Showing posts with label activism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label activism. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Touch(ed)


Was I wearing my blue pajamas? The long light blue silk ones that swooshed across my little legs. The ones my mom claims rotted off of my body because I insisted on wearing them, always. Or was it the hazel velour shirt with the short puff sleeves and a velvet deer on the breast? The deer my fingers would explore like a tongue on a chipped tooth.

I was a tactile kid. I’m a tactile adult. But this isn’t about what I touch(ed), this is about my being touched. Touched in ways I didn’t ask for, in ways I didn’t want, in profound and impacting ways.

At six, my relationship with my body was still new. I was concerned with how to climb the thorny tree in the front yard without getting scratched, how fast my legs could pedal the big wheel down the block, and if I could hide, all of me, in the smallest space during the neighborhood game of kick-the-can.

At six, someone decided to touch the most intimate parts of my body. Parts I hadn’t explored, where long discovered by someone else. Did he remove my Wonder Woman underoos? The ones when worn allowed me to jump tall fences, run fast and fly in invisible planes to restore justice to the world. Was this emblem of empowerment stripped for his sexual gratification?

The molestation continued intermittently until I was 14. He was someone I trusted - a family member, a playmate, a friend. We moved out of state when I was 8, the assaults occurred during visits. In adolescents, I learned that I was not the only one he was assaulting - hushed conversations with my cousin and sisters - Yes. Me too. In the tree house...Do we tell? No!

I had a dark, disgusting secret. It was my fault it happened. I had to protect my parents from the pain I was feeling. People couldn’t know. If they knew horrible things would happen. They would know that I wasn’t pure; I was dirty, damaged and worthless. So, I stayed silent. I kept the secret.

Sexual assault is accompanied by its friend, shame. In my experience, shame is just as traumatizing as the touches, if not more so. It’s part of the assault. Shame undermined my identity and self-worth. Shame researcher Brene Brown defines shame as “...the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed and therefore unworthy of love and belonging – something we've experienced, done, or failed to do makes us unworthy of connection.” Brown teaches that shame needs three things to exist: silence, secrecy and judgment. I know all three intimately.

I was 17 when the truth came out. One of my sisters told. The truth fractured my extended family. Alliances were made - those who didn’t believe the sexual assaults happened and protect the perpetrator and those who did believe and support us, the victims. Those alliances exist today.

In real ways, I was lucky. My mother believed us and advocated for us to the best of her capability. Perhaps, in this, her greatest gift was/is permission and encouragement to talk about it. She says, “We’ll talk about it until...until you don’t need to talk about it anymore.” Her empathy and validation started my long road to healing. Empathy is the antidote to shame.

Sexual assault isn’t something you just get over. It changes you. It permeates everything. I live with the consequences of being sexually assaulted every day. It is present in my most intimate relationships. It's part of me and may always be. However, it is not the single thing that defines me; though, it has refined me. In its crucible, I have lived. Trauma expert, Peter Levine says, “Unprocessed trauma is a living hell; processed trauma is a gift of the gods.”

The only way out is through.

The trauma is recorded holistic - physically, emotionally, psychologically, spiritually, relationally. Therefore, the healing process has to be holistic. I have and continue to process my trauma. Therapy has given me tools, my faith gives me comfort and hope, my tribe gives me love and empathy, my art and vocation give me voice. These are the well-worn tools I use to show up for my life -to find joy in this life. Sometimes I use them repeatedly in a day, sometimes not for months.

Taking ownership of one’s own healing process is empowering. That empowerment enables the transformation from victim to survivor and lays the foundation for the transformation from survivor to advocate. It is not the prerogative of the abuser, oppressor, bystander or enabler to dictate the terms of healing.

Recently, I was discussing this with a friend who is processing her sexual trauma. She talked about how now, in her 40s, she is finally reclaiming her body. For the first time, she knows that she decides who touches her body and how they do - and not just in sexual ways. Hand holding. It was empowering for her to know that she could decide whether or not to hold her partner’s hand. She didn’t have to just because he wanted to. This is her right. This is my right. This is your right. We don’t have to swallow our self-hood in order to protect someone else’s feelings.

I received a new level of understanding about all of this while listening to The Myth of Closure episode on On Being. In this episode, Krista Tippett interviews Pauline Boss about ambiguous loss - loss that is not concrete, there isn’t a body to bury. The extreme examples of this are a child is kidnapped, a loved one disappears while hiking, natural disasters, etc. More common forms of ambiguous loss are divorce, miscarriage, addiction, Alzheimer's, etc. While listening to Boss, I felt validation and comfort around my sexual assault.

Though Boss never spoke about sexual assault, it became clear that sexual assault and ambiguous loss are correlated. This was new information to me. Information that gave me great insight into the feelings I’ve been experiencing most of my life. It had a name - grief.

