+MY ADOBE PEACE GARDEN IN BLOOM ON THE MEXICAN-AMERICAN BORDERLINE

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April 22, 2013.  This is the third spring for my Adobe Peace Garden.  Last year there were two very hard freezes after the plants put out leaves and buds.  They stayed alive but refused to bloom for the rest of the season.  This year we had fantastic high desert Arizona winter rains, and the roses appreciated the boost.  These are their first blooms of the year to be followed by full blooming after our monsoon rains come in mid-July.  THEN they will have leaves and more flowers than a person could count in one season.  Most of these roses were a Mother’s Day gift from my oldest daughter, to be enjoyed every year as they continue to grow and flourish.

Our soil down here is very poor and extremely alkaline.  Roses like sweet low Ph soil, so it takes some time to give them what they want.  Our water rates in this small town are the highest in Arizona.  I so gratefully thank my younger daughter and her husband for providing the water the extensive system of drip irrigation feeds to these plants.

All of the pathways were dug up and mixed into adobe and poured to create weed-free (and snake visible) areas that require no care but for the occasional sweeping.  This is the garden in bloom today!

042213 Back dark red rose

042213 back peach

042213 back red chair

042213 Bk pink

042213 bk scarlet

042213 cabot

042213 close cabot

042213 far blooms

This climbing rose-bush is undoubtedly one of the farthest south U.S. displays.  Behind this fence lies the double Mexican-American border fences.

042213 far pink

This is another picture of the far south rose.  It sits beside my adobe chicken coop.  When I finish getting the gutter on the coop roof enough water should fall on the roots of this rose throughout the summer to sustain its roots long, long into the future.

042213 frnt blue

This is one of my all-time garden favorites — a blue Salvia sage.  It’s glorious blue reminds me of Alaska’s Forget-me-not state flower.  It is a hardy low-water plant that will bloom continuously with a little dead-heading until late, late fall.  It will propagate from a cutting only 1/2″ long.

042213 frnt red

There are two separate bushes in here, and so far I worry about them!  I can’t tell what it is that bothers them, so far they have not taken off like I wish they had.  I have not given up on them yet!

042213 frnt yel all

The climber on the left has the better quality flowers with lovely scent.  It is years younger than the one on the right of the picture whose flowers last week — as it is the first to bloom in the spring — hid the green of its leaves.

042213 frnt yel best

This is the younger of the two yellows out front.  Hopefully I can find the perfect balance to help it reach its fullest potential in that spot.  It is one of the most exquisite in the garden.  I do not grow tea roses or rose trees — my desire is to train and trim the climbers right so that eventually they will create over-arching displays that people can walk under so it will be like breathing inside the roses as if a part of their life.

042213 gate all pink

This another of the best so far in that it seems hardy and blooms thick and often.  It is considered a small climber growing only 10′ long canes.  I have not decided how I will treat it once it stretches itself out.  It sits outside the fence at the front gate.  The following is another picture of its blooms.

042213 gate pink

I wish there was a way I could find out where all the southernmost rose gardens are in America.  Often this borderline is protected within an atmosphere of animosity and fear.  This garden as it sits right on this international boundary is meant to heal and to lend blossoms toward the growing appreciation of the beauty of this world in flowers as well as in people.

042213 island

This is a tough little flower island on minimal drip.

042213 long back

This is a long shot of the southwest side of the garden outside my back door.  The American double border fences dividing us from Mexico is visible at the south behind the garden.

042213 mermaid

I set myself up with a challenge when I planted this Mermaid climbing rose in the middle of my adobe walkways.  I discipline it!  Here it shows early blooms, and as summer progresses it greenery will flourish along with its continual blooms.  It is considered a large rose, could cover a shed or an entire fence line if left to its own preferences.  It is an “own root” rose meaning it is not hybridized upon a graft root.  It can be propagated.  After sunset the back garden soothes with the sweetest scent from this humble, sturdy and beautiful rose.

042213 mid pink

All of the roses became infested with aphids as soon as temperatures warmed.  Far too large a garden to spray with soap water, all that was needed was an aggressive spraying with pressure from the hose to knock the aphids to the ground.  They cannot climb back up!

042213 more bak all

042213 more bk pink

042213 nearly buds

This is a Nearly Wild, lovely tri-color blooms – just budding – very hardy.

042213 petunia sage

This is another flower island on minimal drip with two native sages and petunias that both reseed and grow as perennials here.

042213 wide bk pink

042213 wider pink

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+NEVER VIOLENCE

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When I was about twenty years old, I met an old pastor’s wife who told me that when she was young and had her first child, she didn’t believe in striking children, although spanking kids with a switch pulled from a tree was standard punishment at the time.

But one day when her son was four or five, he did something that she felt warranted a spanking — the first in his life.  And she told him he would have to go outside and find a switch for her to hit him with.  The boy was gone a long time.  And when he came back in, he was crying.

