Thursday, February 19, 2009

coping mechanisms and re-memberances

I cut my parents off after watching Once Upon a Time in the West because of the rape scene.

That was a few months ago? I'd like to say I'm feeling better, because in some ways I am. But in a lot of ways I feel awful.

Right now I'm working on the Courage to Heal workbook.
I'm learning about coping mechanisms. I circled the ones that I use and wrote down some more. Then, following the book's direction, I organized them into ones I'm ashamed of and ones I'm not.

coping mechanisms I'm ashamed of:
-fantasizing
-self-mutilation
-avoiding intimacy
-creating new personalities
-leaving my body
-anorexia (baby's first coping mechanism!)
-hiding from my partner
-suicide attempts
-avoiding sex
-spacing out

coping mechanisms I'm not ashamed of:
-denial
-rationalization
-perfectionism
-forgetting
-staying in control
-minimizing
-staying busy
-taking care of others
-looking on the "bright" side

I realized the difference between the first list and the second is that I think others expect and want me to do the things in the second list.
I think some of them do. I've hopefully cut all of those people out of my life.

Oh. Now I remember what else I was going to say.
I remembered my pastor raping me when I was sixteen and having sex with my boyfriend. Rather, when I was sixteen I remembered my pastor raping me when I was seven? eight? nine and ten?
I worked on it as well as I could at the time, and finally told my estranged mother during one of my rare visits to her home.
I thought she was supportive, but she asked, delicately, if I was sure he had raped me, since she did my laundry when I was small and never noticed the blood that would have shown.
That was disturbing enough to hear but the answer to her panty-problem was "no" as far as I could remember and I only realized the other night that ever since she asked that, I stopped thinking he "raped" me.
I tried to minimize it to "molested" (not that I would ever tell another person that being "molested" is somehow better than being "raped"), but then it just sort of slipped into denial. I started having a hard time saying his name when I had learned at 16-17 to do it, started telling myself and others that I must be making it up, must be, because I couldn't REMEMBER ANYTHING

then the other night I had a dream:
I was in a long corridor with all of the people I loved, all my friends and they were dancing around cleaning the place up. they started to pull the partitions down that made the long room lots of little rooms and I realized that we were in my old church, where my pastor used to touch me and tell me gross things about how he loved me and I was little and pretty and bad and beautiful and sex was good and he would teach me, and that I had so much potential--
so, in the dream, I hunched into a ball and tried to scream but I couldn't, and some of my friends noticed and tried to help me up and asked "what's the matter" but all I could say was "ffff fffff ffffff ffffffff" and then I woke up.

I decided after this transparent metaphor that I should just act like he DID sexually abuse me, because if I was wrong, it didn't matter. who did it hurt? it was just my head.

and then the memories started coming back. but I didn't want them to. so I shook for a week. my heart began to have arrythmias. I went to the doctor and they gave me medicine to sleep. eventually I asked my friend if he would like to give me an orgasm, and he did, and I remembered my pastor giving me an orgasm, and it was awful, awful, awful, awful, awful, awful, awful

but at least I remember? at least I can heal now? can I? ugh. I'm going to work in my book some more.

1 comment:

Comma said...

You can heal, of course you can. It hurts and it's terrifying and it makes the world seem like one big scary rape machine, but you can heal. A trick I learned but keep forgetting to do: when you're having a flashback or a memory or whatever, open your eyes and remind yourself that it's over, it's over and it's never EVER going to happen again. Connect to your surroundings, name the things around you out loud. Come back to the present, because in the present he's not there hurting you. I get the feeling it would work if I could only remember to do it.

I love you a lot. You will heal and someday, it will all be behind you.