Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Remembering and Misremembering

I had a long heart-to-heart with my mom over dinner on Friday night. It wasn't planned. She had a bit of liquid courage in her from the wine we had with our steak, and I suppose I should be worried about this as she is a recovering alcoholic, but I don't think she overdid it. Anyway, she started seemingly out of nowhere by asking me if I remembered when I was little and my brother and I were at a young friend's house. I had been playing around in the cutlery drawer, which I shouldn't have been doing. I was famous for that: doing what I wasn't supposed to, but I suppose that's all children. Anyway, I had cut myself pretty badly on a knife and decided to lie and tell the parents watching me and my mom that my brother had cut me. Somehow my mom found out that I had lied, probably because she eventually figured out that I was a compulsive liar and my little brother had a hard time lying about anything because his anxiety convinced him he'd get caught anyway. I assume that when my brother insisted that I was lying and he didn't do anything my mom rightfully chose to believe him. She brought this up because she was wondering if I remembered that she put myself and my brother in the car, drove up to the mountains and into the middle of the forest, and kicked me out of the car. She then drove away, listening to me screaming and crying in terror.

I didn't remember this at first, but as I let the story sink in I did. I remembered that it was around dusk, and there was nothing around me except for the path my mom had driven up. I was terrified. I was scared of the dark, and I thought monsters or animals would come and attack me. I was screaming for somebody to please help me. What's worse is because I was a child, I believed I deserved this treatment. She screamed at me when I wouldn't get out of the car at first. She said I was a liar and she didn't want a liar for a child, so she wanted me to get out and not to dare come back. I don't know how long she left me there, but I don't think it was long. I think she continued to yell at me on the drive back. That's all I really remember.

She asked me this because she wanted to apologize for that. This memory haunts her. I think she can still hear me screaming in her memories, and that's why she came back so quickly. I don't think any parent in their right mind can hear their child suffer like that and not come to their senses pretty quickly. My mom explained that she wasn't looking to excuse her actions at all, as they were inexcusable. Having my brother and I gave her a reason to live when she was really and truly suicidal during that time in her life, but having two young children to raise on her own was also the cause of an enormous amount of stress and she often snapped under the weight of it. Now that she's older and owning her shit she wants to let me know the mistakes that stick with her, and this was one of them.

My mom then asked me what I did remember. Among other things, I talked to her about the time DYFS had been called and we met them at school. I misremembered the reason why they had been called. Apparently I had let slip to my teacher that my mom left my brother and I alone at night while she worked the graveyard shift at the factory she was working at when I was in Kindergarten. She couldn't afford a babysitter, but she had maneuvered things so that she was only ever gone when we were sleeping, and working from home when we were awake. My mother managed to scramble and say that the same young friend's parents (the house where I accidentally cut myself) would be watching us from then on. They lived in the same apartment complex as us. I have distinct memories of being carried out to the car by the father, I was barely awake and was taken back down the block at some unknown hour to our own apartment. I don't know how long that went on, but according to what my mom said it was long enough for DYFS to conclude their investigation on my mom and her friend to make sure she was watching us.

During this same conversation we talked about a lot of things like how she agonized over whether or not she made the right decision not to let my father's air force captain adopt us away from her, or if her stress had somehow made my brother a quiet baby and troubled young man. This  ultimately led to me being able to tell my mom that I am non-binary. She didn't really react to that. She neither reacted in disgust and horror nor did she accept me with open arms. She just received the information and didn't really question it. She learned why and when I became really depressed - when my friends called to tell me that they couldn't take my lying any more and didn't want to be my friends the summer between middle school and high school. It dawned on her that that's when I really started gaining weight, because I was overeating and not really leaving my room, but she hadn't known what was going on so she couldn't put the pieces together.

I was kind of hoping to get to talk to my mother more on this visit and truly get to know her better, but also have more frank discussions with her about who I am and what we've been through. Slowly over time, we are getting there. I'm learning more about my extended family than I ever realized, like the fact that her father was also "strict" and abusive (so that's where she learned it from), and my aunt (her little sister) had been abused by her husband and that's why she came to live with us sometimes before she was killed by a drunk driver. I worry a lot that my mom will have some secret health problems and will suddenly pass away without me having the chance to really get to know her, or her getting to really know me, but I hope that we keep picking up momentum and build a real relationship moving forward so that I can get some resolution and clarity on my memories and history.

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