He said to her, ‘Mama, I couldn’t find a switch, but here’s a rock you can throw at me.’  All of a sudden this mother understood how the situation felt from the child’s point of view:  that if my mother wants to hurt me, it makes no difference what she does it with; she might as well do it with a stone.

The mother took the boy onto her lap and they both cried.  Then she laid the rock on a shelf in the kitchen to remind herself forever:  never violence.  Because violence begins in the nursery — one can raise children into violence.”

— From a peace prize acceptance speech given by Astrid Lindgren, author of Pippi Longstocking, 1978

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+SAD STATE OF AFFAIRS – NO WONDER NOBODY LIKES US

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The statistics regarding the sad plight of America’s children and youth is not really news.  We have not bettered our standing among other rich nations.  Conditions have been getting worse.

+LATEST UNICEF REPORT – AGAIN U.S.A. RANKED NEAR THE WORST AMONG WORLD’S RICHEST NATIONS

I found someone from another nation today and asked them what they thought.  What are the reasons for America paying no attention to the suffering of their children?  1,825 confirmed cases of abuse and neglect per day is not a small, insigificant number of children.  Well, I need to rephrase that.  It evidently is an insignificant number.  Too minor to pay attention to, to be bothered by.

The person I spoke with told me, well, who is surprised?  Certainly no other nations.  It’s the American personality, I was told.  ARROGANT, self-centered — I forget all the adjectives used to describe what I guess many, many other nations agree on about Americans.  None of them were positive. 

So, are we a nation with a personality disorder? 

That’s what it sounds like to me!  Take a look at some of those statistics about kids in that link up there if you haven’t already.  Sad state of affairs.  As this person told me today, nobody likes Americans and they haven’t for a long, long time.  We may like to boast and bully — but when it comes to our kids?

Take a look for yourself.

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+TAKING A HOLIDAY

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I had a dream, a long wonderful dream last night that I was relaxing with loved ones, friends and family alike, on the shores of a brilliant turquoise sea that seemed to be along the west coast of Mexico.  I’ve never been to such a place in my life!  I could feel the healing of that place and of our time there.  So while I can’t get there from here literally, I have decided to create as much of that feeling and that state of relaxation right here — all by myself — the best that I can.

No more thoughts of book writing until the 3rd of May.  I don’t know if I will post here on the blog or not.  The point is I have been working in such a dark arena of toxic ooze all the way through the contruction of these ten current manuscripts that I am worn out.

Makes perfect sense to me!  Time to let go and let the love of the universe heal what only can be healed that way.  For now, I let go. 

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+LATEST UNICEF REPORT – AGAIN U.S.A. RANKED NEAR THE WORST AMONG WORLD’S RICHEST NATIONS

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According to a Unicef report issued last week — “Child Well-Being in Rich Countries” — the United States once again ranked among the worst wealthy countries for children, coming in 26th place of 29 countries included. Only Lithuania, Latvia and Romania placed lower, and those were among the poorest countries assessed in the study.

According to data released last month by the Children’s Defense Fund, each day in America:

2 mothers die in childbirth.

4 children are killed by abuse or neglect.

5 children or teens commit suicide.

7 children or teens are killed by firearms.

67 babies die before their first birthdays.

892 babies are born at low birth weight.

914 babies are born to teen mothers.

1,208 babies are born without health insurance.

1,825 children are confirmed as abused or neglected.

2,712 babies are born into poverty.

2,857 high school students drop out.

4,475 babies are born to unmarried mothers.

That is a supremely sad list of numbers, and it’s only a small sample.

This says nothing of the violent society that we have created for our children. We have the third highest homicide rate among developed countries, according to Unicef. And according to a December Gallup poll, a third of parents fear for their children’s physical safety at school, and most believe it’s likely that a shooting like the one in Newtown, Conn., could happen in their communities.

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+ONCE AND FOR ALL (Dark Side, book 2, chapter 37)

The Dark Side of Mildred’s Mountain series – Angel book 2 beginning with the POP!  Goes Alaska letters – chapter 37

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37.  The turquoise coat – Part four:  Once and for all

The two letters of her mother’s that Mildred responded to here were not in her collection of papers.  My guess is that she destroyed them.  Those would have been the letters Mildred set her mother up to write so that her daughter could respond back to her in exactly the way that she did here.  Minion Grandmother, kept as no more than a pet to Mildred, could exist as a 3,400-miles-away outsider to our family just so long as she kept her mouth forever shut and pointed no fingers at possible maternal flaws in her daughter most centrally regarding Mother’s treatment of me.

Very, very little indication of Mother’s abuse toward me or even of her great rage appeared in her letters.  All-good Mildred wrote about her all-good world with me remaining invisible in her all-bad hell.  No need to speak of THAT – unless Mother had a psychosis-serving purpose for doing so. 

That she so specifically detailed her feelings about my clothing in her letters was an invitation to her mother to arrive at her own slaughter, or at least at her own castration.  Grandmother took the bait, which is what Mildred’s illness planned all along exactly so she could write these letters and put her mother in her place.  These are some of the phrases that appear throughout the following letters.

