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- <text id=91TT2220>
- <title>
- Oct. 07, 1991: My Own Story
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 07, 1991 Defusing the Nuclear Threat
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 47
- My Own Story
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Barbara Dolan
- </p>
- <p> Last night as I lay sleeping in my bed, I awoke to see a
- lonely figure of a woman hovering over me. I was not afraid.
- Often she comes to visit me in the night. Once I sat upright in
- bed and screamed, "Who are you? Who are you?" As if I didn't
- know. She is my mother. She tells me stories about my childhood,
- stories I do not want to hear and often can't remember.
- </p>
- <p> I am a survivor of incest long past. Somehow it is all too
- easy to forget those things that traumatized the soul. The
- phantom woman in the night reminds me. Everything I do in life revolves
- around working out the problems created by that woman in the
- night who long ago terrorized an innocent child.
- </p>
- <p> How did she terrorize? If it had been done with knives and
- loaded guns, it would be easier to deal with. No, she took my
- affection for her and turned it into a sordid relationship
- involving sex. My first recollections of our interaction, when
- I was three, involve me sitting happily between her legs in a
- bathtub, both of us naked. I also remember her standing in front
- of me rubbing her breasts. At other times, she would fret over
- whether my bowels were all right. A regular ritual was a
- cleansing enema of sudsy water made with laundry detergent. I
- still recall the feel of the tile bathroom floor as I lay there
- on my left side while she administered the preparation. "Breathe
- deeply," she said while we waited for her brew to work.
- </p>
- <p> Where was my father while all this was going on? you may
- ask. He was always away on business. To me he was as much a
- phantom as the woman who visits me in the night. My mother wept
- and wailed over his sexual dalliances, but then she turned to
- me. I became the sexual replacement for my father, who deprived
- my mother of affection. My mother spent much of my childhood in
- bed, horribly depressed and trancelike. The only thing about me
- she was interested in was my bodily functions. Cleaning my
- genitals became an obsession. I remember lying rag-doll across
- the bed, my mother carefully removing my clothes. To me it was a
- loving act.
- </p>
- <p> Although I had sisters, I was isolated and lonely as a
- child. I wandered through wide expanses of prairies without any
- supervision. A farm boy took me into a cornfield when I was five
- and showed me his penis. A teenager molested me when I was
- eight. At 10, I felt the groping fingers of a man reaching up
- my leg in the theater where I was watching a movie. By the time
- I was 18, I was pregnant. In my 23rd year, a psychiatrist was
- putting his tongue deep into my mouth. My mother opened the
- door, and everybody else walked through.
- </p>
- <p> I didn't know the difference between consensual sex and
- rape. I didn't know that when my husband wanted sex, I could say
- no. I didn't know that when a psychiatrist sticks his finger in
- your vagina, it isn't therapy. How could I not know these
- things? you ask.
- </p>
- <p> I didn't know because I was keeping the secret about my
- mother's violation from myself. To be able to see anybody as
- abusive, I had to acknowledge that the woman who gave me life
- also devalued it, demeaned it and nearly destroyed it. It took
- me 20 years before I could admit to myself that my mother did
- not love me. To deny what had been done to me, I became a
- superachiever. To block out the pain, I used alcohol and
- overeating. When those didn't work, I would drown myself in
- overworking. None of these prescriptions worked any better than
- my mother giving me enemas. What worked was giving up my
- pain-killers and finally giving up my mother. I had to face
- squarely the abuse that was done to me in the name of kindness
- and give back the shame I have carried with me all my life.
- </p>
- <p> Recovery is not easy. The messages my mother filled me
- with had to be replaced with self-esteem. It is a tedious task.
- For me it involved five weeks of intensive treatment and many
- hours of outpatient therapy. At times I have felt enraged that
- I have to endure such pain. Today I feel only sadness--and
- hope. Hope for me, for my children, for the many people engaged
- in this incredible battle. I promised my children years ago
- that I would break the cycle of incest that has haunted my
- family, and now that's happening. I only regret that the
- resources I've tapped weren't there for my mother, who still
- says that, whatever happened, it was not sexual abuse.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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