Saturday, December 29, 2018

Part of flying is air beneath your wings.

    When I was quite young-- second or third grade-- a new girl came to my class. For whatever reason, she came to me, and over the weeks, we became friends.
    One day, she confided in me that she was in the care of the foster system.
    “The foster system? What’s that?” I had neighbors by that name, so I assumed the foster system would be wonderful.
    “They take you away from your mom and send you to live with other people,” she told me breathlessly. “Sometimes you don’t even get to live with a family. You just live in a building with some other kids. Then if you get adopted you get a new mom and you get to go home.”
    “Are you getting a new mom?” I asked. The whole thing sounded terrifying to me.
    She shook her head. “No. I don’t have a new mom. But maybe I will sometime, if I find one.”
    As we spoke, a plan started forming in my head.
    She could share my mom.
    I just knew my mom would agree; she was a kind, loving mom and would take care of anybody who needed it. So I told my friend to follow me home after school. I wandered home, finding patches of dirt and sand and writing directions: ‘This way,’ with an arrow pointing the direction she needed, ‘Turn left’, on a corner.
    When I got home I went straight to my mom and told her the situation. “She’s coming,” I said, “I left her directions, and she’s following me home to get adopted.”
    My mom sat down on the couch and pulled me into her lap. “Honey,” she said gently, “we can’t adopt your friend.” She brushed a wayward strand of hair from my eyes as I stared at her in shock.
    “But… why not?”
    “The foster system isn’t an evil thing,” my mom explained. “It’s not always fun for kids in that situation, but it’s meant to be a special system to help kids whose families can’t take care of them correctly.”
    “But we could take care of her.”
    “No, sweetie,” my mom said sadly, “we can’t. It’s best if she stays where she is and is taken care of by the people she’s with.”
    I begged, pleaded and sobbed for her to reconsider. She gently held me and swayed back and forth, lulling me. We would help in any way we could, she reassured… but adoption wasn’t one of them.
    My friend never did follow me home, and soon after, she was moved to a new foster home. By the time I ran into her again, we were much older, and I understood my mom’s reasons for saying no.
    She had been adopted, and she seemed happy.
    Over the years, we did help people. We donated money, food, and toys to fundraisers, drives, and secret Santas. We gave in every way we could, and often, were the recipients of such giving. When my youngest sibling was born-- making eight of us kids-- I was completely content and had all but forgotten about the incident. I had moved on. The dream of choosing myself a new sister had almost entirely faded from my vision.
    It was eleven years before I thought of it again.
    I hadn’t slept since the phone call that morning. At 5:30 am, my best friend,Teesa, had called me and told me she was admitting herself into the hospital for her own safety, and didn’t know how long she’d be there or if she’d be able to talk to me. “It could be three days, it could be ten,” she said, “But I wanted to call and let you know.”
    Teesa had not been spared the tough side of the world, and was just now-- after nearly twenty-three years of abuse, control, and depression-- breaking through and discovering she was worth something.
    I suppose part of that journey was forgetting.
    It was late morning now, and Teesa was all I could think about-- where was she? Would she contact me? Could I see her? What on earth had happened the night before?
    It took my son three tries to get my attention-- he wanted cereal. “I’m so sorry, babe,” I said as I dished him some, “Mommy’s so distracted.”
    “Mommy’s fustated,” he said matter-of-factly as he balanced a spoonful precariously, leaning it towards his mouth. I watched, half-aware, as he tipped the spoon too early and a portion of it dribbled down his shirt.
    “No, I’m not frustrated,” I replied, “Just tired and distracted. Thinking about Teesa.” I ruffled his hair and smoothed it away from his eyes. He munched away, unaware of my mental haze, blissful in his ignorance. I sighed. I wished I could be like him sometimes.
    I reached over to the counter and checked my phone for the billionth time that morning. There was a message there from Teesa’s sister. “I got Teesa’s access code for you,” she wrote, “she wants you to call her.” A four-digit code followed.
    A treasure.
    “I’ll do you one better,” I muttered under my breath.
    That night, I arrived at the hospital minutes before the visiting hour started. I gave her number, was escorted into the facility, and pointed in the direction of her room. “Room 119,” the nurse said, “and if she’s not there, she’ll be around the corner in the rec room.”
    Her room was clearly empty, the bedsheets tousled, so I turned in the direction the security nurse had pointed-- and there she was, taking a stack of coloring pages from the secretary at the desk as they came off the printer.
    I watched her spot me. In the moments before my identity registered in her mind, I saw a sadness I had never yet seen in her eyes, and it broke my heart.
I stayed until the speakers announced that the hour was up, and visitors were expected to make their way towards the doors.
    I had never seen anyone so hopeless, and I had never loved that hopeless person as much as I did right then.