Also please let’s straighten out matter of Linda once and for all.

You’ve always interfered with Linda and probably more reason I’ve had difficulties with her in past than her wearing Levis in Glendora.

Sorry if this hurts but next summer I don’t want fusses such as in past over your well-meant but unwanted suggestions.

You’ve always been far overly concerned with LINDA’S actions anyways.

It takes far more anyways than ‘a pretty dress and a pretty face’ to be nice.  She does wear pretty dresses to school and looks like a Princess in her beautiful jacket (when it’s clean!!)  I no longer wish to discuss it with you and I will appreciate no further comments and psychological theories from you!

We feed, clothe and love our children and we will discipline them and reward them as WE see fit now and in the future!!!!!  They are our responsibility – we brought them into the world – they’re NOT your children ‘only your grandchildren’.  PERIOD.

I want to bring them up the way WE see fit – it’s one reason we wanted to come up here….  In order to bring up our children in our own way – as we see fit!!!

You’re their grandma – their only one now – and they need grandmotherly love and we need love too.

How did Mother define love?  Grandmother followed the only choice she knew how to.  Her lips became sealed after these letters.  There could have been no greater love shown to me by anyone than for someone to have confronted the truth and have gotten me out of that home forever.

In the end, and by the time this correspondence was completed, Mother had won the war.  Her mother was the only “grandma” in our life because Mildred had disowned her husband’s family through her hatred and made sure he disowned his family, as well.  Although in the final of these letters Mother implicates money as her concern, nothing about that was true.  As will become obvious throughout later letters loan after loan from her mother financed Mildred’s homesteading obsession.

I don’t feel sorry for Grandmother.  She helped to destroy her own daughter.  In the meantime, however, in the thickening ooze of their adult relationship my grandmother was the only hope I had ever had for an ally or a rescuer.  I would have added my grade school teachers before I read what they said about me even on the backs of my report cards that were saved among Mildred’s papers.

Like some brave but errant Ponty Python knight about to have his appendages whacked off at the bridge Grandmother marched right into her daughter’s trap to have her power to hold her own in any way against my mother regarding me completely destroyed.   By the time Mildred finished writing these letters Grandmother’s influence over her grandchildren was dead.  This was ultimately what Mildred’s move to Alaska was designed to accomplish.

Here it comes Grandma, with both barrels.  By the time Mildred completed these letters the isolation of our family was nearly complete.  All Mother had left to do was move us up the side of a remote mountain out of reach of anyone.

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November 20, 1957 Wednesday

Dear Mother,

Received No. I and No. II letters today – no real need to number them, as I’m certain I receive all of your letters!!  Thanks so much for the very generous check and of course I could use it but then I could really spend a million if I had it!!  But it’s far too generous and I cannot and will not accept such a large amount so I am mailing it back.  The thought was sweet but we’re all trying far too hard to get caught up to be so overly-generous!  Please understand and $10.00 would be marvelous!  (Anyways I’m 32 in December!)

We’re really trying so hard to get caught up and will have a tight two years in doing so but can’t see accepting $31.00 for Birthday – just can’t.  Why we won’t spend more than $50 on Xmas for children and Bill and Me!!!

Also please let’s straighten out matter of Linda once and for all.

No. I.  I did not write to you for advice!!!

No. II. Linda has always been dressed feminine and given as many (if not more) advantages as any girl!!

No. III. I did buy her more clothes this year and a prettier and more expensive jacket on purpose to make her feel feminine – with NO AVAIL!!  She still wears dresses to school and always does look nice! – When she leaves home! 

No. IV. She looked nice up until two because she was in a play pen and stroller!!  So does Sharon NOW!

ENOUGH SAID except please don’t pass on unwanted unneeded advise air mail please, concerning children – I only mentioned it to let you know that she is not taking care of her clothes and I feel should not wear expensive clothes until she takes care of what she now wears!!  For no other reason.

Linda always was kept nice and still is.  Her hair has always been clean and shining (no child of mine will ever have a permanent in first grade!) and her nails have always been manicured.  I have three girls and you had one – I think I am capable of caring for girls – thank you!  If you want to give advice and must why don’t you give it to Carolyn [Mildred’s sister-in-law], seems Sandra needs it.  Linda looks feminine and always will just hasn’t matured fully but in time I’m sure she will – and never could or would be like Mimi, Diana or boyish girl you mentioned (but Sandra may – dancing lessons or not).  Probably dieting and less fussy, expensive clothes would do Sandra more good than dancing lessons at four!!  See I have my ideas too only the difference is I keep my suggestions to myself unless asked for and usually then too as most people don’t relish advice asked for or not asked for (your clients excepted!!).

WHEW – well that’s off my chest.  You’ve always interfered with Linda and probably more reason I’ve had difficulties with her in past than her wearing Levis in Glendora.

