reminiscing

intake

i share my birthday with a very special person.

the day i met her, almost five years ago, she had come in to my place of work with her mom. the two of them sat out in the lobby, while i was in my office at my desk. my coworker and fellow rape recovery team victim advocate poked her head into my office.

are you in the middle of something important?

“nah, not really. what’s up?”

there’s a victim out in the lobby with her mom. the rest of us are in the middle of SAAM planning with donors. she wants to talk to an advocate, learn about her options, but she wants to do it without her mom present. can you do her intake?

“yeah, no problem. i’ll get the paperwork.”

great, thanks. debrief with me about it this afternoon.

i closed the documents that were open on my computer, locked the screen, and grabbed the intake paperwork from the drawer of my desk.

before my coworker got too far down the hallway and back into her meeting, i called after her and quickly jogged towards her.

“where’s the paperwork from the night of the call? i didn’t have the pager the night of her rape.”

ah shit, sorry. it’s in d’s top drawer of her file cabinet. key is under her mousepad.

i got the victim’s name and then went to d’s office to get her file.

all of us had locked file cabinets, paperwork that had been filled out in confidence, that was respected. always.

flipping through the pages of her file, i learned a bit about the victim… the girl… young… too young… i learned about her assault, who responded to the scene, and what protocol had been followed in order to provide the victim with support, information, and resources, should she choose to use the services that we, as victim advocates, provide.

i took her file, along with my intake paperwork, to the front of the building and introduced myself to both the girl and her mother. the mother began speaking very quickly and with total disregard of the fact that we were in the lobby where others were clearly within hearing distance. her daughter stared at the floor and flicked her fingers at the buttons that were on her yellow raincoat.

once i was able to escort the victim back to one of our counseling rooms, i clicked on the sound machine that was kept at the bottom of each door of those rooms. this was to assure whomever we were meeting with, would be respected and met with total confidentiality.

amongst the paperwork and questions about her rape, from both my end and hers, there were times of basic human interaction. i remember her telling me that she liked my shoes.

she then asked me how old i was… and then she corrected herself.

i’m sorry. i probably shouldn’t be asking you that.

“no. it’s fine. i will be 25 in a few weeks.”

i’ll be 17 in a few weeks. you seem really young to be doing this kind of work.

“i am.”

we both laughed.

after the intake process was complete, i explained the options she had in terms of services that she would be receiving. (this can fall along the spectrum of legal information, to obtaining safe shelter, to establishing free counseling sessions that were provided at my place of work.)

she took a deep breath and asked if she had to share all of the information i gave her with her mother. i told her that what she chose to share with whomever was entirely her decision to make, but i encouraged her to speak with someone, even if it is not her mother.

she then told me why she felt she couldn’t talk to her mother.

her assailant was her stepfather.

the amount of time i spent with her for this intake ended up being more time than i spent during any other intake i had done as a rape victim advocate. there was something about this victim, this girl, that i couldn’t quite put my finger on. but i knew that i wasn’t ready for our time together to end, and i got that feeling from her as well.

for a while, we just sat there and talked. about normal things. because survivors are capable of doing so… talking about normal things.

when i looked at the clock that hung above the door to the counseling room, i grimaced and told her that we should probably wrap things up. i asked her if she had any other questions, if there was anything i had discussed with her that she needed clarification on.

yeah, i have one question and then i’ll go…

“absolutely. shoot.”

how do you know? like… you have sat here and nodded with me for over an hour… you like ‘get it.’ how do you know?

“i was raped too. a long time ago.”

she hugged me, thanked me for my time. she took the folder of information that i had for her. i compiled her intake forms. we opened the door and i bent down to turn off the sound machine.

when we walked up towards the lobby, where her mother was waiting, i told her that i wished her well and to remember that she was not alone.

her mom saw us and got up from her seat to approach her daughter.

i wished the girl a happy early birthday, and when she did the same, she asked me what day mine was on.

“may 3rd.”

mine too.

she smiled and clutched the folder i had given her tightly to her chest.

not a single birthday has passed for me, since that time, when i haven’t thought about her as i blow out the candles on my cake.

**********

april is sexual assault awareness month. if you or someone you know is in need of support, resources or help, please visit RAINN. the national sexual assault hotline phone number is 1.800.656.HOPE

on shifting and budding and growth

mother nature is a menopausal bitch right now. granted, i don’t want to piss her off anymore than she already is (hopefully she is not reading this post). i’m fairly certain that everyone is well aware of her wrath and overall disgust at the way we have treated our world and our planet… each other…

no, i’m not stepping on that soapbox…

in fact, i’m doing the opposite, i’m just taking it all in… i watch the news (somedays, and other days i have to turn it off because i get scared and look to paul for comfort and he shrugs his shoulders because just like everyone else, we don’t have all of the answers). i watch my son grow like a goddamn weed whose roots are so embedded into the ground that no matter how much you trim that sucker in an attempt to control it, it’s just going to grow and grow until you just submit. i watch people around me, some interacting with others and some watching on the sidelines. people in the grocery stores going up and down each aisle picking and choosing, people in parking lots trying to find a spot where they belong.

and then i watch our weather change… seriously, by the hour change… it’s wild and frightening at the same time. one moment i look at the temperature and find myself giddy at the opportunity to take jackson outside without having to wear a heavy coat. to enjoy some sunshine. (after all, he is an earth day birthday, a total tree hugger.) but in the blink of an eye or a rumble of thunder, what i saw outside as potential for spring changes entirely. lightening cracks and jackson looks panicked for a moment. temperatures drop and gusts of wind nearly blow the winter hats off our heads.

his cheeks are red, not from growing warm running around the park, but from the cold.

