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i. Reasons Why To seek to understand the self. To put the scattered pieces together to form a coherent narrative of my life. To understand what pieces are missing and how to continue without them. ii. First Memories The first memory I have is of a high chair, ravioli, and an unfamiliar older woman. Mother working. I explored the house, a baby gate with dogs behind. iii. Paranoid Tendencies Later, Mom with her pistol, nails in windows, doors locked, even internal ones. Being hushed told to hide under the desk with my nieces. Terrified of what was happening, she went outside to clear the perimeter, certain, so certain that people are after all of us. Why? I remember her wild green eyes and her hair of fire. Nights of this, waking up to her shooting outside my window, cursing at this alleged person "creeping around." Nights she would sit in a small yellow chair, only meant for kids, at the door leading from the back room to the kitchen. I'd have to *** but she would clear the rooms before I went. That's love. Protection. **iv. Missing Father: **** On You** The first time my father held me, I ****** in his face. So I'm told. v. Education Impressions I wandered through the halls, my first day of school, Kindergarten, with no clue where I was going. Dropped off, late for work. Always working, the bills had to be paid. That's love. A roof over my head. Paddled weekly, sometimes more, in Kindergarten, age 5. Apparently I had some disciplinary issues. Pulled from this school, onto the next. Write-up forms weekly, or more. I would slip them under the bathroom door in the morning while Mom was in a rush, getting ready for work. Always being paddled, coming home to switches and belts and hands and a tired Mother. Nothing abusive, but that's love. Discipline. Fighting, kicking, punching, pick on me, try it. Always fighting. Their most used punishment was to walk the fence during PE. Needless to say, I never got my Physical Education. Moved to another school, discipline issues again. Stopped fighting, and sacrificed my self-esteem for it. The issues continued, but I graduated and left. vi. Missing Father: Formative Years This is when you were needed most. I made many poor decisions, a stupid kid, with a need for just a bit of guidance. I made it on my own though. vii. Bologna and Ramen There were special nights, with an electricity through the air, when Mom would cook. Hamburger helper, green beans, corn, a fresh gallon of sweet tea, a slice of white bread to top it off. A meal for kings in those days. But, typically, with a single income, and a house of five, it was sandwiches and noodles. I despise bologna and ramen still. viii. Missing Father: The Second Time The second time we met was in a store my Mom frequented. I asked you if I should get a hot sausage. I didn't find out who I had spoken to for years. ix. Control As a kid I always could figure out how to make things go my way. I would make sure things lined up just right. Most things are about the order in which information is revealed. You have to see through others' eyes. It's a ***** side of me, but I do what I can to keep it at bay. Still, it remains. x. Envy Family in Auburn, cousins, Aunts, Uncles. There was one set in particular. My Uncle who come from nothing, as all the others, and was so determined to have something out of life. I always wanted to take his kids' places. The nice clothes that didn't smell of cats, the go-karts and swim lessons and swing set and pool. They had it all. I modeled myself after this Uncle. I'm going to have something. Now I do. xi. Kitchen Floor I laid in the kitchen floor at my Sister's trailer for several hours. I cried, maybe. I didn't speak, I just laid there. Catatonic. This is the first thing that came to mind when I started realizing the sickness in my mind. A first clue, if you will. All of the others fell into place quickly afterward. xii. Step-Father It all started so perfect, how could there be a demon in this kind and gentle man? But manic phases happened. Regularly. Usually spurred by alcohol. He would stay up all night, with *** after *** of coffee. Going through every item in the house. He and my Mom would scream, so late, she telling him to go to bed, to get the **** out, to quit messing with **** He would call her names and throw things and make word salad in the air of money and get rich quick schemes. I would pretend to sleep, most nights I didn't while he was manic. I would sleep at school, and dread the war-zone I'd step into every day after. He would finally be arrested and committed. This happened for years, this cycle. One of the last times it happened, he put his hands on my niece. I nearly killed him that night. He died in a drunk driving manic-induced spree not long after. He was a great man when he wasn't manic. But that's love. Through darkness and light. xiii. Harm I went through these years filled with hatred and recklessness. Lines on my arms, and a barrel in my mouth, but I came out the other side. I know the dark times are here when I regret not pulling that trigger. xiv. Missing Father: Unneccessary Hardships Things didn't have to be that way, but maybe we are all better for the suffering. xv. Driving I learned to drive by taking my Sister back and forth to hospitals because she was fiending for pain meds. I watched her toss pill after pill down her throat for years. "Migraines." Aka, withdrawals. She would scream and incite chaos until she got her fix. An addict. It was not my Sister. She attempted suicide multiple times. Eventually the chemicals were too much, she had a stroke. I thought I was going to lose her, my dear Sister. She's clean now, and I've never been more proud of my big Sis. xvi. A Final Word My life was not hard, no harder than anyone else's. But it was mine. I look at this myself and say "oh boo hoo," in contempt of myself, but it was real. Somewhere, hidden in this half-missing puzzle, is the answer to the question on my warped views on love and life. This is my narrative, these are my beginnings.
