11 September 2007

Why Do I Still See You In Every Mirrored Window, In All That I Could Never Overcome?

I'll just start by saying that I'll be surprised if this entry ever actually hits the internet. It's deeply, deeply personal and I usually end up deleting these things before they're half finished.

But here's the thing. New circumstances, right? Which means a whole new set of people to whom I have to explain why I freak out if people walk where I can hear them but not see them. Which means telling The Story, capital letters and all, complete with missing memories, and six years of depression, repression, and brokenness. No matter how much better I get, no matter how much stronger I feel, telling the story always breaks me a little bit.

I worry that people will see me as broken, and it's so important that they not. It's so important that people know I'm much more than a victim. Because if I can convince them, then I can convince myself for one more day that I'm okay. That I'm more than a statistic. That I am not defined by my story.

The thing is, though, that I am defined by what happened (and to be fair and less mysterious, I will tell this damn story if it kills me. I just have to prevaricate first) in a way that's not bad at all. If I didn't have this need to prove myself not broken, I don't know where or who I would be. If I didn't need to show that one man did not define my life forever, I might be less driven. I might care less. I would not be who I am today. I would give up easier.

There is something that makes me feel physically ill about realizing that my rapist has done good things for my life. That anything good at all could have come out of that summer.

Here is the story that has been deleted a thousand times.

The summer I was seventeen, I went away to college for high schoolers. It was a somewhat prestigious program; we got to take college classes and live in the dorms and be college-esque students for six weeks or so. While I was away, four hours from home, a classmate of mine died suddenly, and I was understandably upset. And I did what I was supposed to do: I confided in one of the counselor/RA type people. He responded by systematically alienating me from my friends in the program, my parents, and anyone else who could have helped me, and then raping me for three weeks. I don't remember much from this period of time except two things: the statement "sorry I couldn't last longer, but the struggle was so hot," and bleeding through a dorm-style mattress. This last boggles my mind. That's a lot of blood. How did I lose so much blood and not notice? Or care? I just went about my business, attended class, and came back to hell every day. I went home at the end of the program and he tried to kidnap me; came to my high school with the intention of taking me away.

I have been so determined not to be defined by this, not to give him any more power over my life than he already had. I ended up being defined by it anyway, but in a completely opposite way.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

i'm sorry to have to write this on your post wall, it makes me feel shitty that the only way i can tell you this is through such an impersonal and generic thing.

but i really appreciate you sharing your story. While i have never met you and i don't know you, i find that your ability to overcome, to understand that such an experience is defining, but does not always have to be in a bad way, is beautiful. i cannot imagine the strength of character you posses.