**********

distractions occur. the television channel changes. phones ring. emails grab your attention. you stumble upon a blog post that resonates so deeply within you. and then you lose yourself for a moment, entrenching yourself in something else entirely.

at some point, you rub your eyes, take a look at the clock and acknowledge how much time has passed. sometimes this can be a gift as you realize that you’ve possibly accomplished a great about of stuff in a small amount of time thereby leaving you with that much more time to accomplish that much more stuff. other times this can really piss you off because it dawns on you that you spent what seems to be an obscene amount of time starting at a black computer screen that is still blank because you don’t know what on earth you want to say.

so you breathe. because, ya know, you can’t not breathe (i mean you could, but that’s another post entirely…). inhale. exhale. reassess. possibly step away and return later. possibly plug on. trying to remember that you really truly want to be present.

**********

i looked out my bedroom window just now and see the slightest glimmer of sunshine. hope.

excitement exuded from my voice as i drove jackson to school this morning and we talked about running around outside on the playground. swinging and sliding and jumping. he thrilled me with stories about yelling outside “but not inside mom,” and i smiled.

shit, he is growing fast.

he is going to turn 3 very soon.

shortly after, i will turn 30.

i cannot wait to begin a new decade. strange as it may sound, there is nothing about aging that scares me at this moment in time. i’m sure that will change, as all things do… mature, learn by experience, and grow. it’s important to me to continue absorbing, allowing myself to be taught by other people and by the world.

as i approach this new decade, softly tuck away my 20′s, i welcome thoughts of what’s to come… good and bad…

…the wanting, trying, working, failing, learning, achieving, resting, and everything in between.

**********
a special thank you to jen o. from my tornado alley for writing this post that inspired mine. if you haven’t already read it, you must. you simply must.

a baker’s dozen

earlier this week, paul reminded me that tomorrow marks twelve years that he and i have been making out with one another.

twelve… 1-2… 12… TWELVE!

yes, he remembers anniversaries better than i do. he remembers a lot of things better than i do.

come to think of it, paul’s kind of like a vault that occasionally cracks open when you get the combination correct and then busts out with some random nugget of knowledge… or in this case, a reminder of when he and i began dating.

he remembers the movie we saw on our first date. i don’t. i know that there was fire in it. i actually missed a good chunk of the movie because i spent an obscene amount of time in the bathroom that evening.

the part of our date that i remember vividly, other than it sucking, is my contact lens getting stuck in the top of my eye. like UP on the white part of your eyeball and you try to ::BLINK:: to get it to move down but your eyelid is being a bitch and fighting you with each ::BLINK:: and then your eyes start to tear up but not because you’re crying at the stupid fire movie you’re watching, but because you have a circular piece of plastic that was made to correct your vision STUCK ON TOP OF YOUR EYEBALL and unwilling to move.

i spent what felt like hours in that bathroom, splashing my face with water, attempting to get some in my eye so that it would somehow swish my contact lens around and magically conform to my eye the way it’s supposed to.

after a few minutes of failing at that, i had to do one of the things i hate the most… i had to TOUCH MY EYE. and sweet mother of all things disgusting that gives me the itchies in my soul, I HATE TOUCHING MY EYE.

alas, i had no choice nor any saline solution in the movie theater bathroom. i touched my eye, removed the bitch of a contact lens, and saw that the lens had flipped itself inside out.

(remember that lesson in science class about concave and convex lenses? i should’ve paid more attention to that.)

i toss the contact lens in the trash can, pinch my cheeks in the hopes of looking like i still have a little bit of blush on even though i washed it all off during my battle with my contact lens.

it then dawns on me that the amount of time i spent in that movie theater bathroom was the exact equivalent of the amount of time one spends in a public restroom when one has explosive diarrhea.

paul is totally thinking i diarrheared myself during our first date. of course he would think i diarrheaed myself this whole time because i have been in here FOR-EV-ER.

i wanted to die. i didn’t die (obviously) but i wanted to at that moment in time.

(it should be noted that years later, when i finished grad school, my parents asked me what i wanted as a gift to mark the accomplishment of getting my master’s degree. i asked for lasik eye surgery.)

paul does not recall the contact lens of death drama that occurred that evening. he was watching a movie about fire and totally plotting how he would make out with me by the end of the night (which he didn’t because the date sucked and i don’t put out on dates that cause me to jab my own fingers in my eye.)

the night of my first date with paul ended excessively early. i had a lame curfew and paul had a loud-ass jeep wrangler that irritated the hell out of me for years because of the stupid noise those cheap plastic windows make that ultimately keep one from having any sort of conversation while driving.

i’m convinced jeep wranglers were invented just to piss excessively verbal people, like me, off.

also, that night, after throwing away my contact lens in the movie theater bathroom, i could only half see which was an odd experience and gave me a craptastic headache.

WHATEVER! I HAD TO TOUCH MY EYEBALL, PEOPLE! IT WAS TRAUMATIC!

happy 12 years, my love! let’s make out.

wordless wednesday (kinda)

this look… is the look my husband gave me when he asked me to marry him, 7 years ago.

and it’s now the look jackson gives me when he wants to eat cake.

funny how that whole DNA thing works.

this weekend, we remembered

paul’s beloved grandpa jack and many others who have so bravely and selflessly served.

Join Me


Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Funding My Coffee Habit

ThisWebHost Banner

Designs By PrincessJenn

Pigtail Pals

Supporting

I'm a survivor. www.violenceunsilenced.com