Sunday, May 31, 2015

Band-Aids On The Inside





I remember when I was a little kid, in my single digit ages, I always seemed to be wearing Band-Aids as if they were part of my morning getting dressed routine.  A scraped up elbow or knee from falling off a bike or skateboard.  A splinter in my finger from the handrail on our front steps.  A fresh bite mark from my baby sister when I let myself get to close to teasing her.  A Band-Aid across my nose when I missed a step running up the basement stairs because I was afraid the monster would grab my feet through the steps.  Perhaps that is why I 'tripped'. 

I remember as a kid thinking Band-Aids were cool.  Someone would ask you what happened and you could tell them how brave you were when you turned the corner to sharp on your bike and wiped out.  How you ran down the basement to get your mom potatoes for the nights meal and you tripped coming back up from losing your balance due to the heavy bucket you carried up for her.  How you were sharing your treat with your little sister when she decided to take a bite of you.  The injuries were always worth the stories you could tell about how you got them.

My best Band-Aid memory was when my mom and me walked up Lemon Street to Morningside Ave to the public library to get books to read for the week.  We got up to the church along Morningside Ave that was along the way.  I saw a bush of flowers and wanted to pick one for my mom because I loved her so much for walking me to the library.  Turns out I should of used more caution as I grabbed the flower that turned out to be a rose with a stem full of thorns.  It was a long walk to the library after that but before we stopped at the library my mom headed straight for corner of Peters Park and when she turned left at the stop light and we walked down past the post office I knew we were headed for the Dairy Queen. 

I remember when we got to the Dairy Queen I showed the lady taking our order the three spots on my hand that got 'bit' by the thorns on that stem.  She took me to the back, washed my hand and put Band-Aids on my wounds.  When anyone asked me about my wounds I wouldn't have to make up a cool story at all, I already had one!  Turns out the truth of the story of how I got my injuries was not one I should of told to my birth dad.  In my excitement of the day I forgot that our walks during the day were forbidden, by his command we were never to leave our house beyond the yard.  Not only did I received wounds a Band-Aid would never cover, so did my mom.  At the hands of that monster we were taught a lesson we would not soon forget.  It was from that day on I never again, not once, explained my injuries and how I obtained them to anyone.

It was from that day on that I discovered wounds and scars and pains that no size of Band-Aid could ever hide.  Through the next seven years I would learn to hide my fear and pain from the world, including myself.  From that point on a bite, a splinter, a scraped elbow or knee was minor compared to the bruises and broken bones you could hide behind your clothing.  The black eye you got from your birth dad is a lot more painful to look at than the one you got when you ran into the corner of a dresser.  From that day on both my mom and me suffered abuse at the hands of my birth dad.  From that day on both my mom and me covered our wounds with denial.  From that day on both my mom and me never spoke about what Band-Aids could never hide.

I buried my lifes 'ickies' for seven years.  Scars on the inside that no one could see.  Abuse so physical layers of clothing was the only Band-Aid I could hide behind.  Abuse so verbal not even heavy metal music through headphones cold make the words fade.  Abuse so ugly in a sexual nature that it knocked the beauty right out of any life I knew. 

I learned at a very young age not to judge others because you do not know what they have gone through in their lives.  We don't see the scars on the inside of others.  We don't know their pain, whether it is self inflicted or by the hands and motions of others.  We don't see the splinters in a heart, the bruises under the clothes, the scabs formed on on the memories.  There are no bandages to see, to let us know that something is not right.  There are no bandages that let us know to handle someone with care as to not hurt them more.  No tears to give us a heads up to ask what is wrong, show them we care.

I can attest to the fact that the more abused you are, the more pain you have to hide from others, the better you become at it.  In fact, you become so accustom to shielding yourself from the abuse you become somewhat of an expert of hiding it from people that are in your life daily.  You can hide it from siblings, parents, spouses, family members, friends and even a therapist when you need to.  Worst of all, you get to be an expert at hiding your pain from yourself. 

Wounds heal and scars fade away, but the memories of abuse last forever, even after your abuser has left this earth.  In some cases it gets worse when your abuser has died.  You lose the fear of running into them again someday on earth.  You know they can no longer hurt you physically or sexually abuse you, but the mental abuse seems to never go away.  Since you no longer have your abuser to blame, you turn the blame onto yourself.  You spend hours a day trying to figure out what you did wrong, what you could have done differently.  You never forgive yourself.  No matter how many times you are told by others it wasn't your fault.  That it was his illness not yours.  That you are a victim, you were victimized.  Your therapist tries to help you sort it out, day by day, back another day until you visit the very first time you were abused. It only brings back all the pain, all the fears, all the denial.