Sorry if this hurts but next summer I don’t want fusses such as in past over your well-meant but unwanted suggestions.

Remember I’ll be 32 in December – not 2!  [all written very large on paper]

Love, Mildred

P.S.  I.  When my temperature simmers down in a few days I’ll write a letter.

P.S. II.  Weather is warm and rainy here, thanks!

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November 26, 1957 Tuesday

Dear Mother,

Bill brought home ‘the letter’ last night that you addressed wrong – isn’t it funny how you can do something like that.  I did it many times last summer.

I am glad I wrote my recent letter and hope you fully understand so I won’t have to repeat myself in the future.  You’ve always been far overly concerned with LINDA’S actions anyways.  I am not nearly as concerned with ‘Tom Boyishness’ which is not as prevalent now anyways as with poor behavior in school and traits and personality.  It takes far more anyways than ‘a pretty dress and a pretty face’ to be nice.  She does wear pretty dresses to school and looks like a Princess in her beautiful jacket (when it’s clean!!)  I no longer wish to discuss it with you and I will appreciate no further comments and psychological theories from you!  Save them for the Cahill’s – I’m sure they’ll welcome them – I never have and I especially don’t now.

We feed, clothe and love our children and we will discipline them and reward them as WE see fit now and in the future!!!!!  They are our responsibility – we brought them into the world – they’re NOT your children ‘only your grandchildren’.  PERIOD.

* * * * * * * * * * [Mildred put these stars in her letter – notice how easily and thoroughly she dropped the subject having assured her complete power of control over me.]

The weather has turned cold here but we like it.  The temperature has gone down to 18° nights and 20° and 22° days.  There’s no snow on the ground – although weather report predicts it today.  But it looks as if it’s snowed as the ground has a thick white coat of frost which remains all day now and the trees are also heavy with frost.  The creek is partially frozen and has widened considerably.  Parts of the surface are ice but the water still runs swift beneath and around the ice.  In places there are big chunks of ice and icicles hand around edges and from trees where water has splashed.  It’s fun to watch the changes – it looks more like a pond now, in places and although rough in spots will be good place for children to learn to ice skate when frozen solid!

We haven’t gone out lately – not since last Saturday.  Second concert is this Friday so we’ll plan to go to that.  Oh, yes – we did take the children into Anchorage Saturday to see “Perry” Disney’s production about wild life in forest.  The scenery was identical to woods and creek near here and we enjoyed that plus music plus pictures of change of seasons BUT I squirmed and so did John at pictures showing animals chasing, hunting and devouring one another.  The poor frightened, frenzied animals still haunt me.  Sharon woke up at least four times during the night crying – I think she had bad dreams after it – she’s so sensitive.  She never ordinarily awakens during the night.

This Saturday Santa comes to town and there’ll be a parade – I hope we can go.  We’ve told Cindy about SANTA this year.  Our Xmas is going to be zero this year – except for tree, dinner and 10¢ gifts and some clothing SO – thought I’d better explain.  The thoroughly understands and feels big knowing.  Anyways her questions were getting too involved.

The days pass fast – almost too fast – there’s so much to be done each and every day.  The girls play very well together and Sharon says anything and everything.  She’s cooperative, good and plays like a four year old – they have fun!  Cindy likes being a big sister and is patient and good and also a Big help to me.  She picks up her room, wipes dishes etc.  I’ll be lost when she does go to school.

John and Linda are doing perfect in reading etc. – they work hard in school and their hours are long but they’re learning a lot!!  They watch TV at 5:00, at 6:00 we have dinner, any reviewing, a story – it’s usually 8:00 by the time they get to bed – although it should be 7:00.

The days are so busy!  My sewing got me behind.  Yesterday I washed windows and cleaned walls in living room, washed curtains and rehung them.  I have lots of ironing to do today and am writing this with my wet shampooed hair wrapped in a towel and better get to work!  And also get my hair dried before I catch cold.

Before I close I must remember to tell you that big hat arrived and one smaller one.  We opened them – of course didn’t unwrap Xmas packages but guess the smaller ones were books you mentioned and large one contained two quilts.  (1) John’s quilt (beautiful!) and pillow THANKS – I only hope he’ll take care of it!  And he needs a good pillow and (2) Sharon’s quilt and pillow (Mom may I return girls’ pillows to you).  Remember I made those tiny pillows and just finished more pillowcases and embroidered on them.  They’re very attached to them and those are too big for now.  I could use rompers etc. so badly needed instead OK?

You did say you were sending four quilts and see only two came.  Will others be in another box or what?  We were worried but maybe put on another boat or something.  Certainly everything got here SOON ENOUGH!!

Let me know about pillows please or can we return them here – I think we should mail them to you direct.  They’re beautiful but just can’t use them now!  And need other things SO BADLY!

