On the side will be a few things, such as peripheral subjects, tidbits of thoughts, tidbits of articles, mini articles, food for thought, or a current event. I hope it fires us up. I hope it calms us down. May it carry with it the propensity to make us laugh and make us cry. To make us think and make us let go. Be it no-nonsense or humorous, I deem it a place to go for brief and momentary consideration.
NOT GUILTY!!!
I recently read a statement/question. It was: Why does he get to be free while I suffer from the trauma he gave me.
Part 1. The definitive in the statement is free. My answer is, “because you are in prison.” Namely, because you don’t discuss your perpetrator’s dirty little secret. And you don’t discuss it because of the stigma, the disgrace associated to it. Even some of the most unpleasant prisoners, past or present, admit to their confinement. They may not always say why they were there, but they will admit to their confinement.
However, a victim of rape or sexual abuse may not be so forthcoming. That makes it hard to traverse from victim to survivor. A victim is traumatized with guilt, shame and trauma; this is the baggage internment camp victims carried out of the concentration camps. You learn this when the survivors begin to talk about the atrocities.
Confinement
Generally, a person does something unlawful, goes to prison, gets out, and talks about the transgression and the incarceration. But our confinement is rather unique. We can’t admit the wrong we’ve done because we didn’t do anything wrong. One of the things I learned early on was you have to talk about what happened to you. I didn’t start off as eloquent in my attempts but for years now I’ve talked about the abuses visited upon me. First, a little at a time, then I could do so as little or a graphically as I wished. As I’ve stressed before, a great place to begin might be to talk to yourself. (And please do not apply the stigma of talking to yourself here.) Whether sitting in your car or sitting on your throne, say what happened to you. And do so with no shame, guilt or stress because you are Not Guilty! Write it down if you can’t speak it to yourself, but do not hold that secret.
This began with why are they free while we suffer.
Because we sit in our cell and don’t say anything, nothing, notta. Why? Because we didn’t do anything.
Now let’s look at what other prisoners say. I robbed that store and I got 3-8 years. This is year 4 and I go before the parole board this year. Oohh, this is what I’m gonna say:
- I fell in love with the wrong woman. She was on drugs and I did rob that store. After 4 years I am not in love anymore.
- My husband is a gambler. He gambled away the rent and I didn’t want me and the kids to be homeless, so I robbed that store. He has since remarried.
In short, they talk. They write. They word somehow. But not us, we say nothing. And guess who’s the president, vice-president and officers of our parole board? We Are.
We don’t even know how to begin the letter. Why? Because we didn’t do anything wrong. Then our recitation or writing to our parole board has to begin with, “I’m here in this cell because when I was 3, 8, 17, 28, or 36 my uncle, brother, mother’s friend, auntie, stranger or acquaintance robbed me. It started when I was asleep, walking down the street, etc.
Say it loud to yourself, the stranger at the bus stop, or to a counselor. Then you can have hope of leaving that cell you are in for the crime you did not commit. Stop being the victim and become the survivor.
We hear of people serving time for crimes they did not commit all the time. Oh, we say that is just mucked up. We judge that as so unjust, the unfairest of the unfair. Guess who our judge is? The jury? The guards? The parole board? The witness? You are a prisoner. You suffer the guilt and shame of your (undeserved) incarceration. Face that. We don’t even act like someone who’s been unjustly incarcerated. You didn’t do anything wrong and yet you are serving time, your life. You can talk or write your way out but you relegate yourself to sit in the dishonor of that drab cell.
Uh oh. That’s one key to freedom. I have another one. Jennifer, my little FatAss, was a little toddler, when the late Rev. Harvey D. Anderson was preaching a sermon. I’ll never forget what he said, He said, “You can forgive a person and never speak to them again.” Trust me, I know, it took a long time for me to grasp such a readily clutchable notion. On the tail end of never speak to that person again, I’ll add to wish that person no ill will. In short, you’re walking down a pier near a life preserver and you see that person drowning and you throw them the preserver.
To forgive is to set a person free and discover that prisoner was you. Lewis B. Smedes
Ha! Forgive Somebody. We can’t even forgive ourselves for something we didn’t even do. Then to set yourself free using the component of no ill will to your perpetrator when you can’t forgive yourself, an innocent person, is a key that may be discussed some other time.
Regardless of how illogical it may seem at times, it is through unconditional forgiveness that we surrender the past to the past and enter the present, freeing ourselves to stand in the infinite light that knows how to heal our deepest and most painful wounds.
Author: Dennis Merritt Jones
Do Tell A Story Poem
Although this is a website for adults, I believe “Do Tell” can be shared with those of us who are younger than
18 years of age
A child needs stability and security in order to begin to construct their maps on how the world works
www.themindsjournal.com
Anything you want to hide cannot be good for you. Well, almost anything.
DO TELL
Exerpts…
She said our brains tell us to run and pedal fast like a super ranger
It makes our bodies do something called fight or run
So you’ll get yourself out of danger
Which is what you’ve done
There was also a little voice inside you
That told you something was wrong
Listen to that voice all of your life
It’ll make it easier for you to get along
We read and watch the news
Which isn’t always nice
People hurt each other everyday
We should really stop to think twice
Don’t be so worried about your friend
We can bring this to a halt
Mom and mom will go to lunch tomorrow
And mom-to-mom we’ll have a talk
But before we have our talk
I have to talk to you
So if something like this happens
You’ll have an idea of what to do
Some people may seem cool
As they talk their jive
But he didn’t fool your little voice
With his give me 5
Your decision to fight or run
Won’t be due to a monster or boogeyman
It’ll be a regular person
With 2 legs, a face, and 2 hands
In a good relationship
You create a healthy link and bond
A young man kissing a kid
Run baby girl run
Like you and me, we love and trust each other
That is so so cool
But someone putting their mouth on your mouth
Girl don’t you be nobody’s fool
Like when Auntie bought Uncle to us
He was family before he met us all
They had wonderful and exciting pre-marital blush
Their light was all natural
New uncle and auntie didn’t hide in secret
They dated in the light for all to see
But an adult who wants to hide and kiss a kid in secret
Know this: they are lewd, deviant, and crazy
When Auntie had her little son
He seemed to come out of the blue
And then we had our little talk
About things that married people do
When Auntie got married
It wasn’t long before I got my little nephew
Our healthy secret was sometimes 1+1 = 3
It doesn’t always = 2
I told you
nephew came true
Your voice is genuine and accessible, thank you for that.
Thank you, that means a lot for a subject that can be considered “heavy”