I dare you to survive! This is
the Challenge that I feel was given to me on the day I was thrust into this
world, on December 24, 1966. I can’t even image what that day must have been
like. I was already a couple of weeks early and coming into the world to join a
family that already had five children in it. My parents didn’t have enough
money to feed the five kids they already had let alone try to feed a sixth.
I always thought that being born
on Christmas Eve surely must have meant something special because it is the day
before the most Holiest days of the year, but for me
it would turn out to be just another day, no different then the other 364 days
of the year. So, that has often made me wonder what the day of my birth must
have been like. Did I meet smiling, excited faces when I entered this world or
faces full of doom? Was there energy and exeburance
filling the room after my birth or did the doctor just whisk me away to join
all of the other screaming infants in the nursery? Either way with the fate that
lied ahead for me I can’t even begin to imagine that there was any of the joy
and happiness that usually surrounds the birth of a new baby. If only someone
could have predicted at that time what fate had in store for me then maybe I
could have been saved the many years of despair and torture I would have to
suffer through.
For so many years now I have been
trying to break these chains that bind me to that horrendously horrible past
that has haunted me for far too long. It is a past that I would just assume to
forget anyway. But, it seems every time I take a step to move forward that
chain gets yanked and it tightens so tight I feel like I am choking and the
voices echo in my head.
“No you don’t, you can’t get away
from me.” “No one will believe you anyway.” “You have a wild imagination.”
“You’re a liar and you know those things that you say are not true.” “ They’re all lies, you made them up.” The voice is that of
my mothers.
Everything starts swimming in my
head. The memories swirl around me so fast I can barely make out what it is
that I am seeing. I start spinning and spinning, as if caught in a whirlpool
that’s sucking me down to drown. I have to grasp a hold of reality and fight my
way back to the surface of this sea of memories before I get sucked in so far
under I fear that I will never be able to return.
Before I do this I have to do a
recount of everything to ensure myself that I truly am not crazy and my mind is
not made up of imagined memories. I think to myself if it is made up of
memories that I just imagined then where are the real memories that I should
have to replace them.
I realize that I am still
allowing my self -confidence to be swallowed up by that black pit of despair
that was mine to keep for so many years. I know full well that what I am seeing
is real, but it is so much easier to cling to that hope that maybe I am wrong
and some other memories might pop up to replace them then it is to deal with
reality.
Now I am just hoping that if I
give my story away to others then maybe I will be freed of these shackles and
chains that have stolen far too much of my life already. Maybe I can make
enough of an impact on the world to see that it is crucial that we work harder
to make a change in the process. If I
can only just succeed in that than maybe I can make a life that was full of
cruelty and abuse seem more worthwhile.
I am fully aware that this is not
an easy story to read and for those who have the strength to endure the book to
the end I give you loads of credit. For those who can not; all that I can say
is imagine that this is not a book and you can not
just shut the pages and escape. For that is what it is like for me because this
story is not based on fiction it is a true story and for me there isn’t any
escape. I can’t just shut the book and
make it all disappear.