This is my last piece of paper.  I’ll form a few articles and have them reading in case he wants them.  OK?  Love, Mildred

P.S.  I hope I never have to mention again about children.  I don’t want to feel I can’t tell you about children or say something without a barrage of letters of advice following.

So once and for all:

We want no financial assistance in any way from now on.  [What a joke.  As future letters describe, Mildred and Bill continually benefited from Bea’s financial support.]

Only birthday and Xmas etc. gifts and those inexpensive and no more spent on our children please by you than we can spend on them!  I don’t want Grandma giving them expensive gifts – love and thought count just as much.

We’re tight financially now and will be for two years but even if I were a millionaire I want children to learn the value of money and saving and spending own allowance etc. – also to be considerate, polite and thoughtful.  I want to bring them up the way WE see fit – it’s one reason we wanted to come up here. 

* In order to bring up our children in our own way – as we see fit!!!

I don’t want them to be materialistic or have false standards – I think it will be far more possible here than in southern California.

We intend to scrimp and save and don’t want you (please) influencing them in any way!  [What a confused sentence along with whatever the thoughts were that made it.]

You’re their grandma – their only one now – and they need grandmotherly love and we need love too.

Use your well-earned money on yourself.  Take trips, buy pretty clothes for you.  Do things! – Go places!

From now on let’s limit your Birthday gifts to children to $10.00 or under and Xmas $5.00 apiece.  NO MORE!!

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An aftermath comment from Mother to Grandmother appears in the next chapter in a letter dated December 6, 1957:

Your letter arrived last night.  So sorry you’re “low” – please don’t be.  I should be able to mention one thing (as a Mother myself) without your getting like that.  I’ve never criticized YOU as a Mother and I’m not now – you’re wonderful!!  It’s only that I don’t want a lot of advice on the children – no more, no less.  I have to rely on my own judgment in bringing up the children.

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+THE CONCLUSION OF THIS CHAPTER — The turquoise coat – Part three: Darker than night (dark side, book 2, chapter 35)

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35.  The turquoise coat – Part three:  Darker than night

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Commentary

April 18, 2013.  This is the 62nd time in my life I have lived through a date of the 18th of April.  I am surrounded by the blooming beauty of the many roses and other perennials in my high desert Arizona garden as the morning light pushes away the shadows left by the last nightfall.  Although I sit outside writing wearing my knitted winter hat and long black down coat I know by the time night shadows are gone I will be warmed again by that magnificent orb we call the sun.

I think about many things including the dreams I had last night about two of my brothers and the bush of pink roses whose blush has never been matched by anything I have seen in my waking life.  I think about the many disadvantages I have because I was given so few opportunities as a child to learn to be a social being among others of my species.  Flowers in my garden take care of themselves as long as I make sure their roots don’t dry out, as long as I trim off old growth and shape them when needed.

People, on the other hand, seem to need perpetual care and mostly I don’t understand what they are asking for.  I think of a chapter I read several years ago, Responding to need in intimate relationships: Normative processes and individual differences, whose lead author was Nancy Collins (Department of Psychology, University of California in Santa Barbara).  (See note below.)  I found information about human relationships in this writing that I needed to know. 

Because we are members of a social species we have built within our body a sophisticated collection of interrelated physiological systems that are all geared toward modulating our attachment to life that includes other people.  Of course, as the Teicher article I mentioned in my previous chapter makes clear, abuse and early relationship trauma changes how our physiology develops so that these systems then operate differently from ordinary.

An ordinarily-built attachment system is designed to turn itself off and on.  Those of us with early relationship trauma have built into our body what can be simply termed an insecure attachment disorder.  One of the consequences of having been built this way is that our on/off switch becomes essentially broken.

In Collin’s description our body also grows within it an interactive caregiving system that is also based upon physiological abilities in our body that come into play ONNLY when the operation of our own attachment system is turned off.  People whose physiological development was changed through chronic exposure to early relationship trauma and deprivations can have an attachment system that never turns itself off.  Those people therefore experience detriments in their ability to genuinely and appropriately “give care” to others.

How all of these systems work together to balance our ability to have our own needs met “good enough” so that our attachment system CAN and periodically DOES turn itself off so our capacities to caregive to someone else is very complex.  Understanding what these systems are supposed to accomplish is part of what we need to know before we can accurately figure out how to make positive changes.  As long as we blindly allow ourselves to follow along the attachment-caregiver routes our physiology dictates for us we lack the capacity to consciously modulate how we are interacting in our relationships.

People who were given the opportunity to grow the best possible body-brain in a resource-adequate predominately safe and secure early attachment relationship environment can trust that the operation of these two main systems is working “good enough” to give them opportunity to both take and give in their relationships in a balanced and healthy way.  Those of us raised in early environments scarce with resources and deprived of safe and secure attachments will spend most of our lives struggling in ways that safe and securely attached people never will.

For us the shadows of nightfall are never fully chased away by a new day’s sunshine.  I could even say that we are walking stress response systems that never had a chance to build the physiological ability to experience the counterbalance state of peaceful calm into our body.  We can easily be in a chronic state of unmet need which means our attachment system cannot turn itself off.

