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.
On New Year’s Eve, we had chicken cacciatore for dinner. So Chris and I are sitting on the couch, Maia’s in her high chair, we’re watching The Office like usual, and during a commercial break we’re watching her eat. She’s picking up strands of spaghetti and tossing them casually aside. Then she picks up a chunk of chicken and shoves it into her mouth, before digging through the spaghetti again. She’s been doing stuff like this a lot lately, where she eats her favourite part of a meal first before going for the rest — for example, we had roast chicken, crescent rolls, and brussel sprouts with bacon tonight, and her order of eating was the crescent roll first, the roast chicken second, the bacon third, and the sprouts last. She ate everything, though!
The dogs circle below her as she eats, and every once in awhile they get excited. They begin whimpering and prancing around on their hind legs, and sometimes they’ll even yelp/bark in anticipation. Joss did this when a strand of spaghetti dangled from Maia’s tray, just out of his reach, and Chris hollered, “JOSS!” It scared the dog, and it scared Maia too.
She startled so hard that she shook the tray, then she stared at Chris in amazement. He apologized for frightening her, looked back at the tv — and she yelled at him! I laughed and laughed and laughed. What an attitude!
There are so many parenting things I’m completely unprepared for, things I never thought about that touch me deeply.
On Christmas day, we were visiting family, and in attendance were two other children — a ten year old girl, and a four year old girl. They got along really well with one another, and although they idly interacted with Maia here and there, they were more interested in racing around the house together and playing with each other.
Maia wanted to play with them, though.
Whenever they entered the room, she lit up, watching them. She offered them her blocks. She watched them leave the room and toddled after them. When they went down into the basement, where I wouldn’t let her go, she stood at the door and watched them walk away, her palms pressed to the glass, her brow furrowed in worry.
All of the adults, of course, wanted to play with her, and she loved it a little bit, but we were nothing in comparison to the Big Girls.
At the end of the night, the girls went into the living room and started dancing while listening to the Mamma Mia soundtrack. Maia loves music, and next thing I knew, this happened:
My heart exploded with love. The three of them danced and danced; it was amazing, beautiful, and it filled Maia with so much joy.

Recently, the Olympic torch passed through our town on its way to Vancouver. I had to work (SIGH) but Chris and Maia got bundled up and went out to watch it arrive together.
As you can see, Maia ended up wearing my mittens because, well, she didn’t have her own pair. I’ve since remedied that, but I’m not sure she could have looked any cuter even if she were wearing kid-sized ones!
It turns out that Chris and Maia stood at an intersection where the flame would be passed from one torch bearer to another.
Maia also ended up getting a souvenir: a “Torch Relay” edition bottle of Coca-Cola, put into her hands specifically by a lady who was passing out the bottles.
Chris took a few videos, and I look forward to showing them to Maia sometime in the future, maybe for a show & tell day at school or something. I dunno. I’m just glad that they got to go and see the torch pass through our city!
Dear Maia,
Today you turn ten months old, and I must say, I would keep you at this age forever. You, right now, are more perfect than you’ve ever been, more loving, more playful, and more interactive; our days are filled with smiles and laughter.
The big news this month is that you’ve mastered the art of walking.
You love to walk, and we love to watch you walk. You are so steady on your feet that it looks like you’ve been walking for a heck of a lot longer than you have. And it was funny, Maia, how you suddenly decided — just like I knew you would! — to start walking one day. I went to work and you were cruising along holding on to furniture; I came home, you walked over to greet me, and that was that. You were walking.
This has lead to a whole new way of living for us, because now you follow us (me) everywhere, and you are FAST. You are REALLY, REALLY speedy. I literally have to speed up a bit if I’m trying to get into the washroom without you, because you are right at my heels. Then I close the door in your face and you scream bloody murder while beating on the door and honestly, all I can think is this is gonna get so much worse once she learns how to use the doorknob. Sometimes I just bring you in with me and put you in the bathtub, where you eat the loofah or chew on your favourite thing, Daddy’s tube of toothpaste. It’s better than constantly wrestling the toilet brush away from you or rerolling up the toilet paper after you unravel it with a glee that I thought was only reserved for lolcats.
You like the bathtub a lot better when there’s water in it, though.
You see, you’ve also learned how to splash, which is, as we all know, pretty awesome. You splosh, splash, splish and make a mess and have a grand old time, all while your poor Mommy or Daddy try to wash your hair without getting suds in your eyes from all the wiggling you’re doing.
