Sunday, October 7, 2018

I Was Seven

I haven't shared my story publicly, but anyone close to me knows it. However, on the heels of Christine Blasey Ford's recent testimony about the sexual assault she endured by then Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, I feel I should. Not because I want pity or sympathy or even empathy, but because when someone opens the door to a difficult and important conversation, you don't slam it back in their face. So while yesterday's sad confirmation of Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court attempted to close that door, I'm sticking my foot in the door frame.

Talking about sexual violence doesn't feel comfortable—and it never should; it should always disturb us—but speaking about it feels safer than it ever has before, thanks to Dr. Ford and the brave women who came before her, including Anita Hill, who brought her allegations against Clarence Thomas at an even more hostile time in America. This post is meant to keep the conversation open and to help others feel as though they're not alone.

The Incident

I was seven. I lived in a house on a corner lot in a subdivision of Altamonte Springs, Florida. We were recent Ohio transplants, settling into our new life in this hot land of dry brown grass and palm trees and lizards whose tales came off a little too easily. My mom was a nurse who at the time worked the midnight shift at the hospital. My dad was in sales, delivering live fish from wholesalers to retailers. He sometimes left the house very early in the morning, and I sometimes feared their absences would overlap, but I don't think that ever happened. My two sisters and I each had our own bedroom, which felt like a luxury compared to the attic space we all had shared in our quaint Ohio home. Whether by choice or lack thereof, my bedroom was the first one on the hallway off of the living room.

Late one September night in 1988, when my mom was at work and the rest of us were home sleeping, a man broke into our house through the back porch and entered through the kitchen window. He took a kitchen knife from a drawer and walked down the hallway that led to our bedrooms, which was opposite my parents' room. Probably because my room was the first one he encountered, he came in and sat on the edge of my bed while I slept and used the kitchen knife to cut the crotch of my underwear, which is how I woke. I was more confused than I was alarmed. He wasn't aggressive initially. When I started to ask questions—who are you, what are you doing; questions to which I expected rational replies—he shushed me and told me to be quiet. Ever the rule follower, I did. He told me to follow him and then led me out of my room, exiting the hallway into the main living area and out the front door of the house.

Me at age seven.

He continued around the side of the house until we were in the backyard. By then I was scared, and his tone had changed. He continually told me to shut up, and when I didn't he placed his hands around my neck while pushing me against the exterior wall of the house. I tried to scream, but his chokehold didn't allow my voice to come out, or much air. I started to fight with everything my small body could muster, which was no match for his adult frame. Next he had me on the ground and pressed the full weight of his body on top of mine. I was kicking and squirming while he pinned me down and placed his mouth on mine. That struggle is the last I remember before coming to by myself, still lying on the dewy grass.

I picked myself up off the ground, ran back into the house where the front door was left wide open, and went down the hallway where my sisters' rooms were. In a state of panic, I wasn't sure where to go, thinking my dad might have left for work already, so I stopped first in my older sister's room and, blinded by my fear, didn't see her there. So I went farther down the hall to my twin sister's room gathered her and came back to my older sister's room, where this time I saw her soundly asleep. We roused her and three of us ran across the house to our parents' room, where my dad lay sleeping. I shook him awake and said that a man broke in. He startled to action and called the police.

The Aftermath

My memory of what happened afterward is a jumbled scene of police officers wandering around the house dusting surfaces with a black substance and collecting some of our belongings, a police dog outside the house, a helicopter up above. My sisters and me watching TV and playing board games in the living room for distraction. My mom finally coming home from the hospital, walking into the living room with a look on her face I couldn't quite place—one that was trying to be comforting to me but that I now know was barely covering her anguish. Her hug. My conversation with a female police officer, the details of which are missing. Driving in a police cruiser around the neighborhood to look for the attacker. Going to some cold and sterile facility to have what I later learned was a rape kit conducted (the man did not succeed in raping me). Spending the rest of the night in the living room with the whole family around me, all of us close together on the floor, in sight, real, barriers around me to the now scary outside world.

In the following days, we had more interactions with the police. We learned of other incidents that occurred that same night in our neighborhood, and with all of the testimonies together, the police had an idea of the suspect—a man who'd been imprisoned on a previous charge and was out on a work-release program. An officer brought over a book of mugshots to our house one day and asked me if I could identify the man who'd attacked me. I pointed to someone, but I can't tell you whether I'd chosen the right guy. My testimony was the least reliable of the three victims that night; thankfully the other two—a middle-aged man and an older woman (both of whom escaped serious harm)—gave clearer descriptions.

I never had to go to court; my testimony was recorded on tape, a courtesy extended to me because of my age, I think. A man was eventually charged. We'll call him W. As much as I'd love to blast his name and image publicly, I realize there could be repercussions, even if unlikely.

The attacker. 

W was charged with burglary and assault and sentenced to 15 years in prison, a little more than eight of which he served before being released. He was incarcerated again one year later, for a year. He appears to have stayed out since 1999. Most of his crimes were burglaries. I don't know why he veered into different criminal territory that night. I remember hearing that he might have been on drugs...

Immediately following the assault, I was afraid of all men—neighbors, uncles, even my own father for a short time. It's hard to say when the general fear of men changed, or whether it ever completely did. For a while I slept in my parents' room, having repeated nightmares of running barefoot on the wet grass in the dark, not able to get anywhere, hearing my heart pounding through my chest. Then I eventually shared a room with my twin sister but always slept with the lights on. I must have been 10 or 11 years old before I began sleeping through the nights, with the lights off.

Gradually, as the years passed, our lives became normal again, and we didn't talk about what happened when I was seven.

The Healing

Although I'd made attempts beginning in my twenties to address the trauma through therapy and (pretty bad) creative writing, none really stuck. But this year, a mere 30 years after the assault, I decided to deal with the trauma head-on in a special type of therapy called EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing). This type of therapy is often used on patients with PTSD, which I'd been told I had by a couple of different therapists but doubted the diagnosis until recently. During my visits, I would vividly relive each moment of the trauma, following the pathways in my brain that the memories led me down, week after week until, several months later, the memory of the assault became less powerful over me.

I won't say the trauma doesn't affect me anymore, but I am more aware of the ways in which it has impacted my life, and simply having that awareness has helped me understand myself and my particular relationship to the world around me. That, to me, is progress.

One of the best things that has happened, however, is that I've had open conversations with my immediate family about the event; after all, it happened to them, too. I think we all sort of carried pieces of this burden throughout our lives but didn't quite know how to lay those pieces down. We don't need to talk about it on any regular basis, but just knowing that we can, that I can, talk about it if I want to without feeling like I'm disrupting the ordinary flow of everyone's lives is a relief.

Sometimes I think about what it would be like to talk to him, to W. I wonder if he feels remorse. I wonder if he cares. I wonder if he'd recognize me. He has an address listed in an area very close to where my family moved after the assault. I can picture it. I think about knocking on his door, seeing him face to face, and telling him ... I don't know what. I run through different scenarios. I wouldn't say, "You ruined my life," because that's not true, even though I've had more challenges than I probably would have otherwise. I wouldn't tell him I hated him and wished him harm, because that's not who I am. Maybe I would tell him, "Despite you, I am a strong person. Despite you, I have love in my life and I love who I am." Maybe he would care, maybe he wouldn't. That's not the point.

1 comment:

  1. Lee, my heart is full, not with pity, but with so much love for you. And I could not be more proud of you. Thankful for your courage to tell your story. With your gift of writing you have contributed to the healing if countless other survivors.

    ReplyDelete

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