Being sexually assaulted at such a young age robbed me of my own discovery of sexuality and sexual identity. Being violated in this way took from me a sense of well being, ownership of my body, and trust. These are real and profound losses. Losses that don’t just deserve to be grieved but must be. It’s part of the process.

It is a process. It’s a life’s work. Closure, as Boss says, is a myth. The work isn’t about making it go away or for things to go back to the way they were. There’s no going back, only forward. Forward through the darkness, forward through the pain, forward through the confusion, forward when there is no well worn path. You must find a new way of being in the world. You bridge what was before and what is after.

Boss believes that we are to “make meaning out to the meaningless.” Being sexually assaulted is nonsensical. It cannot be rationalized; there are too many opposing ideas for this to be possible.

As I’ve awakened to the ambiguousness of my loss, a deeply rooted NO has emerged from within me. It’s not resistance or denial. It’s the no that comes from awareness - a no that is a gift of the gods. A no to leveraging my personal integrity out of politeness, compliance or habitual obedience.

This impacts my extended family’s dynamics. I’ve gone off script. I’m not playing the role I was cast to play - the good girl - compliant, responsible, respecter of authority. Solidly rooted in who I am and my inherent worth, my most authentic-self surfaces - a revolutionary spirit with justice in my stomach and the ache in my soul to heal my family’s generational systemic abuse.

From this place, I’m imperfectly drawing boundaries not just with perpetrators but, also, with bystanders and enablers. I’ve learned that boundaries must be spoken, otherwise it’s just passive-aggressiveness.

Therefore, I must speak in new, uncomfortable and challenging ways. What gives me courage is remembering it was in the silence that the toxicity of shame took hold. It was the silence that eroded my self-worth. It was in the silence that my body became something other than me. It was in the silence that I suffered. It was in the silence that he had all the power.

I have to live with the complex web of consequences from his actions. He has to live with the consequences of my voice.

My work is to figure out how to do that as my best self. It is because I’ve lived in darkness that I chose to seek the light. It’s because I know the pain of abuse that I chose to be kind. This post is part of that work.

To save myself, I must make meaning out of the meaningless. I do this by speaking - sharing my story and create space for others to share theirs. This is how we build compassionate and empathetic communities that foster healing.

Friday, February 6, 2015

Rewriting the Rules


Sunday's Superbowl had more viewers than any other TV program in history. This is the only TV event, I can think of, where views look forward to the commercials. In fact, that's the primary reason that some people watch. Did you know that a 30 second Superbowl commercial costs roughly 4.5 million dollars? 

I only watched the last 3 minutes of the game clock and glad I tuned in. That was intense! Thanks to Hulu's Ad Center and Youtube I was able to see many of the commercials. 

I braced myself for the customary offensive, objectifying ads. Per usual Carl's Jr. delivered. Carl's Jr. continues to equate women to meat- to be ogled, lusted after and then devoured. Of course they stop there. They don't continue with what happens to that sensual burger after its gone through the digestive system. And yet women are often left feeling like that byproduct after viewing their ads.  

*Deep Breath* 

AND there were many enjoyable, funny & poignant ads that made me hopeful about media in the US and American socialization. 

I was touched by Budweiser's puppy. How can you not love that puppy? 

Snickers' Brady Bunch with Steve Buscemi saying the iconic, "Marsha! Marsha! Marsha!" had me laughing out loud.  

I appreciated Coca-Cola reminding us that we make this world what it is and we can choose to #MakeItHappy. (I grew up in a serious Coke family. Even though I rarely drink soda anymore, Coke will always have a special place in my heart. It's my go to cola. It also was one of my first words. Ha!).  

But for me, there were two STANDOUT commercials. 

First, Always. I'm so in love with their #LikeAGirl campaign!! 



Yes!Yes!Yes! Thank you Always for taking on the derogatory attribution of the phrase, "like a girl." If doing anything "like a girl" is a socially recognized insult then what are we telling our daughters about the value of being a girl? All of this matters because it informs and influences how a girl (then a women) views herself and her value to society.

I'm a girl. I run like a girl. I throw like a girl. I love like a girl. I advocate like a girl. I create art like a girl. Because I am a girl (woman). I love being a girl (woman).  

Let's Rewrite the Rules!!

Speaking of rewriting the rules...

Two car companies focused on Dads. Nissan's #WithDad campaign and Toyota's #BoldDad campaign.

Nissan's #WithDad reinforces the hyper-masculinity expect of men and their prescribed gender role as bread-winner.  Set to Cat's in a Cradle (a song about a father never establishing a meaningful and connective relationship with his son because he prioritizes his career), it depicts a largely absentee race car driving father who tries to stay in touch with his family. I'm confused as to why this campaign is called #WithDad seeing as the father and son are rarely together. It should be called #WithLonging.