A seven year old boy who told daddy how he got stuck with thorns trying to pick a flower for his mommy because she not only took him to get books to read she bought him an ice cream treat.  A seven year old boy who never once got a hand laid on him before that day, who never got yelled at or called names by his daddy, who never had a hand laid on him in an inappropriate manner.  And in one day he caused his daddy enough anger by disobeying his commands, breaking his rules, that him and his mommy got beat with a belt so hard it left bruises on their skin, scars on their souls, and broke their hearts.  A day when three lives were changed forever, a day when a daddy and a mommy and a son would die on the inside.  A day when a seven year old boy would learn that not only a Band-Aid could hide a wound.

Be careful and mindful in your life on how you treat others.  Be careful in how you judge someone based on the outside shell that protects an inside scar.  Be mindful of a past you have not witnessed.  A kind word, a warm smile, a slight nod of the head.  A handshake, a wave, a friendly hello.  It cost nothing to give and its reward is priceless.  Remember, you may not see a Band-Aid but that does not mean there is not a wound.  You may not see a scar but a memory never fades.  You may not see tears but someone could be drowning on the inside.  Judge not, least you be judged.

STUFF HAPPENS WHEN YOU ARE A KID,
IT SCARS YOU FOR LIFE - Corey Haim

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

... because I loved you the most ...

God took them all because I loved them the most.

I want you to know that this is not about you, this is about me.  Please try to understand this with an open mind and try not to make this about you.  This IS NOT YOUR FAULT.

I understand more than you realize what is going on with your brain cancer.  I understand you are experiencing brain fog and that your short term memory is not working right now.  I get that you will be late and I know your attention span is very short right now.  I get it, I really do, and I know it is not something you can control no matter how much you want to be in control of it right now.  I hope with all my heart that you realize you should not take this personal on behave of myself.

My frustration does not lay with-in you and your actions.  My frustration is with life.  You know more about me than any one individual on earth.  That doesn't scare me at all.  From day one you supported my issues, you comforted my soul.  From day one you showed me unconditional love and pushed it on me until I accepted it, embraced it, got comfortable with it.  From day one listened to my stories, my fears, my dreams, my hopes and my faith.  You never let me down.

The only other people that know me more than you do are in heaven. Taken from me by God.  He took away the people I loved the most, the deepest, the purest.   

I loved my little sister and the three years I got to have her on earth with me would never be enough even if it had been a million years.  God took her from because I loved her the most.

I loved my oldest brother and the thought of him taking me away to live with him when he was done with college.  I knew I could tell him my troubles and through my tears he would save me from the very things he had to save himself from.  I loved the thought of leaving my troubles behind and growing up normal.  God took him from me because I loved him the most.

I loved my brother Joey with everything I had.  I loved how he loved and cared for me enough to take me places and be my buddy.  I loved he taught me how to hit a baseball, skate on roller skates, not scream when I rode the rides at the carnival in Peter's Park.  I loved that he loved me enough to promise me a better life and save me from the monster who tried to destroy my heart, my soul, my youth.  God took him from me because I loved him the most.

I loved my mom with all my heart and after my sister died I knew then that now my mom was the greatest love of my life.  Eighteen years was not going to be enough time to spend with my mom.   God took her from me because I loved her the most.

I loved Amazing Gracie the moment I met her. I loved her strength, her courage, her spunk, her innocence and I fell in love with the story of her life.  I loved the life's lesson I was learning from that sweet eight year old girl.  God took her from me because I loved her the most.

I loved a lot of people along the way.  People who listened to my dreams.  People who tried to calm my fears.  People who accepted me for who I am , where I came, where I was heading.  People who made me laugh and dried my tears.  People who let me annoy them.  People who helped  me understand I am good, I have a good heart, I have a good soul.  And God took them away from me too, because I was loving them the most.

I love Jake and I love how he helped me grow from that awkward chubby boy to the confident successful young man I want others to believe I am.  I loved him the most, and then I remembered God takes those that we love the most and I distance myself from him so God could see I loved HIM the most. 

