My Testimony | From Surviving Relentless Abuse to a Blissful Life | Part Three

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I never wet the bed until I wasn’t allowed to use the bathroom. If I would get up to pee, I could hear him get up to snatch me up as soon as I got close to the bathroom. He said the same thing every time. “She’s up with the devil.” He didn’t bother to find his belt, he would just beat me in the hallway and send me back to bed. I started stuffing my wet underwear behind my bed. I would sneak it into the laundry basket when my brother was washing clothes, but I always got caught, the abuse was never-ending.

This is the fourth post in this series, to start from the beginning, please click here.

Disclaimer: I wrote this in 2013 to share my testimony with the world in the hopes of helping other children faced with abuse. Most times, you will be the only person to advocate for a child that cannot stand up for themselves. Children in abusive situations are taught to conceal every aspect of abuse, so if you by chance are able to see something, it may be the only opportunity for rescue a child has. Please take the appropriate steps to report child abuse. I have since rewritten and updated these posts to make them more understandable and up to my current writing standards.

Punished for joy

I think the first time I recognized he hated my happiness was when I was in kindergarten. My teacher announced that we were going to have a pajama pizza party. I needed to bring a paper home to inform my parents and get their consent. I was so excited. It was school, I had already missed so many days from being too bruised up that they would have to let me go. That morning I don’t remember why, but we were late. He walked me to school and I couldn’t contain my excitement. There was nothing he could do to take away my joy once I was inside my classroom. But as we reached the halfway point to my school, he turned me around and told me I wasn’t going. Instead he took me home and beat me.

Looking back, there was a point where I recognized that just the thought of me being happy equaled a beating. I had to learn to hide my joy. But for so long I was so naive. I dreamed about that pizza party for years. I imagined what happened, and what the pizza tasted like. Because I dreamed about it so much I forged a memory in my mind as if it really happened. I can still picture it and I’m 30 years old. I hated him for robbing me from that experience.

On the rare occasions that I wasn’t on restriction my mother would bring home Lisa Frank sets for me. I only got a few sets but when I did I cherished them, they were my most prized possessions. And since I wasn’t on restriction it meant I got to play outside with my brother and sister. Every time I would get a Lisa Frank set, I would bring it with me, and every time, I would leave it at the park and forget them. The last set I received, I actually remembered to bring it home. I was in our room looking at them. So happy that I still had them, vowing that next time I would hide them at home somewhere to keep safe.

And then I heard the sound of his car. Terror struck. Being off restriction was very uncommon for me so I never really knew what to do with myself. I stayed in the room, just looking at my stickers. Already shaking, knowing something bad would happen, I heard him come through the door and he headed straight for me. I wasn’t in trouble. I didn’t do anything wrong. But as soon as I looked up, he punched me in the face. My nose began to bleed all over my precious stickers and notepads. They were all ruined. It’s crazy looking back thinking about how I was more devastated about all the blood and not about what he did. This was my reality. I had to take it.

Alienated from reality

When I would go to school I would hear about a world that was hard to believe existed. I didn’t have more than two friends at a time up through fifth grade because I didn’t know how to socialize. I was bullied and harassed beginning in the third grade because my hair was cut to about an inch long, thanks to my mother. Which made me rock something that resembled an unkept fro, plus I had coke bottle glasses. The perfect recipe for being picked on.

I never got close to anyone but I always observed the other kids. Their lives were so interesting. They would go to birthday and slumber parties. They would go to ballet class or play sports. It was all so hard for me to imagine. I didn’t even know what half of the stuff was. When they talked about their lives, I couldn’t relate, I could barely understand what they meant.

I don’t remember even going to the mall. The only place we ever went was to the grocery store on rare occasions and we weren’t allowed to ask for a single thing. As we passed the other kids in the store we saw them grabbing things and putting them in their cart, or asking for snacks. I was always jealous of them. We ate what was made for us without complaining. And to be honest, I was grateful to be able to eat, even when it was punishment food because anything was better than when they starved us.

There wasn’t a part of my existence that wasn’t penetrated by his rules. When we would go outside we had a million boundaries. We had to stay inside the fenced playground and not go outside of it to the field or the basketball court. We were never allowed to swim at any of the pools in our apartment complex. And we always had to look over our shoulder because at random times he would come out and watch us.

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But all of that never stopped me from being stubborn and trying to be like all the other kids. I figured one day that it was time for me to ride a bike, so like all the other lessons in life, I decided I would need to teach myself. Thankfully there were plenty of kids with bikes around that would let me borrow theirs. And so I taught myself, and when I would ride on a bike I felt like I was free.

There was a day when I was especially daring and decided I was going to ride a bike wherever I wanted to. Across the street from the park, in between the apartment buildings, there was a pool that had a sidewalk surrounding it. That sidewalk went down a hill and into the street. So as I was riding, I decided it would be fun to ride it down the hill, so down I went. The problem with teaching yourself things, is that you don’t have the wisdom to see the things that could go wrong.

