lists in my head

i keep thinking about Meghan’s suggestion that i should write a prevention list at the end of the book.  i should, but i haven’t because it haunts me,  i genuinely believed for years that i was protecting my children from abuse, but i was wrong,  so the only list i feel qualified to write is remedial–a list of don’t, not do’s, that i write brokenly–like writing to the person i thought i was before…

don’t think you can be too careful or paranoid

don’t take advice from people whose parenting models you don’t agree with

don’t second guess your instinct

don’t think that instinct will be enough

don’t expect a child abuser to tell the truth (they won’t)

and don’t expect them to have a conscience (they don’t)

don’t believe statistics ( sexual abuse is ridiculously underreported)

don’t believe the myths surrounding both predators and their victims

(for instance most victims of abuse are not abusers

and abusers will lie about everything to save their skin or keep abusing)

don’t think that there is an economic, racial, or educational profile for predators, there isn’t

don’t think abuse is rare

remember 6 degrees of separation?  it is my contention that if you have not been the victim of a sexual predator, you have a close relationship or family relationship with someone who has

why?

because all the predators I know or have heard of had an AVERAGE of 10 victims

that means that if even 10% of the population is a predator, we are all victims

don’t think that prevention checklists, sex offender registry, and warning sign checklists will ferret out most abuse

which leads to my next post..

 

little girl alone

my neighbor tells me a story about her attempts to help one of her students.  the girl shows noticeable signs of abuse and neglect.  when people at her school report the abuse, nothing happens and it happens for so long that state social worker tells them to shut up and stop calling.

all i can think of is one little girl’s loneliness and pain.

i thank God for my friends’ tenacity.

as usual, edmund burke is right

 

Tabernacles

One of my favorite stories from the gospels is when Jesus goes to the feast of tents (secretly) and then stands up at the end of it and publicly proclaims that He is the source of living water (John 7).

I admire strict sabbatarians, I am a liberal sabbatarian–shameless about eating out on Sunday, but beguiled by the idea of abiding in God on Sunday and making each Sunday a reminder of Heaven. 

Sea was caught on Sunday.

He used each sabbath freedom for unthinkable evil.

 

God remembers

Sabbath

Sea or his friend calls every Sunday morning.  I wonder at this, like the time I told them we would be traveling and there were still 26 messages on our machine when we got back.  Sunday morning should belong to God, but it seems that their schedule and the shape of their lives is off-kilter, like ours.

When everything came out I bought a book about the desert fathers, a group of Christians who left the dying embers of a corrupt christianized Roman empire to live in caves in the desert.

The accounts of these men are strangely mystical and I am a bit sceptical about how good they were.  I naturally distrust people and their biographers now.

But I figured that if we were going to wander in the desert of social stigma, I should at least learn about others who had lived there before me.

Now when I see the starkness of our life, I remind myself that it may be the desert, but I am here with my favorite people.

truman

i was too young when i read in cold blood. i did not finish it.  too scary.  too real.  more than just hating the inevitability of the violent deaths at the heart of the book, the seeming randomness of their deaths chilled me.  the idea that you could be the recipient of violence without cause haunted me, as did the terror and pain of an ordinary family in the hands of evil.

i only read it at all because i loved truman capote.  i loved truman because i loved dill, scout, jem, atticus, and of course, Harper Lee.  i understood truman’s loneliness and his uneven life, but i did not understand how the book affected him.

there is a terrble price for violence. a price i do not like, much as i do not like nabokov for profitting over a story of egregious abuse.

i like instead the iconic picture of atticus taking aim at the rabid dog, finishing it off with one perfectly aimed shot.

 

Last Thursday

Okay, I admit it, I love Groundhog Day.  I love the movie, Bill Murray, and the friend of mine from a long, long time ago whose birthday is today.  I plan to really celebrate, although I am still unclear how.

I have always thought the idea was ridiculous, but I do remember when I longed for shorter winters.  Now I revel in winter swimming.

But last Thursday was tough.  I was pulled over by a police officer because my running lights were on, not full headlights. He badgered me about my insurance card, the origin of my numerous children, my origin and destination, and my job.  He had the audacity to ask me if I am a foster parent.  He could not have understood how painful that question was.

After all of that he gave me a ticket for an unrestrained child who was in fact in his seat belt the whole time.

I protested, but to no avail.  Alas…

Today at the park Mel and her older brother were directing traffic among the preschool set, who were tooling about on motorized jeeps.  Melanie engineered a fake police stop for two boys–friends age 5 and 4.

She chastised the older boy, saying, “you don’t have your seatbelt on and neither does your four year old!!”

but these three remain–faith, hope, and love, but the greatest of these is Love