Lately you are really trying to talk. I can tell when you’re babbling — mamamama — and when you’re genuinely trying to call for me — mmmuh MUH — and it’s really awesome that you’re exploring language. We often ask you to say “Dada” to which you grin slyly and reply “Mmmuh MUH!” Keep it up, baby girl. It’s hilarious.
Along with this learning to speak thing, you’re also clearly learning to listen. Your favourite word right now is “nice”. It’s what we say when you touch the dogs gently, and you smile widely, your dimple deepens, and you squeal with delight because you are being “nice to puppies”. You often flail your arms in excitement, which scares the dog away and somewhat defeats the purpose, but you are also learning how to be quick, and you will try to snatch at a retreating paw.
Your least favourite word is “no”. Oh. My. God. You hate being told no. We’re only using it when we need to — NO, you cannot pull the wires. NO, you cannot open the gate to the kitchen — but you react as if this is the most infuriating thing you have ever heard, the most irrational and stupid, and then you start with the wailing and screaming and your face goes totally red as you glare with dark, anger-filled eyes at whichever one of us has dared to tell you no. Maia, I must admit, I have a hard time not laughing when you do this. Seriously? You want to throw a temper tantrum at me because I won’t let you give yourself electric shock? Well, go right ahead then.
Fortunately, you haven’t learned how to say “no” yet (I dread the day you do) but, you do mimic our fake coughing. This is something your daddy found out when he was making funny noises at you and you started to repeat them back, and it’s completely hilarious. You are so proud of yourself as you make these fake little hacking and coughing noises from the back of your throat, and we try to keep up with you, but we end up laughing too. Oh, speaking of, you’re learning to fake laugh. That’s also hilarious.
The one thing about this month that has sucked is your sleeping “pattern”. I use the word “pattern” because while you do have a fairly regular bedtime and wake-up time, the time in between them is completely erratic. Will you wake up three times or five? Will you sleep in your crib or will one of us have to take you into the nursery to snuggle? And in line with this, your nap schedule is fairly irregular too. It seems like whenever I’m at work, you nap for two hours around noon, but when I’m home you might sleep for an hour anytime between 10 and 3, and then you’re done for the day. Maia, I don’t know if you know this, but according to the book I received from the author herself (Ann Douglas, you rock), only 11% of babies your age take only one nap per day. And that’s fine, if you want to continue being extraordinary, but for the love of all that is holy, that nap needs to be longer than one hour or you are pretty much a disaster by the end of the day.
Really, though, crappy sleep isn’t too much of an issue when you are so damned charming and loving the rest of the time. Lately, you really enjoy being read to, and you will sit with me while I read the same book to you three times, then carry it over to your Daddy, hold it out to him, and squeal with delight as he reads to you again. It’s awesome. I mean, it makes me realize that we probably need to get you a few more books, but still, it’s totally awesome.
Not that I’m dropping any hints as to what you might be getting for your first Christmas or whatever. You are just going to have to wait and see!
All our love,
Mama & Dada
Dear Maia,
Today you turn nine months old. Today is also a Friday the 13th, just like you were born on, and I have to admit that this makes me smile. Oh sure, I’ve heard a few times that it’s “too bad” you didn’t hold off your arrival for a day so you could be a Valentine’s Day baby and share a birthday with your Grandma, but I’m pretty sure that being born on a Friday the 13th is going to give you way more street cred when you hit your goth phase. Never forget that, baby girl, you totally owe me.
Like I do every time I sit down to write you this letter, I check out the pictures I’ve taken of you over the past month so I can review in my mind what we’ve done together and how much you’ve grown. Unlike most months, however, I am shocked at how much your presence has changed and matured; between October 13th and November 13th, you seem to have become a completely different baby. In fact, sometimes I stop thinking of you as my baby, and I think of you as my kid and yes, those are distinctly separate entities. A baby is reliant on other people for everything. A kid has some autonomy, and if there’s one thing you like demonstrating to us, it’s your need to have some autonomy.

See, here’s a picture I took of you on October 14th. And whatever, don’t be hatin’ on your hair, this picture has SERIOUS high school yearbook potential. Don’t you look so cute? So sweet? so YOUNG?
In comparison, here you are at the park the other day:
See what I mean? You’re totally bigger now. And I still can’t do your hair properly, but you’ll notice that you’ve now graduated to adult sized clips.