I would suggest that for any “psychological” or “psychiatric” or even sociological approach to be effective (or even rational) it must set its beginning point of thought at the beginning point of human life.  Recent advances in technology now take the guesswork out of what truly makes us the same and what makes us different in terms of how our physiology is forced to accommodate itself to a life of woe versus a life of ease.  The essential changes that happen through adaptation to stressful trauma during the first 33 months of life (conception to age two) determine the trajectory of any individual who experiences them.  NOBODY, for example, can be spared degrees of debilitating change to their physiological development during those first 33 months of life if chronic stress-related biochemical reaches toxic levels in their body-brain.  On the other hand, being spared the flooding of these toxic hormones would benefit anyone.

Taken to extremes it is specifically the difference between the levels of toxic stress (distress) that infants are exposed to through the presence or absence of trauma in their earliest attachment relationships with their caregivers that creates the physiological body-brain that is designed for a lifetime of either plenty or of scarcity.  Degrees of change directly affect all social-emotional interactions a person has with self and with others for the rest of their lives.  The operation of and the balance between their attachment need and their caregiver systems will be impacted.

Rather than getting lost in an abyss of confusion about what I am attempting to describe I will ground my writing in the life experience of my mother whose attachment system had been formed in an early environment of such stressful trauma that only in the strangest ways in the rarest of circumstances could it ever be turned off for even the briefest periods of time.  Mother, as I study what patterns I can see of her life, more than ran on empty.  She ran on a perpetual vacuum that meant not only could she not caregive, but she sucked the life out of anyone she was around if they could not stop her from doing so.  Certainly Mildred’s dependent children had no capacity to protect themselves from her appetites of need except as they were able to preserve the inner integrity of their own mind.

I doubt there is any greater potential for child abuse than that which exists in a mother who is left alone with her children to suck their experience of childhood out of them by creating such an environment of continual trauma that any safe and secure attachments are prevented from forming.

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Life is in me and life surrounds me.  Life itself is a “one thing.”  It is tenacious in all of its variety of expression in form.  Life has a voracious, insatiable appetite essentially for one thing:  More life.

As I sat perched alone that night on the metal kitchen stool I had what all life yearns for.  I was alive.  I was carried through that night by the same processes that carried me in their current all the way through my life with mother.  I had my life.  I had the greatest powers on my side in existence.  Life itself carried me forward in its grip and it did not let go of me.

That level of attachment cannot be questioned, but it was not an attachment to humans on any but the most basic level of my having received what I needed to sustain my body that my parents “took care” of me.  Mother fed off of me as her (psycho-projected) all-bad child because the cord of her connection to being alive was contorted and twisted.  In very real and profoundly disturbed ways Mother robbed enough from me to stay alive herself and to have enough to give to her other “adored” children to sustain them.

She left me alone in the darkness on that stool all night because she needed to.  How she turned my suffering into cheerfulness to give to her other children is a mystery of psychotic Borderline Personality Disorder that needs to be solved.  Mother’s broken attachment system required that her needs be met through reverse-caregiving me. 

That is exactly, in my thinking, what all adult abuse of children is meant to accomplish:  Take away from a child everything but its very life to get what’s needed to take care of the unmet needs of self.  Additionally in Mother’s case she also took from me enough to minimally take care of her other “adored” children.  What is left over when these patterns are in operation is the great suffering of one that achieves some form of benefit for others.

These are excessively primitive, evolutionarily altered patterns of survival.  It was never Mother’s direct intention to kill me.  I was, so to speak, the perpetual fountain of her “youth” (life).  Her madness needed me alive.  It did not need me happy.

I do not believe any other species has the ability to create and sustain such a distortion of natural systems’ operation.  Because of our innate complexity humans have more to give, more to get and more to spare than other creatures do.  Mental, psychological, emotional and even spiritual abuse happens to children because it can.  Children are alive in each of these areas.  They have within them mines of resources that a deranged needy abuser will simply go after – because they need to and because they can.  (Society lets them.)

It is only to the extent that an infant or child who is under such attack can sustain itself and continue to replenish its inner resources that it will survive.  Without access to protective factors nobody can remain alive.  Certainly not young infants and children.

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I hung onto life because life hung onto me.  I was not uprooted.  Yet seldom in my life have I ever been able to experience true rest.  Perhaps such survivors as I am were forced to stretch a tap root so deeply into ongoing life itself that our continued existence was guaranteed simply because we were able to do so.

But on this my 62nd experience of the 18th of April I consider a body of information provided by the Center for Disease Control (CDC) through their Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study research.  This research has shown clearly that the more of these ACEs a person experienced the more likely it will be that they will suffer from difficulties throughout their lifespan that those with a low ACE count will not.  Long-term (longitudinal) research that attempted to follow high ACE count survivors became difficult to pursue because these survivors die on the average of twenty years earlier than low ACE people do.  (Again, basic information on this research and its findings can be found through using “CDC ACE study pyramid” in an online search.)