    The next morning, my mind was no less distracted. Teesa’s children had been passing hands in an infuriating fiasco, claimed by multiple parties, all of whom were certain they had the right, and I was stranded nearly two hours south, watching her designated caretaker flounder under the pressure of her family’s attempts to control the situation.
    CPS will take them if they’re not with family, they claimed, the kids know us, they’ll be happier here. As I watched the drama unfold, the thought came unbidden to my mind:
    She could join my family.
    She had listed me as her primary contact; the person to be called for discharge information, the designated pick-up person. She said they’d encouraged her to use family-- she’d refused. She didn’t trust them, she said.
    I did a quick google search. ‘Can you adopt an adult?’ Reading through the results, it looked like it would be relatively simple-- but I quickly dismissed it. It’s a daydream, I thought; It would never happen.
    I closed the internet tab and moved on.
    The week went ahead with drama after drama unfolding. A few people-- including family and friends-- insisted that the kids should be with family, claiming over and over that CPS would take them from any non-family caretaker. I had looked up the CPS guidelines and felt that the exact opposite was true: kids were to be left with the designated caretaker under all circumstances, unless in cases of abuse, neglect or a six-month lapse in parental contact. Only under those circumstances would the children be removed.
    Eventually, they claimed that Teesa was in an unfit state to care for the children or make decisions regarding their welfare. They arrived at the home of the caretaker, took the kids, and left him defeated, with a fridge fully stocked with the week’s supplies and beds already prepared.
    I watched helplessly, unable to do anything but spew forth words.
    As words were my only power, I chose them carefully.
    If you insist on taking the kids,’ read a part of my message, ‘I won’t try to get the law involved, because I know their needs will be met. But understand that going against Teesa’s will for her children will drive some major rifts in your family and they may not be able to mend.’
    Friday came. I got a call from the hospital with Teesa’s discharge information, and was instructed to arrive at the hospital the next morning at eleven to bring her home.
    We’d made it through the week. Thought it had not been without considerable fuss, the kids were back in the home they were originally meant to be in, and we would come home to relative quiet.
    I picked Teesa up the next morning and drove her home. We had a lot to talk about. She was on new meds and seemed a great deal happier than she had last time I’d seen her in person; though I’d talked with her on the phone every day of the week, it was better to see her in person by far.
    We had nearly arrived at the home of her children’s caretaker when she said something that shocked me.
    “Jenica?” she paused, almost embarrassed. “Do you think your parents would consider adopting me?”
    I balked. I remembered my google search earlier in the week and felt a glimmer of something rise in my chest-- not exactly hope, but… truth. “I don’t know,” I said honestly. “But I think they’d at least consider.”
    She got visibly excited. “I looked up the process,” she admitted, laughing a little. “It’s not too hard.”
    I laughed too. “So did I,” I told her, “but I didn’t think it was an actual possibility. You really mean it?”
    She did, she said-- she was tired of the broken pieces of her family ruling her life. She was tired of feeling lonely, judged, and controlled. “And if this ever happened again,” she said, “my kids would go straight to your parents. I feel a lot more comfortable with that.”
    That evening, alone with my mom, I told her I had a question to ask. “It’s a big question,” I warned, “don’t be too shocked.”
    Her eyes went wide when I delivered the request. “Oh,” she said softly, “I’ll… need to think on that. And talk to Dad.”
    “I expected so,” I said, shivering from the intense nervousness, “no rush.”
    We discussed a little further the reasons for Teesa’s wish, and the next morning I went home.
    It was a couple of months later-- four days before Christmas-- that my parents visited Teesa in her home and told her that they felt she was meant to be a part of their family. She called me beaming to deliver the news, and we spent the weekend teaching our children that they were cousins.
    Teesa and her children joined our traditional pile on Christmas Eve, sleeping on the floor amidst people and blankets, and spent Christmas morning with all of us. Things felt shockingly normal as we lounged in our pajamas, hair askew, and laughed as my brother-- our brother-- announced from around the corner, where he had previously been lounging pants-less, “The pants are on, I repeat, the pants are on.”
    We tumbled down the stairs and watched our children delve into their stockings as my mother-- our mother-- read aloud from The Living Christ, a manger resting in the center of the floor.
    She belonged.
    She belongs.
    Most people don’t get to choose their sisters. It’s a privilege I doubt I will ever happen upon again in this life. It’s a blessing beyond anything I had ever imagined.
    I have been told throughout my life that God will surprise me with the blessings He has in store. I wasn’t certain I believed it, but I do now.
    He has a plan. He has a plan that nobody can see or imagine. He knows us and who we are and where we’re headed. And He knows where we belong.
    Welcome home, Teesa… welcome home.