This month has been a great one for all of us. We are in a rhythm now, the three of us, working in tandem with one another. You have a certain time when you wake up (around 7:22) except for once or twice a week when you decide that waking up at 6:30 would be way, way cooler. And then Mama or Daddy, whichever one of us is getting up with you that day, walk around like zombies while you bounce around the house and squeal. You go to bed around 7:30pm, after we read your favourite book (which is borrowed from the library… we really must buy you a copy instead). You wake up two or three times a night still, but that’s alright, because you just want to eat. Sometimes you want to eat and then snuggle and while that’s great in theory, when your very tired Mama wants to sleep, it kinda stinks. Because, you see, while I am totally willing to put you in bed with us so we can snuggle and sleep together, you seem to think the bed is a place to romp around regardless of the hour, and then when I put you in your crib you act like this is THE GREATEST INDIGNITY babykind has ever known. Tough luck, honeybuns. Trust me, all three of us need our sleep.
You can totally walk, but for some reason you seem to be convinced that walking unsupported is not worth your time and that you would much rather hold onto the table, or me, and walk. However, sometimes you will trot back and forth between Daddy and I four or five times in a row, giggling and smiling. Or I’ll catch you sitting on the floor before pulling your legs into a squatting position, then you will stand straight up without supporting yourself on anything and take a few steps over to wherever you want to be. I have to admit, though, that if I could get carried everywhere, I might be tempted to pretend I could not walk.
You like to do this thing we call “drama hand”. You hold one arm out in front of you, palm upwards, your fingers outstretched, then clench and release your hand repeatedly. Usually, you have a very earnest look on your face. We can just imagine you being on stage, delivering some dramatic line or another in a Shakespeare play, and posing like this. It’s completely hilarious and I have yet to capture it on film, because every time you hear my camera turn on you immediately have to turn and start posing. Or try to grab it.
Your grandma came up from Florida this month and you pretty much love her. You two got along like peas in a pod, except for, apparently, when she was babysitting, and you wanted to walk around. So you grabbed her hands and started walking, only she didn’t come along, at which point you started screaming and shrieking your little head off (a sound Daddy and I are very familiar with). When recounting this to me the next day, she laughed and laughed, saying how much you reminded her of Daddy when he was a baby. I said you remind me of Daddy as an adult. She agreed.
Actually, you remind everyone of people that aren’t me. You look like Daddy. Your uncle Sean. Your grandma. Your great-uncle. Your auntie Katie. You do not look like me.
Whatever, though, we’re totally gorgeous together. Maia, I’ve never been a terribly confident person, but when it comes to parenting you, I know we’re doing it right. You are so beautiful, intelligent, and altogether vibrant that Daddy and I often look at one another over your head and smile, unable to articulate how much we love you and how happy you make us. Life right now is amazing and better than I ever could have imagined it being. Who knew that being a mom is wicked awesome?
We love you, baby girl. Always and forever.
Love,
Mama & Daddy
I am already thinking about 2010. Not that I want 2009 to end, but I feel like I’m finally getting a grasp on my life, like I’m finally comfortable with who I am and what I want to achieve to feel fulfilled.
- Take French classes.
I am very, very good with languages. Despite the fact that my writing here is not always the most beautiful thing, I understand language. I adore French, and being bi-lingual here in Canada would be a boon; after French, I’d like to achieve conversational fluency in some of the other Romance languages (Spanish and Italian in particular, and probably Portugese) since they’ll be really simple to pick up. I’d like to be able to speak Polish too. Then I’d finally understand what my mom and her family are saying when they speak to one another when they don’t WANT us to know!
- Finish my first novel.
This will be SUCH a huge deal for me. I have loved writing fiction for as long as I can remember, yet I’ve not finished anything longer than short story length. I feel confident that I can achieve this goal in 2010, if not before. Then I’ll get an actual printed copy via Createspace.com and it will be amazing.
- Get pregnant with #2!
Really I should say “have more sex” but, well, Maia’s gonna have a sibling eventually, so we might as well get this show on the road.
Have you thought about what 2010 will hold for you?
Dear Maia,
Nothing makes one so aware of the passage of time as becoming a parent. As usual, I’ve had a hard time accepting that you’re growing up, and even though I’m typing this at 11pm on the 12th, I still call you my 7 month old. I can’t believe we’ve been together for so long, and at the same time that I am so proud of you growing up healthy, smart, and strong, I stare at my face in the mirror and wonder where time has gone, how I’ve ended up this close to being 27 — so close to 30. 30? That’s how old your Babcha is in my mind, eternally.
As you might be able to tell from that paragraph, this has been a mind-blowing month, one that has left me feeling alternately scatter-brained and ultra-focused. The month began in a devastating fashion: you went on a nursing strike.

