A Letter to Her Abuser
I'm sure you must remember me. I could never forget you. I'm the one whom you raped and tortured for many years. Did I forget to mention your friends, who also abused me under your watch?
Read MoreI'm sure you must remember me. I could never forget you. I'm the one whom you raped and tortured for many years. Did I forget to mention your friends, who also abused me under your watch?
Read MoreI always wanted to be “Daddy’s Girl.” The kind of little girl who makes her daddy smile “just because.”
Because she is the apple of his eye and he is her hero, she and daddy share a beautiful bond. Like glue, they have a connection that mends all of life’s ups and downs. Unless mother prevents that.
Last night we hugged. It was more than just a casual hug. It was a “heart-hugging-heart” kind of hug. You know, the kind where the emotions run so deep that we cried.
I should clarify; only one of us cried.
Last December I was given a precious gift. If you asked me even days before, I wouldn’t have understood any of what I’m about to share. I would have had no reason to.
I lied. Mine was a 50-year kind of lie.
In our yard, we have a wooden split-rail fence. During the last windstorm, one of the lower rails was irreparably broken. What a bold yet honest metaphor to symbolize the relationship between my mother and me. Some fences can be fixed. Some can't. We couldn’t.
I'm not too sure how old this fence is, just as I don't exactly remember when my abuse started. All I know is that like our fence, my abuse withstood the elements of every season. I never liked spring showers. Raindrops that rolled down the outside of my bedroom window panes were akin to the tears that welled in my eyes and streamed down my face. I would wipe them away just like mother made me her mop to wash away her own childhood abuse.
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