As I came down that hill and picked up speed I went darting into the street and got hit by a car. The bike I was riding, along with me, ended up underneath the car. I stood up and the man got out. Out of fear of what could happen at home I begged the man to not take me home. I had to convince him I was fine and I made him pull the bike out and drive off. My leg was really hurt but I knew it was nothing compared to what could happen if he found out that I was somewhere I wasn’t supposed to be, doing something I wasn’t supposed to do.

The fear of him was so crippling to me that in a moment where I needed a parent to comfort me I was alone. Being a child should have been my priority but instead I knew that I had to grow up and get over everything in order to survive. I didn’t have a “mommy” and “daddy”. I had no one to tell me that everything was going to be alright. No one to save me, and no one to trust enough to tell what was going on in our home.

As time went on everything intensified

As we got older, what we got in trouble for became more random than ever. Nothing ever made any sense, and you never knew if your next step would land you in trouble.

When I was about eight or nine years old I came home from school and needed a pen to do my homework. So I found one on the table and took it to our room. When I was done with it I left it on one of our dressers. When he came home he found the pen and wanted to know who had used it. Terrified of what would happen, I lied and said that it wasn’t me.

So to figure out who was the culprit he made the three of us sit at the table, my brother first, me and then my sister. He started with my brother and asked him if he had used it. When he said no, he took a belt and whipped my brother across the face with it. Then came my turn. I was horrified.

I didn’t know what to do, I didn’t want to be whipped across my face, but I also knew the real punishment would be much worse. So I lied and said no and got the same consequence. And then it was my sisters turn. I don’t know why I allowed them to go through what I was going through. Maybe I had felt like it was only me for so long, or maybe I was too frightened to find out what the real punishment was. But when it came back to my turn I confessed.

I don’t know how he punished me afterwards because I blacked out. Seems I did that a lot. I wish I could say that when he was beating me I would go to some happy place and think of other things. But that pain was too real–too overwhelming. I always told myself what didn’t kill me would make me stronger. That there was a reason I was going through all of that.

As the years came and went the fear started to set in. It crippled me. Those assigned seats that we had on the couch and on my bed became my reign of terror. I would sit there, shaking, waiting for him to come home, wondering what kind of mood he was in. By this time, our routine was set, even though at random times new punishments would appear. My mom and him loved learning what I didn’t like so they could use it against me. When I think of the things he did to me, there’s only a few times that I can remember what I actually did wrong to deserve the punishment. In my opinion there was nothing I could have done to deserve what he did. Being the target of someone’s unpredictable rage was too much for a child to bear.

“Then my head will be exalted above

the enemies who surround me;

at his sacred tent I will sacrifice

with shouts of joy; I will sing

and make music to the Lord.”

Psalm 27:6

Would you share this post? I’m writing this series in hopes to help someone. You never know who’s suffering, whether that is an adult who is trying to live in the aftermath of abuse or a child that someone can help, they just need a push to do it.

Next Post: My Testimony | From Surviving Relentless Abuse to a Blissful Life | Part Four 

Previous Posts:

My Testimony | From Surviving Relentless Abuse to a Blissful Life | Part Two

My Testimony | From Surviving Relentless Abuse to a Blissful Life | Introduction

Related Posts:

Why I Rededicated My Life to Christ

3 Free Encouraging Verse Printables

 

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Please feel free to share this, my hope is that through my brokenness I can save other children from abuse.

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5 Comments

  1. I cannot believe you were hit by a car and walked away untreated. I wonder how that man felt. Could he not suspect abuse if you feared being brought home so much? It is just so heartbreaking hearing what you went through…I have gasped and my throat constricts every time I read about the pain and abuse he caused you. My hands immediately went over my mouth and nose when I read he punched you in the face. HOW DOES ANY HUMAN DO THAT TO A CHILD?! Monster is the only word that comes to mind. My oldest is currently in kindergarten and it just breaks me that you didn’t get the type of love and care that she is getting. No child should ever go through this. Thank you for sharing so that we can all be more aware to look out for these signs.

  2. I didn’t suffer abuse to the extent that you did, but I remember fearing my father. I was always so scared of him because he had such a bad temper. I couldn’t play like a normal kid because he didn’t like any type of mess. I always remember being nervous when I was at friends houses because they were being messy and loud…I was always waiting for their dads to yell at them or hit them, but they never did. I tried to stay gone from home as much as possible to escape the craziness. Thanks for sharing your story.

  3. As a mother, I am sitting here shocked and horrified. I am sorry hun. However, I know Christ and he uses all things for his will. I am thankful you found him and are able to share your story. I originally came to the blog to find out how to organize my mommy blog. Then I saw your title and couldn’t help but click. You are beautiful and much success to you hun.

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