Friday, June 15, 2018

New Adventures


     Starting a new project. Probably the biggest one I've ever taken on.
     I've 'started a book' before, but never with a timeline for my goal or an actual expectation of finishing, at least not until I was 'better qualified', or 'more confident', or... you fill in the blank.
     This is something that, over the past year or so, has come to mean a lot to me. I've been wanting to share, but not certain how, until my sister approached me and asked me to co-author a book with her. A very specific, very personal book for a lot of people.
     The topic is ‘abuse: from an outside perspective’. A collection of stories from people we know personally who have gone through different types and levels of abuse.

     What do you think of when you hear the word ‘abuse’?
     A man in a ‘wife-beater’ with stains across it?
     Unspeakable violence?
     Horror stories of starved children and a drunken father?
     These are sometimes true.

     What do you think of when you hear of someone being abused?
     "Why didn't he/she leave sooner?"
     "How could he/she allow him/her to treat their children that way?"
     "She should respect herself enough to leave before it gets abusive!"
     These can also carry some truth.

     However, I lived in a home for 7 months where abuse was going on. It had been for years previous.
     And I had no idea.
     There were red flags, but I didn't recognize them as such.
     Countless moments that, now, I can see clearly, but then, I encouraged my friend to look at her husband with love and patience, hoping their marriage would mend.
     Countless iterations of the same conversation:
     "It's getting better. We went to counseling and did X-Y-Z."
     "I'm so glad to hear that. You're doing amazing."
     "Thanks. I think we'll get through."

     I'm not sure at what point I realized I was encouraging my friend to stay in an abusive situation.

     Maybe the day she asked, "Jenica, when you don't want to be touched, does Joe stop?" and a chill went up my spine.
     Or possibly the day she told me, “Sometimes he covers my mouth when I lose my temper until I stop. He’s right. I do have a terrible temper.”
     Or perhaps the day, “the counselor said everything he’s doing is normal male behavior and I need to be more patient,” came out of her mouth, and I surprised myself with the ferocity of my reply: “You need a new counselor.”
     Maybe even the day she showed me four angry red fingernail marks across her back, coupled with, “He didn’t mean to. I was being really rude. He wasn’t trying to hurt me, just get me to stop.”
     But, to my shame, I don’t think it hit me until she said, “I know I’m in an abusive relationship. If he ever threatens the kids, I’ll have to leave,” and my response was, “Aren’t you worth protecting?”

     She left a few months later.

     With all of this going on, with all her words ringing in my head, with all the nights wondering if I was hearing their TV show or their arguments, it took me until that moment to truly feel the conviction that she needed to leave. I was seven months living in their home, sharing a kitchen, seeing him every day, and it took that and a 25-point article on red flags, 23 of which applied to him, for me to fully support the ending of their marriage.
     It still hurts me sometimes. He is not a bad man. He is not the drunken, angry, frightening man I had mentally defined all abusive husbands to be. He was calm, quiet, rarely spoke out and never complained. He was someone who, when he heard me mention needing a night-light offhandedly to Joe, went and bought us night-lights. When he heard the door squeaking, we found WD-40 outside. When Joe mentioned our laundry had been mixed up, he apologized profusely and went to fetch the other basket. Never was there a whisper of anything I understood to be a ‘sign’, or a ‘red flag’.
     But he abused his wife.

     It is all of this that brings me to the project I have just described. We know so little. There are so many people, men and women, stuck in situations that are unhealthy for them and their children because, as I told myself so many times, “He’s not a bad man. He can change.”
     I still believe that. He can change. But, at least at the time, he chose not to.
It’s a hard call to make, but I am so proud of the many people who have made it. It’s a life change that forever alters everything. It’s a marriage ended and a parent, or parents, whose presence in their children’s lives is altered or even made nonexistent. It’s a journey that is only beginning when the abused takes the first steps out of the house.
     And it’s something that, with knowledge, understanding, and humility, can be avoided, or, in situations where the person doing the harming refuses to see their folly, at least helped.
     Every story shared is one more chance for another to be changed.
     Every experience validated represents a person that much closer to healing.

     So. I am putting this out there for two reasons: One, to keep myself accountable. A dream never begun and never shared is only a dream, and never becomes a goal. And two, to open up an invitation.

     We have enough stories to write a book. In fact, adding more may, in actuality, lessen the impact, as fewer details would be able to be shared and thus there would be less understanding of individuals. However, as a part of, and leading up to, the release of the book, I would like to work on a series of blog posts sharing people’s stories. This will be worked on by both my sister and myself, and will serve as not only practice for writing the stories the way they deserve to be written, but as a tool to share more stories and get the word out about our project.
     The blog posts are not the main project and so will not be the main focus, but we hope, eventually, to get a collection of them together to be published on a blog dedicated to the project. We will likely open a facebook page as well, where these will be shared and where we can be contacted by those who wish to share their story.
     To be clear, I am not only asking for tragedies. I would love to hear stories where healing has happened, if they are out there. I know it is rare in the world of abuse for a marriage to turn around, but if that has happened, it needs to be shared and celebrated, if you are willing.
     We are challenging perceptions and paradigms and I expect it to be a tough climb. But we are so grateful for everyone who is willing to share.

     For anyone who wishes to share their story, please contact me at jrcb.business@gmail.com.

     Thank you.