story B is just…ENORMOUS. This is something that MANY survivors experience, but almost EVERY SINGLE ONE thinks there’s something horribly wrong with them because of it, because “normal” people’s brains don’t do things like that. Actually, it seems to me that this is a VERY normal response to trauma. Our brains protect us from having to fully process what “really” happened by creating multiple possible realities so that we don’t actually have to know what “really” happened. It’s an emergency safety mechanism. The TRAUMA is the “abnormal” factor — the rape is the thing that wasn’t supposed to happen, not the response of the survivor’s brain! But your brain is still just so well fucking wired that it can create some level of safety for you on the inside, even when something or someone has taken that away from you on the outside.

#4 Posted by Megan M. on April 3rd, 2009 8:30 am | link

And it was only when I realized that someone was me that I got out.

YEAH!!!!!!!!!

DUDE! That is some kind of AWESOME FREAKING ending to a very scary, very vulnerable story — I wasn’t expecting it and YOU ARE SO RIGHT. I’m all, fist in the air, triumphant roar, victorious high-five, WOO!

Awesome post, man. You’re awesome. ^_^

#5 Posted by Sonia Simone on April 3rd, 2009 8:47 am | link

First, hugs & kisses: xoxox

Second: ” I stayed because I was waiting for someone to save me. And it was only when I realized that someone was me that I got out.” RIght on, sister. I hear you. I really, really hear you.

#6 Posted by Tamir Nadav on April 3rd, 2009 9:02 am | link

2/3, if not more, of my female friends have had these experiences. I wish.. hmm. All that social conditioning that we go through as young children seems to encourage these events and stories; men are raised believing that women are sex objects, always ready and willing to please them. Women are raised to be seen and not heard, and to be beautiful more than smart, to be used by men and hope for the best.

Granted, this *has* gotten better, very slowly. But we still have a long way to go to break this horrible cycle. I don’t know how I managed to not follow the “male” mentality of my youth; it could be good parenting, random circumstance, lucky social observed situations… but somehow, I did. Sure, it made school very rough while I was ostracized by the jocks and cheerleaders, I spent my time with a few other outcasts or alone. But, I cannot be grateful enough for all this making me who I am now.

Most of my friends are female; this means I hear stories like these all the time. It’s sad, frustrating, infuriating, depressing… and I know all I can do is encourage my children to not be like this.

Thank you for sharing this. I can’t even imagine how hard it must be to write this out and share with people… that’s incredibly courageous. I’ve felt for a while incredibly lucky (I’d say blessed but I’m not sure of your religious views) to have met you and Pace and feel welcomed into your lives. We have a fantastic, loving, and wonderful group of friends; and we draw our strength from our common experiences and time we share together.

Just know, I’m always happy to lend an ear to speak to, a shoulder to cry on, a belly to sleep on and a hand to hold on. We all love you so much.

#7 Posted by Bridgette Boudreau on April 3rd, 2009 9:18 am | link

Courage.

You have it. You will change someone’s life by posting this.

Sounds like you’ve already changed your own.

Cheers to you Kyeli.

#8 Posted by scwizard on April 3rd, 2009 1:15 pm | link

And then, weeks later, I was suddenly confronted with the truth again. Through a weird chance reading of a webcomic that was eerily similar to the abusive situations I had experienced, I was forced to look at the facts again.

Was it http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/friends.png by any chance?
And if not which one was it?

#9 Posted by Duff on April 3rd, 2009 2:06 pm | link

Rock on, Kyeli. You are a brave soul. Congrats on sorting out the truth and turning this unpleasant memory into a powerful resource.

If you need any resources for techniques for clearing trauma, let me know. I spend most of my free time learning about effective change techniques and know of 3 or 4 big ones that are very effective for trauma.

Be well,
~Duff

#10 Posted by James | Dancing Geek on April 3rd, 2009 3:01 pm | link

I just want you to know that you have another person out here in the world that is sending you love and thinks you’re pretty amazing to be able to work through this and then share it for others too.

#11 Posted by Diane Whiddon-Brown on April 4th, 2009 2:03 pm | link

This is amazing and beautiful, and so are you, Kyeli. Thank you so much for posting this.

#12 Posted by @TheGirlPie on April 4th, 2009 3:59 pm | link

I bet your having to write this will help hundreds of kids in your former shoes speak up before the writing themselves into the false story — good for you for sharing it aloud. I’d think you’d be a great asset to kids in all stages of that timeline, Kyeli — rock on.

#13 Posted by George Wachsmuth on April 6th, 2009 10:48 am | link

It is posts like this and all the others in here that give me hope and can only help all who read them.. Thank you !!!

George

#14 Posted by Abuse: both sides of the coin | Pace and Kyeli on April 17th, 2009 7:32 am | link

[...] Kyeli made a brave, honest post about abuse, so I’ll do my best to make my own brave, honest post about abuse. This is based on yet [...]

#15 Posted by Meira on April 17th, 2009 1:01 pm | link

I’m so sorry that this happened to you. You are brave and wonderful, and so strong. Thank you for writing this and sharing it. These things are so hard to write about, and you did it very well.

“I stayed because I was waiting for someone to save me.

And it was only when I realized that someone was me that I got out.”

This especially was touching to me, because lately I’ve been thinking the same thing myself.

Again Kyeli, you are awesome.

#16 Posted by Leah on April 22nd, 2009 12:06 pm | link

thanks so much for sharing your story, kyeli.

i so appreciate your braveness and honesty. xox

#17 Posted by Keely H. on April 22nd, 2009 12:51 pm | link

I’ll add my thanks to the chorus.

Mine isn’t the same as your story (they never are) and yet this happened to me and I rewrote my memories because I loved him and I would rather it was all my fault then face the truth that this person that I loved and trusted more than anyone violated me.

“I stayed because I was waiting for someone to save me. And it was only when I realized that someone was me that I got out.”

Hell yes! You’re an incredibly strong person and don’t let anyone tell you differently ever again.

A million thank yous for sharing this, seriously.

#18 Posted by Sarah Marie Lacy on April 22nd, 2009 3:08 pm | link

Oh my gosh, Kyeli this was beautiful.

Thank you so much. Your sharing this was liberating for me. I might be able to heal some parts of my past I’ve never dealt with before.

Thank you.
Sarah xoxo

#19 Posted by joyce lukaczer on April 22nd, 2009 4:57 pm | link

a beautifully resonant reminder to option ourselves into-the-currency-of-the-moment …

again, you offer gold …

#20 Posted by supportive reader on April 22nd, 2009 5:04 pm | link

thanks for your honesty and openness. by sharing your story, you may be sparking off that familiarity in many other readers.

sending you hugs and good wishes on your healing journey.

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