Maia Papaya Brings in the Spring 2010
Tatiana and her huge wiggly tongue

Victim as Witness

by Tatiana on January 5, 2010

Two years ago today, on my 25th birthday, I was in a very different place in my life.  Chris and I lived in a basement apartment and he worked nights, so I was also on a nighttime schedule; I slept from 10am til 4pm or so.  I was not working, having been fired from my bartending job in July, but I kept in frequent contact with a coworker from there — we’ll call her Alyssa. Her bleached blonde hair tumbled down to the middle of her back, naturally wavy although she kept it straightened.  She had huge blue eyes, a slender figure, and a smoky voice; people either thought she was incredibly beautiful or not attractive at all.  I fell into the former category.

Those who fell into the latter saw the things I did not: her sunken eyes, her too-thin face and frame punctuated by the bony jut of her hips and shoulders, and the straw-like texture of her hair.

Two years ago on my birthday, something happened that made me see those things.

I sat at home as Chris worked, $80 in my pocket, and I itched to go out and celebrate.  Alyssa and I had gone out clubbing before and had a blast — she was, unexpectedly, a quiet partier, more content to sit and observe, while I went out on the dance floor to get down & dirty.  I had nothing else planned, and so I called to see if she wanted to go out.

When she answered the phone, I knew something was wrong.  She spat out something about fighting with her husband, how he had hidden her new jacket so she had broken some of his new KISS memorabilia — honestly, the two of them squabbling like children was nothing new, and the two of them mistreating one another’s material possessions was pretty common as well.  He treated me nicely enough — he was a very charismatic guy — and I figured that their marital difficulties were theirs to deal with, not mine to judge.

I recognized the signs of potential abuse, but when I asked her about it, she insisted that he’d never hurt her, they had a baby together, of course he would not do that, he never laid a hand on her because she’d kick his ass if he did, etc etc.  So I stopped asking.

That night, she came to pick me up.  She was upset, her head hurt, she was tired — she had a thousand reasons to want to go back home.  I begged her just to go out to dinner with me and see if that helped.  We had nachos and a drink apiece and she decided she just wanted to stop by the house to kiss her son goodnight. Fair enough, I figured.

When we got there, the fighting began in earnest.  He told her she was dressed like a slut, that she didn’t need to look good if all she was just hanging out with me.  She said she wanted her new jacket back, because it was cold outside.  So on and so forth, as I sat in the living room with their son who stared at the television.  Eventually she came storming down the stairs to sit beside me.  “I’m going home,” I told her.

She begged me to stay, begged me to take her out.  She said she had a friend on the way who would be our designated driver so we could get plastered and forget all about men.  And because it was my birthday, because I needed her companionship, because I couldn’t abandon her, I said alright, I’d stick around.

Her husband came downstairs, all smiles for me.  I shuddered.  Alyssa said we should go sit out in her van and wait for her friend to arrive, and as we walked out, her husband launched into a harangue against her about how she looked, how she talked, how she acted.  He said he’d call her mother and tell her how many drugs Alyssa was taking.  She had tears on her face as we walked outside, her still not wearing a coat.  When I asked why she didn’t have anything with long sleeves on, she said he had hidden everything.  When I asked why she put up with this, she said he wasn’t normally like this.  I knew she was lying, but I felt like there was nothing I could do.  Her abuser had left us both powerless.

Their son stood peering from the glass front door, staring at us.  Throughout the whole ordeal he had been silent, like he always was, every time I visited.

Her husband stood in the kitchen, at a window, talking (or pantomiming) on the phone, gesturing viciously out at Alyssa, sneering and smirking.  “He’s talking to my mom,” she whispered, “he’s telling her everything.”

“He’s faking,” I told her, “don’t let him fuck with you.  There’s no one on the phone with him. He wants you to go inside, but you need to stay here with me.”

“That’s my baby in the door, he needs me.”

“He needs you in one piece.  Stay here.”

She reached into the back of the van and picked up something.  I don’t know what it was, but it was heavy, and it was on a cord, and she flew out with it in hand, screaming as she swung it, smashing it against her husband’s Camaro parked in the driveway beside us.  Four or five times she smashed her husband’s car, and finally she looked up at him, looking out at her.

He hung up the phone.

She raced back into the van with me and locked the doors, but left the window open.

“Roll up the window and ignore him,” I pleaded, as he came storming out of the house.  I knew that face.  I knew that look.  He wanted to hurt her.

Too late, she realized the same.  She was rolling up the window as he reached through it, seizing a fistful of her hair, and next thing I knew she was shrieking, I was screaming, and he was hollering, “DO YOU WANT TO DIE, ALYSSA?  DO YOU WANT ME TO FUCKING KILL YOU?”  He was shaking her head back and forth, up and down, slamming it against the frame, against the window, and I scrambled against his hands, trying to get him to release her.

“What the fuck are you doing?” I remember screaming.  “Let her go!”

He finally did, throwing her head away from him.  “I’ll fucking kill you if you come back home,” he said.  “Remember that.” And he walked away.  He never once acknowledged me.