0
May 7, 2017
May 7, 2017 at 7:36 PM UTC
Narrative
i. Reasons Why To seek to understand the self. To put the scattered pieces together to form a coherent narrative of my life. To understand what pieces are missing and how to continue without them. ii. First Memories The first memory I have is of a high chair, ravioli, and an unfamiliar older woman. Mother working. I explored the house, a baby gate with dogs behind. iii. Paranoid Tendencies Later, Mom with her pistol, nails in windows, doors locked, even internal ones. Being hushed told to hide under the desk with my nieces. Terrified of what was happening, she went outside to clear the perimeter, certain, so certain that people are after all of us. Why? I remember her wild green eyes and her hair of fire. Nights of this, waking up to her shooting outside my window, cursing at this alleged person "creeping around." Nights she would sit in a small yellow chair, only meant for kids, at the door leading from the back room to the kitchen. I'd have to *** but she would clear the rooms before I went. That's love. Protection. **iv. Missing Father: **** On You** The first time my father held me, I ****** in his face. So I'm told. v. Education Impressions I wandered through the halls, my first day of school, Kindergarten, with no clue where I was going. Dropped off, late for work. Always working, the bills had to be paid. That's love. A roof over my head. Paddled weekly, sometimes more, in Kindergarten, age 5. Apparently I had some disciplinary issues. Pulled from this school, onto the next. Write-up forms weekly, or more. I would slip them under the bathroom door in the morning while Mom was in a rush, getting ready for work. Always being paddled, coming home to switches and belts and hands and a tired Mother. Nothing abusive, but that's love. Discipline. Fighting, kicking, punching, pick on me, try it. Always fighting. Their most used punishment was to walk the fence during PE. Needless to say, I never got my Physical Education. Moved to another school, discipline issues again. Stopped fighting, and sacrificed my self-esteem for it. The issues continued, but I graduated and left. vi. Missing Father: Formative Years This is when you were needed most. I made many poor decisions, a stupid kid, with a need for just a bit of guidance. I made it on my own though. vii. Bologna and Ramen There were special nights, with an electricity through the air, when Mom would cook. Hamburger helper, green beans, corn, a fresh gallon of sweet tea, a slice of white bread to top it off. A meal for kings in those days. But, typically, with a single income, and a house of five, it was sandwiches and noodles. I despise bologna and ramen still. viii. Missing Father: The Second Time The second time we met was in a store my Mom frequented. I asked you if I should get a hot sausage. I didn't find out who I had spoken to for years. ix. Control As a kid I always could figure out how to make things go my way. I would make sure things lined up just right. Most things are about the order in which information is revealed. You have to see through others' eyes. It's a ***** side of me, but I do what I can to keep it at bay. Still, it remains. x. Envy Family in Auburn, cousins, Aunts, Uncles. There was one set in particular. My Uncle who come from nothing, as all the others, and was so determined to have something out of life. I always wanted to take his kids' places. The nice clothes that didn't smell of cats, the go-karts and swim lessons and swing set and pool. They had it all. I modeled myself after this Uncle. I'm going to have something. Now I do. xi. Kitchen Floor I laid in the kitchen floor at my Sister's trailer for several hours. I cried, maybe. I didn't speak, I just laid there. Catatonic. This is the first thing that came to mind when I started realizing the sickness in my mind. A first clue, if you will. All of the others fell into place quickly afterward. xii. Step-Father It all started so perfect, how could there be a demon in this kind and gentle man? But manic phases happened. Regularly. Usually spurred by alcohol. He would stay up all night, with *** after *** of coffee. Going through every item in the house. He and my Mom would scream, so late, she telling him to go to bed, to get the **** out, to quit messing with **** He would call her names and throw things and make word salad in the air of money and get rich quick schemes. I would pretend to sleep, most nights I didn't while he was manic. I would sleep at school, and dread the war-zone I'd step into every day after. He would finally be arrested and committed. This happened for years, this cycle. One of the last times it happened, he put his hands on my niece. I nearly killed him that night. He died in a drunk driving manic-induced spree not long after. He was a great man when he wasn't manic. But that's love. Through darkness and light. xiii. Harm I went through these years filled with hatred and recklessness. Lines on my arms, and a barrel in my mouth, but I came out the other side. I know the dark times are here when I regret not pulling that trigger. xiv. Missing Father: Unneccessary Hardships Things didn't have to be that way, but maybe we are all better for the suffering. xv. Driving I learned to drive by taking my Sister back and forth to hospitals because she was fiending for pain meds. I watched her toss pill after pill down her throat for years. "Migraines." Aka, withdrawals. She would scream and incite chaos until she got her fix. An addict. It was not my Sister. She attempted suicide multiple times. Eventually the chemicals were too much, she had a stroke. I thought I was going to lose her, my dear Sister. She's clean now, and I've never been more proud of my big Sis. xvi. A Final Word My life was not hard, no harder than anyone else's. But it was mine. I look at this myself and say "oh boo hoo," in contempt of myself, but it was real. Somewhere, hidden in this half-missing puzzle, is the answer to the question on my warped views on love and life. This is my narrative, these are my beginnings.
eric-w
Written by
33/M/American
May 7, 2017
May 7, 2017 at 7:36 PM UTC
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