One thing this showed me, however, is that you are a stunningly independent child (also, that you’re very stubborn). I think that independence is at the root of why you decided to reject nursing, and then return just as suddenly: you felt like exercising your free will. And to that I say YOU GO, GIRL (that is, now that I have a breast pump). We’ve recovered from this just fine, mostly, except now we face the challenge of you biting me nearly every time you delatch. I still yell “NO!” or “OUCH!” or the very Canadian “EH?!” (I wish I were joking) when you do, but instead of crying as if you’re the one that got bitten, like you used to, you now let out a little chuckle and stare up at me innocently. Pro tip: if you want me to think you did it unintentionally, DON’T LAUGH AFTERWARD. I’m totally on to your game.
The pain of these bites is from your two little teeth, right in the center of your bottom gum, which have finally begun showing enough that people notice them. This is a source of constant pride for me, although you’ve now gone nearly a month and a half without any other teeth coming in. I’m kind of wondering if they’ll ever show up. You’ve been drooling like a damned fountain for a few weeks now, so I’m expecting something relatively soon. I figure if I keep thinking you’re teething, eventually I’ll be right.
Oh Maia, YOUR HAIR. I love it. There are strands that now reach to the back of your shoulderblades. I’m so impressed with it. Everyone insists that it’s growing in blonde in the back, but I know better; it’s just that you have less at the back, and so it looks lighter. The fact is, if you had dirty blonde hair, you’d end up looking VAGUELY like me, and we all know that can’t happen. We have discovered that you and I have two things in common: we both have big feet and big butts. Congratulations my dear, you’ve got the biggest and best baby badonkadonk on the block.

Can we talk about how huge you look? You are thisclose to outgrowing your infant car seat. It’s good up to 30 inches and you’re hovering around 27.5. If we count your crazy pigtails, you’re probably at 30. This is the first month we’ve put your hair up like that and I must say, I think it’s very fetching. Little wisps of bangs escape to brush your forehead and the nape of your neck, and I just want to gobble you up. Maia, NO ONE can pass you by when you have pigtails without remarking upon it. It’s clinically impossible.
Physically, you’re still not quite walking, although you have taken a few steps on your own. You get so excited about the fact that you’re learning how to balance yourself this way that you invariably end up flapping your arms around and falling over, which infuriates you. So I have to pick you up and soothe you, and then when I try to set you down you’re apt to start babbling “Mamamama” in between whining, until you’re over being butt-hurt about losing your balance.
You have decided that solid food is the most amazing thing ever. This means that on Sunday, at your first Thanksgiving, you ate turkey, cranberry sauce, scalloped potatoes, green bean casserole, and some squash. Also, I let you have a taste of key lime pie, apple pie, and pumpkin pie. Your favourite food is, by far, butternut squash. I am forever roasting it up for you to nibble on. I also love squash, so I’m delighted that you have good taste. You seem to like everything that I make and let you try, except for the Moroccan-spiced lentils and brown rice which you promptly spat out and started screaming at me for feeding you. But then later, when they were cold and we tried again, you liked them, so who knows. You’re just a little gourmande.
You still haven’t quite gotten the hang of drinking from a cup. You love when I hold your sippy cup up so you can drink from it, but the second you have to hold it up yourself, you get pissed and bang it against the floor until the top flies off. Have I mentioned that the dogs really love when I give you a sippy cup? I decided to outsmart you, and got you a cup with a straw instead, but that just made you even angrier. So our interim solution, until you set your mind on drinking on your own, is for me to hold an “adult” glass to your lips. You kind of chew on the rim of the cup, causing the liquid inside to slosh all over your face and in your mouth, then smack your lips together and lean forward for more. You love sharing orange juice with us in the morning.
You’ve had your first real injury, in the dressing room of a department store, when you put your hand in a baseboard heating unit that was then turned on. Believe me, I feel like the WORST parent in the history of ever about this, and I only hope it doesn’t scar too badly. You’ve definitely coped with it far better than I, and it’s healing beautifully. When we took you to the doctor to have your burns checked out and see if we needed any ointment for them, she said I could just keep applying breastmilk to the burns because they looked great. You know, as great as hideous burns on a little baby hand can look. I know that someday you’ll be like “MOM THAT IS SO GROSS THAT YOU PUT BREASTMILK ON MY HANDS” but hey, whatever works.
Your favourite thing to do right now is watch this video of “I Gotta Feeling”. I don’t think it’s possible for me to put into words how much your father and I hated that song, until one day he for some unknown reason (fate?) clicked on a link to the above video, with you in his lap, and you sat there absolutely mesmerized for the entirety of it… then started whining and complaining when it ended. Want to know how many times a day that video is played in our household? Let’s just say that the video has 1.4million views at the moment, and I think we’re responsible for the .4.