She was sobbing, rubbing at her head, pulling away handfuls of blonde hair in clumps.  I had no idea what to do.  I remember wishing that I had a cell phone to call Chris.  I did not once think of calling the police, just my husband, because he would protect me and hold me and take me away.

We didn’t talk, I just held her close as she cried.  Finally, she looked up at her house.

Her son stood in the doorway, witness to it all.

On that day, two years ago, I was a victim as surely as they were.  To this day, I blame myself for not being more proactive; as a mother, the thought of the environment that child lives in makes me nauseous.  I should have called someone to get him out of there.  I should have called the police against her husband.  I should never have sat there mute and powerless.

Yet I did.  Because I am intimately familiar with being a victim of a violent man, and it’s entirely too easy to fall back into that mode of just protecting one’s most basic self, just staying quiet and hoping that the abuser will simply walk away without hurting you too much.

Silence is a tool of abuse.

Today, I share my story at Violence UnSilenced.  Today, I refuse to be ashamed of what happened to me.  Today, my 27th birthday, my first as a mother, I have an obligation to myself and my family to speak out, to drown the shame in a sea of support and love.

i_spoke_out_125a

{ 19 comments… read them below or add one }

maggie, dammit 01.05.10 at 09:28

Wow.

I think your point is so clearly made at the end there, when you say that essentially you’ve been trained to hold still and stay quiet in the interest of self-preservation. People who haven’t been there often flip to movie reels in their minds, think of all the badass things they would say and do in that situation but you are so right–in the moment, it’s instinctual. A person’s desire to survive.

Thank you so much for speaking out here, and over on VU. I hope on this, your birthday, you receive a gift of the caliber you have given others today.

xo

Christy @ Jinxyisms 01.05.10 at 09:51

What a horrible, scary event. I’m so sorry that you were put in that position.

I hope, no I know that you will have a much better birthday this year. Happy birthday!

Mary Jo 01.05.10 at 10:12

I hope that your friend was able to get out, as you were. Sometimes all we can do is be there, and you were. Thank you for sharing your story with us all @ VU.

Jennifer 01.05.10 at 10:25

Happy Birthday.
We can’t live on should haves. You did what you could in the moment.

Jacki 01.05.10 at 10:39

Happy birthday. What courage you have to sharing – both this story and the one on VU.

pamela ~ the dayton time 01.05.10 at 13:35

Both of these posts are so very moving. Thanks for sharing.

Chibi Jeebs 01.05.10 at 13:57

I can’t even imagine what that was like – I have goosebumps just reading it. Again, thank you for speaking up, speaking out. And again, happy birthday lady.

MommaKiss 01.05.10 at 14:02

Here from VU, thank you for sharing and I hope you are still in Alyssa’s life. For her and her child’s sake. Happy Birthday to you!

A-M 01.05.10 at 14:30

Wow! I read this and your other post. What horrifying experiences and I am so happy you are safe with Chris now.

And again Happy Birthday! 27 was an awesome year for me :)

Rachael 01.05.10 at 16:16

There are moments in my life when I feel paralyzed after reading or hearing something like this. I can’t help feeling lucky that I’ve never had an experience like this, or the experiences you wrote about on VU. At the same time, it is heartbreaking to me how much this is still happening in our culture.

We all do what we can. Especially with your history, I cannot imagine how hard it must have been going through watching a friend be treated this way. You tried to support and encourage her, and that’s all that really matters.

MommyNaniBooboo 01.05.10 at 18:14

Silence is a tool of abuse- well said. And thank you for being strong enough to break the silence.
Happy happy birthday.
May this one be filled with love, good times, and laughter. :)

Michele 01.05.10 at 19:50

I honestly don’t know what to say. Thank you for sharing your stories. I can’t even imagine what you have been through. You are so brave and strong.

Aunt Becky 01.05.10 at 20:13

What an amazing story. You were an amazing friend to her. Happy Birthday to you. May this, and all of the years, be better than each before it.

xoxo

magpie 01.05.10 at 21:03

Fuck. I want to wish you a happy birthday, and it seems so damned trite. I’m glad you helped her. I’m sorry for what happened, to you both. I wish that every birthday from here out is lovely and charming and heartwarm.

jodifur 01.05.10 at 22:32

Happy, Happy B-day. What you wrote here and on VU was soooo, sooo powerful. Please know how many people you have helped. And how glad I am you got out before he gurt you worse, or killed you.

Katie (aka Kekibird) 01.06.10 at 19:04

Made my stomach hurt while I read this. A horrible experience for you all. But look at your strength, your beauty, and your life today. You are a beautiful person. Happy Birthday. :o )

Rebecca 01.07.10 at 00:39

Such a powerful story. Thank you for sharing. And happy belated birthday. 27 was *a very good year* for me ;)

Christine LaRocque 01.07.10 at 09:43

Oh my God, I’m crying. So scary, so sad. That poor little boy. What a story, how brave of you to tell it.

Maria 01.10.10 at 08:19

My heart hurts for that little boy.

And you.

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