As a high ACE count survivor who has already survived advanced aggressive breast cancer I do not take for granted that I will have dozens more of these dates to account for.   Between this April 18th and the next one I am committed to completing the writing of what parts of my story I feel have something useful to offer to others.  I realized this morning that hope itself can so fade into the background as a motivating force that it can seem to vanish altogether.  It is no longer hope that keeps me writing.  It is the extent of my caring.

I realize today that hope is connected to an attachment need that seeks fulfillment.  Caring comes from the quieting of attachment needs that allows for that system to turn itself off.  In all but the most pathological cases when the human attachment system has turned itself off the caregiving system is activated.  This happens when there is an excess of resources one can then release and give away.

The fact that we know there are over three million infants and children suffering abuse in our American nation each year, with millions more suffering under conditions of deprivation, tells me that on the whole there must not be enough Americans living here who have the ability to turn their own attachment system off so that they can begin to take care of these suffering millions of our nation’s offspring.  Perhaps the reason we have not yet stopped their suffering is because we are still too needy as adults to do so.  I have a small suggestion that might be of some assistance.

The more we educate ourselves about the lifelong benefits given to those whose bodies were formed in a safe and secure attachment relationship environment the more we will identify the riches those people have always had in comparison to others who experienced an early life under the opposite conditions.  With this recognition can come the realization that where it matters most there is probably not enough need present in a safe and securely attached person’s life to prevent them from NOT letting their attachment system turn itself off so that their caregiving system can turn itself all the way on.

A drizzle of caregiving done by only a few people will not accomplish what needs to be done to improve the life of the suffering millions of abused and deprived infants and children alive in our nation.  A recognition of the privilege that safe and securely attached people have always known might stimulate an increase in their personal experience of caring – and I mean as in GIVING a meaningful DAMN – about suffering caused to other people’s children.

If caring does not follow into actions of meaningful caregiving it is not really caring at all any more than an empty promise is a promise.

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Note:  Collins, N. L., Ford, M. B., Guichard, A. C., & Feeney, B. C. (2006). Responding to need in intimate relationships: Normative processes and individual differences. In M. Mikulincer & G. Goodman (Eds.), Dynamics of romantic love: Attachment, caregiving, and sex. New York: Guilford.  (pages 149-189)

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The first part of this chapter is in the previous post

+The turquoise coat – Part three: Darker than night (dark side, book 2, chapter 35)

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+The turquoise coat – Part three: Darker than night (dark side, book 2, chapter 35)

The Dark Side of Mildred’s Mountain series – Angel book 2 beginning with the POP!  Goes Alaska letters – chapter 35

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35.  The turquoise coat – Part three:  Darker than night

In Mildred’s November 13, 1957 letter she wrote of me 2½ months past my sixth birthday as she had forced me to wear such a coat as this was through long first grade days at school and on filthy bus rides in the mucky gray filth of a rainy Alaskan late fall as it moved into a still snowless winter:

Her beautiful turquoise jacket and white fur is filthy.  First day she ruined it, I washed it heartbroken (it’s a beauty and expensive) and made her wear old jacket for one week.  Then let her wear it again – same thing – and always blames other children!  I gave up.

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It was this day Mildred referred to when she took my coat away that she tore it off me as she attacked me when I walked in the log house door after school.  I was very small compared to her largeness and could not protect myself as she swung me around in circles by my arm so thin she could easily close her hand around it while she beat me with her wooden jelly making spoon in the kitchen.  As hard as she could.  With the spoon in her other hand.  The sounds of my wailing and of her screaming must have terrified my sisters (age 2 and 4) and my brother (age 7).

“Stand in the corner until your father gets home.  He’ll deal with you then!”  Shoved face into the wall beside the back door.  SLAM went the lid of the washing machine with my “washable” coat in it.  The water runs.

Standing still.  My forehead against the wall.  I did not mean to get my coat dirty.  I didn’t know how that happened.

Daddy came home from work.  He walked in the front door.  She screamed and shouted at him about what I had done.  “Take off your belt and give it to me.  I’ll show that girl of mine I mean business.”

I could not get away when she came at me.  Stomping fast across the kitchen floor.  She brought the metal kitchen stool with her and smashed it down on the laundry room floor in front of the drier screaming at me to pull my panties down.  “I’m going to give you want you deserve.  I will give you something you will remember.  Now bend over that stool right now!”

I wasn’t tall enough but I tried to hold onto it but I couldn’t.  Both of her hands holding onto the snaking arc of Daddy’s leather belt slashing against my back, my arms, my bottom, my legs.

Knocked down.  Dragged up.  Slammed against the edge of the doorway.  Both hands.  I tried to hold on. 

Into the kitchen.  Banged against the cold white edge of the stove.  Against the other side of the doorway and again into the back hall.  Beating.  Beating.

