I
would like to tell everyone that after that incident that I walked away and
never saw him again. Actually, I would
LOVE to tell everyone that is what I did, but I did not… In fact since it
wasn’t the first time I ever got beat up by him, it wasn’t the last either.
So
why would I write about it as a life-defining moment and why do I think about
it everyday? That was that moment in my life where I could have left, I knew I
should have left and I chose to stay even though he didn’t care.
That day I made what would be, physically, the wrong decision, but twenty years
later, may have been the path I chose to take so that I would be strong enough
to handle adversity and to recognize co-dependency, addiction and narcissism.
I
think about that time when I begin to waiver from the path I’ve chosen
because it seems difficult. It is a
reminder that when I chose what would be the easiest, it was the wrong way and
would have lifelong consequences.
I stayed
with him for eight more months and I can’t tell you it got better because four
months after this I finally hit rock bottom and although it was a bad time I
quickly learned that you can’t rate evil. It is or it isn’t. I became so
desensitized to the pain that I was numb – on the inside and out.
What
made me finally leave? I realized I didn’t like myself very much. I found out I
was pregnant and couldn’t bring myself to tell my family about it, so I hid
it… I was 20 weeks pregnant when it
happened… My second miscarriage… I came home one afternoon – and he wasn’t
home. He had gone out with the guys, which was fine with me, because I was
hoping he’d have just enough of a buzz that he’d be in a good mood… it was a
crapshoot. I don’t gamble because the odds
are always against me. He came home in a rage over something he wouldn’t tell
me about and he said I was in his way. He had that look and even though I
covered my stomach, he kicked me and I fell down the stairs and it must have
been too much.
I
didn’t know what to feel. I was numb. I remember laying on the gurney in the
OB-GYN unit and nurses and techs were swarming around me with IV lines,
equipment and with comfort. They called
my family, which was a cross between humiliating and fear. I was so embarrassed
for them to see me like this and for them to find out about my pregnancy this way… The nurse in
charge was heartbroken to tell me that they didn’t think they were going to be
able to save my baby. I just laid there
not knowing what I felt or if I felt anything.
My cousin asked me how I got to the hospital and I had to admit that my
boyfriend dropped me off in front of the hospital and left, in my car. When
they called him to tell him I may have surgery and he should be with me, he
wasn’t home. He wasn’t around until the day before the funeral. I delivered a little boy, Robert. The nurses asked me if I wanted to see him.
If I wanted to hold him. I regret it to this day – I said no. I felt like such an epic failure that I
thought I didn’t deserve to be a mom, if even for a minute. The nurse must have
known I would regret it and she brought him to me. I did not understand that he
would live for only a few minutes. Robert didn’t survive, and I believe he died
so that I could live.
I
pray for his soul everyday and thank him for the strength to leave. I loved
this young man more than I loved myself, but not more than that little life. At
that point, I began to hate who I was with this person. It was as if a fog had
been lifted from me. Things were clear. I realized that I needed to leave. I
sought refuge with my cousin and her husband (a deputy). She had been with me
through all of the hurt and I knew she wouldn’t let me go back…
The
rage I had inside of me was palpable and it propelled me into a world so
surreal that I don’t know who that person was when I looked into the mirror. I
snuck away to see him and he was just coming home from a date. I remember
feeling so sorry for that young woman, she had no idea who she was fooling
with. I told her she needed to walk home… He thought the “Tina” he knew had
shown up. Wrong. He was drunk and high on himself. He pulled out a 30/30
shotgun and held it to my head all night – the next day he woke up and began
drinking while he kept that gun laid across his lap. I wasn’t allowed to leave.
I remember thinking at that very moment, that this was no life. I refused to
live like this… Robert didn’t die for me
to put up with this. I’ll never forget it… all the abuse, all the foul words,
that’s all that passed through my consciousness – like rapid fire. When he
passed out, I took that gun and beat him with it. I bit him. I fought him and
most importantly, I left. That was
twenty years ago.
I
will never go back there. I will never allow myself to ever see that woman in
the mirror again. That woman who lived
through that era is gone. The one who is writing this is no one’s victim.