I returned to work, leaving you and Daddy together. The first few days were rough, but when I came home one night to see you two like this… well, I knew everything would be okay:
Do you see the little smile he’s trying to hide?
Yeah, we kinda like having you around, papaya.
All our love,
Mama & Daddy.
I haven’t been blogging lately because I’ve been angry.
Angry at Chris. Maia. My family. Myself.
I’ve just felt so utterly low-spirited that coming here and writing about it seems stupid.
Every day — in fact, maybe even every hour — I find myself angry at Chris. It’s gotten to the point where I just don’t respond when he talks to me, because I’m afraid I’m going to say whatever bitchy thing is going through my head. I won’t say he’s perfect, but I’m pretty sure he doesn’t deserve me being uber-bitch to him.
Every night, I’m angry at Maia. Ever since her goddamn nursing strike ended, getting her to sleep is miserable. We’re lucky if she’s in bed within an hour of starting her bedtime routine — which we’ve had to move back to 8pm because getting her to sleep anytime earlier than that is apparently impossible now. It’s frustrating. Then she’s up four or five times a night, nursing and refusing to lay back down. I don’t know what’s changed, I don’t know if it has something to do with the fact that Chris had to put her to bed without me around twice last week or that the fingers she self-soothes on are burnt (pic here) but now every time I lay her down in her crib she starts to cry. Eventually, I can rub her back and soothe her back to sleep, but that’s usually after she stands up and cries for me to hold her a few times.
Which, of course, means Chris can’t put her to sleep. He’s tried. He ends up just leaving her crying. He comes stomping out here: “Fuck it, she can learn to cry herself to sleep,” which of course is not an option, and I have to go in there, calm her down, and help her go to sleep.
I’m angry at my family, because they don’t live close enough to see my daughter growing up. It’s not their fault; it’s mine, I moved away. But here I am, here we are, alone. I’m angry at the goddamn USA for not being good enough for me to raise my daughter in, because if it were, there would be some chance of us moving there, closer to my family. It takes a village. IT TAKES A VILLAGE and I never understood the abiding truth of those words until I became a mother. I’m angry when I hear people rant and lie about Obama’s agenda, because he would take the shambles of the USA and make it into a country I could live in. I’m angry at the sensationalist pundits who have, since last November, nurtured and encouraged fear and fury in an uneducated, reactionary population.
And yet I’m angry at some “educated” people I follow on Twitter. I’m so fucking tired of all the self-righteous indignation going around. Every time these people declare their opinions and mock others who do not hold the same ones, I hover over the Unfollow button. Their crusades have become so meaningless to me because these people seem like caricatures in an editorial cartoon.
I’m mad at myself for feeling everything I do. As if life is really so horrible? I have a healthy, beautiful family. We’re keeping our heads above water financially. The next few years should really see life looking up for us, and yet I sit here and think about all the things that frustrate me. I hate our apartment. I have no education. I’m working retail. My fucking video camera still isn’t here after four and a half weeks. We’re uninvited to a wedding this weekend, one I didn’t even want to go to in the first place, because we can’t bring Maia.
I’m so tired of WAITING for things to get better. The last six years of my life have been about waiting. I feel like I’m wasting away. Whenever I tell Chris this, he says get out, go find clubs and groups to join, but he doesn’t seem to understand that I’m angry about the wasted years. I am usually more zen than this. I usually take a very “what will be will be” attitude, and consider the past to be a learning experience that has shaped who I am today.
The past.
Maria recently posted about her therapist asking about the most significant moment in her life.
I can think of two, and I’m not sure which is more powerful, which is more meaningful, and that indecisiveness infuriates me.
One: A man who had hurt me, intentionally and regularly over the course of four years, said “I love you” over the phone… and when I didn’t reply, asked “Don’t you love me?” I said “No, I don’t.” I knew that finally, after all those years, all the manipulation and all the mistakes, I had escaped him.
Two: Giving birth.
Shouldn’t bringing my daughter into this world be more significant?
October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. I was a victim. I hate typing those four words. I don’t feel liberated or empowered by claiming that title; I feel dirty, weak, and embarrassed. I’ve erased them and re-typed them more times than I can count, and every time, the little knot of nausea in my stomach has tightened.
Someday I’ll share my story. Not today.
Today, I am going to be angry.
Tomorrow, I will try not to be.