This Dad is cool and manly. He drives fast cars and walks away from serious crashes with a victorious fist in the air. The sons simultaneously plays out the scene with his toy cars and mirroring fist raising thereby being indoctrinated in what it means to be a man.

And then there is #BoldDad by Toyota. It is bold, brave and beautiful. Oh...it deeply effected me.

The socialization of gender roles harms boys/men just as much as it does girls/women. Toyota rewrites what it means to be a Dad by pushing against all those expectations propagated by Nissan.


The Dad in this ad is present, emotionally available and connective. There is no longing in his daughter's eyes. When she's leaving a party upset, she knows that her dad will be there (wiping away her tears). We're told that being a Dad is a choice and that a Dad's choices in actions and words will influence the human being a child becomes. A human being that will make their own choices.  

The end moment in these two campaigns couldn't be more diverse. After a montage of loneliness, the Dad in #WithDad surprises his now adolescent son by picking him up from school. Clearly, a novelty. They hug and drive away. In #BoldDad, we discover this Dad has been driving his daughter to the airport and she has joined the Army. We take from the growing up montage that because of her relationship with her Dad, this daughter is ready to be an adult, to live the life she has chosen. For me, the secure attachment of this Dad and Daughter is everything.

What are your thoughts on the Superbowl commercials? Favorites?

Thursday, September 11, 2014

I Will Not Be Silent


Dear Reader,

Wednesday (9/10), would have been my 17th wedding anniversary had I not found the courage to end the abuse. For 9 years my identity was eroded, my voice was silenced, and my soul was dismantled. During those years everything that made me - me - was broken and discarded, the pieces buried in an internal graveyard (or so I thought).

I played small to survive.
I said nothing.
I became a shell of a person.

To know me now, is not to know me then.

In October of 2004, I had what I call my Tetris moment, when all the fractured pieces of information, advice and experience finally came together, clearing the board. In that moment, for the first time in a very long time, I heard my voice from that internal graveyard, and it said, "End it, now!" I knew I couldn't stay in the relationship another day or I would die. Ending the relationship was terrifying. For my safety and to break the trauma bond, I severed all relationships that were ties to him. It was a harrowing and painful time.

It was a very long journey to break the domestic violence cycle. With the support and love of my closest friends and family members, my faith, my art, and a lot of therapy, I was able to finally hear my voice over his, to trust it, and use it.

The aforementioned graveyard was actually a garden that needed nurturing. Creativity nurtured my soul, was a healing balm and the earliest manifestations of my emerging self.

Art is the primary way that I bring awareness to the fact that 3 out of 10 women are the victims of domestic violence. I wish my story wasn't common, but it is. So, I talk about it. I tweet about it. I create theater about it. I create works of art about it. And now, I blog about it.

But why now? Ray Rice is enough of a reason. However, the motivation comes from something that happened on Wednesday. My ex-husband, whom I haven't seen nor spoken to in almost ten years, made a contribution to my Life's Echoes Creativity Coaching, Indigogo campaign. As a person of integrity and who is an informed consumer (minimizing my financial contribution to labor trafficking as much as possible), I refuse to accept this contribution. I have returned the funds, however, Indiegogo is unable to remove the contribution from my campaign page. Thus it looks as though I've exceeded my goal. When in fact, I'm still $145.00 short with 3 days left to go (September 14, 2014).

My original plan was to send a simple reminder and encourage you to contribute, even if it was $5 or $10 because those contributions really do add up. Instead, I found myself in an awkward situation and felt shame wash over me. I felt myself go small again and wanting to hide. Interesting how when triggered, some coping mechanisms come right back. Thankfully, I'm a hell of a lot healthier now and was able to bounce back emotionally within minutes.

Today, I was reminded that: I was a victim, and then a survivor. Now, I'm an advocate.
This is an opportunity for me to stand in my truth and tell my story.

All those things
That you taught me to fear
I've got them in my garden now
And you're not welcome here
-Poe, excerpt from Control

So, if you can contribute to the Indigogo fund I would greatly appreciate it. My story is a huge part of why I advocate for creativity and nurture it in others. It's a necessity to living a fulfilling and happy life. It can heal individuals, communities and the world. Again, I'm $145.00 away from reaching my goal and have 3 days left. (The new goal on the campaign website is $1,045. This factors in the unacceptable contribution).

If you are a victim of domestic violence or know someone who is, know that you are not alone. There is nothing to be ashamed of and there are lots of resources available to help you. There is a way out and a lot of joy on the other side.

I will not stay silent. I will not stand still.

Much affection,
Liz