I love you Pooh, but I love you the most. I love how you let a stupid little mouthy kid into your life, be part of your family.  How you shared them with me and let them love me too.  How you challenged me in life to face my fears.  How you let me know its ok to be love and to love back.  I loved you most and HE knew, so inside your head a tumor grew.  I want you to be ok, I want you to live forever.  I want to be your friend.  I want to love you the most, but I cannot chance God taking you from the world.  It breaks my heart but broken hearts can heal.  It's more important for you to live and be in the lives of so many people that love you. 

Every time you are 'late', or see a 'shiny' object, or forget something I've told you the day before.  Each time something happens to remind me you are going through this difficult time I am reminded that God is in control and as long as I love Him the most, you will be ok.  I know you will be ok, you are so loved and have so many prayers going up to the heavens above there is no way God is ready for you to leave us.  Unless I love you the most. 
 

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Motherless Son's and Daughter's



It's here. Mothers Day 2015.  That time of year when "motherless" sons and daughters are reminded of the loss of a love so great it can never be replaced.  I'm sure there are a lot of first timers of  Motherless Day reading this.  A day where you silently stand by and witness all the joys of others celebrating this special day that honor mothers of the world and all they do for us.  A day where mom's don't cook, mom's don't clean, mom's don't lift a finger unless its to provide a hug to their sons and/or daughters.  Where mom's get flowers, visits, dinners out, desserts in.

If you're a first timer to Motherless Day you will find yourself grieving all over again for the mom you wish back to earth, back into your journey.  You will cry, be sad, get angry, ask God why.  You will fill empty in your heart and see constant reminders of your mom being gone from your physical world.  There is no denying on this day that she is gone.  You will face it head on as you see all the other mother's around you being treated like queens today.  There is no more escaping what you have been so far denying.  Your mom is gone.  There is no spending today showing your mom how much you love her and appreciate everything she has done for you.  Gone. Forever.  Put to rest. 

If you're not a first timer to Motherless Day you will still grieve but you will be able to comfort your aching heart as you remember why you miss her so much.  You will spend time today thinking about all the ways you love your mom and your mom loves you.  Memories she left with you, memories you kept with you.  It's just as painful as the first Motherless Day you had since your mom went to heaven, you just have learned to deal with it on a whole new level.  You miss her just as much but you reach deep into your heart and pull out memories of days gone by. 

The warm coats in the winter, the long walks in the summer.  The special birthday cakes made for your special day, the homemade cards made and written with love from you moms heart.  The meals she made you the clothes she washed for you.  The hands that did everything out of the love in her heart for you.  So many memories that only a mother could give you.  Each day since she passed you cried and you laughed and you missed her and the love she showered upon you.

You walk alone in your journey thinking about how much you loved her and how much she loved you and you marvel t the thought of how many times you felt so much love for her yet once she was gone you found how you loved her even more than you fathomed when she was her with you.  You honor her everyday and even though you know there is one day set aside each year for mothers you think about how mothers should be honored every day.  You find yourself thinking about how much wiser you became after she died only to realize it was she who taught you everything you know about life, about love, about death.  She taught you all you know about sadness and heartache and happiness. 

You wonder why you could not see how valuable she was to your life when she was still beating inside her heart.  How you could not see that you are who you are because of your mom, only to realize that upon her death.  You realize now how much you are like her, the things that brought you closer, the times you shared with her.  You realize now that she is gone that you were capable of giving her so much more of your heart, share so much more of your life with her.  You are now aware of not just how much you loved her but how much she loved you.  You realize now that she was more than a mother, she was also your friend. 

 

It doesn't ever get easier my friends but it gets more bearable.  Let the tears fall for as long as you need too.  Let the sadness strings pull at your heart.  Let the memories, good and bad, seep out of your hearts and into your minds.  Cherish the memories of times spent with your mothers and allow yourself to relive as many moments as you can between the tears.  Honor your mother this day, and every day, until you meet her again in an eternal life that will end your fears and tears of a life on earth in the absence of your mother. 

I love you Mom and I miss you every minute of every day. What I didn't get to say to you when you were here with me is how much I love you and am thankful for everything you left with me to survive in my motherless world.  Love you to the heavens and back.  RIP ~ Jett
 

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I do not write to spread my sadness on earth, I write to share my journey to heaven.