No scene such as this one was could ever be shown in any movie.  Never.  No thing should ever be done to a child that can’t be seen in the light of day by other people.  In view of strangers.

I crumpled.  She let go of me then.  All tired out from screaming and beating.  “Get up off the floor and sit on that stool.  Stay there and don’t get off of it.  I can’t stand the sight of you.  You’ll have no supper tonight!”

The stool must have been placed very near to the trapdoor John remembers in the back hall over the well.  I faced the drier but I could not reach out to touch it to keep from falling.  I had to do that part by myself.

So hard was the stool.  My bottom hurt very badly.  I dared not move.  Crying.  Breathing.  Gasping.  Crying.  As quietly as I possibly could so she wouldn’t hear me.

Mother’s voice changed.  She was cheerful as she made the sounds that went with making supper.  Pots and pans.  Metal cupboard doors open and close.  Dishes onto the table.  “Everyone come eat.  It’s time for supper.”

She didn’t mean me.

The food smelled so good.  I was so very hungry.  I heard them all talking together.  Eating their supper.  Then they were done.

Clearing off the table now.  She washes all the dishes.  She turns off the light as she walked away.  There is no light on where I am.  They are all in the living room.  They are all happy.  The television set is on.  Then it is off.  “Time to put your pajamas on.  Time for bed!”

The house grew quieter and quieter.  Daddy pulled open the couch into their bed in the living room.  The light went out everywhere.  No more distant murmuring.  Everyone asleep but me.

Not asleep.  So hungry.  So tired.  Dead dizzy tired.  In pain.  My stomach hurts, too.  I am getting colder.  I am weak and shaky.  Arms wrapped tight around my middle.  Feet hang down.  I dare not move.  I have to go to the bathroom.  I cannot.  I am scared.  I cannot move.

Alone in the darkness shivering.  I am a chill inside my skin.  Barely.  I rock myself forward and back.  Forward and back.

Coat.  In the washing machine.  She did not come to take it out.  She did not come get me.

I thought without thinking about everyone else eating supper in the dining room.  With their eating supper voices.  Sometimes they had laughed.   Rising.  Falling.  Happy voices eating smell-good supper.  Daddy’s smiling voice.  Mommy’s smiling voice.

Now they are all sleeping.  Sleeping.  All in their beds sleeping.  I am not sleeping.  I make no sound.  Tears.  Sliding down my cheeks.  Dripping.  Dripping down my neck.  Cold.

Long night.  Long silent night.  I am tired.  I am scared.  I am alone.  I am forgotten.

No lights anywhere.  Woods outside.  The refrigerator hums.  It stops.

So quiet.  So still.  So still.  Still.

There is nothing but me.  I am still waiting.

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+WHAT ABOUT THEM? INTRO TO CHAPTER 32 (dark side, book 2)

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32.  (under construction – intro only)

April 15, 2013.  On the Tuesday morning of September 11, 2001 Boston was brought into national attention because of the horror wrecked from the actions of those inside two jetliners that lifted off from Logan Airport.  Boston is in the news again today for two explosions that sounded like booming claps of thunder that came seconds apart at 2:50 P.M. near the finish line of the prestigious Boston Marathon.  According to the latest ABC news report at least three people were killed, one of them an eight-year-old boy.  Over 140 others were injured including children; at least ten of these people suffer from “amputated” limbs. 

Federal law enforcement officials confirmed that the blasts were caused by explosive devices.  As night falls authorities know nothing about “who was behind this act of terror,” or if this was a domestic or a foreign attack.  Horror and acts of terror shock.  They belong in the news, deserve and get attention, cause concern and outrage.  They stimulate compassion for the victims.  Everyone wants to know who is responsible and who will be held accountable.

Yet what about infants and children suffering from traumas behind the closed doors of the homes they live in?  Who cares about them?  Who notices?  Who identifies their attackers?  Who responds?  Who asks questions, rescues these little ones, treats their wounds, listens to their stories, keeps them safe and holds their attackers accountable?  Who speaks for these hidden silent fallen little ones? 

According to the most current statistics from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, 3.3 million children were abused in America in 2010.  These were REPORTED cases of abuse.  There is no reason to believe this is not a gross understatement.  Who cares about all of these terrorized little ones?  How do we define a crisis?

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At the start of this chapter before I write about what happened to me during the span of time Mildred’s letters cover here, I want to mention a blog called Crosstalk that one of my Stop the Storm blog’s commenters posted the link to last week in response to my posting of chapter 20 of this book, A durable, endurable child.  The title of the post I visited on Crosstalk, written 96 weeks before I arrived on the site to read it, is Mothers Who Dislike Their Children Are Disturbed, Not Normal.  (It can be found via an online search using the title as the search term if the article does not get deleted!)

The post is well worth a read for anyone concerned especially with a split-mind (all-good/all-bad) abusive Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) psychotic mother.  The author of this post who goes by the online moniker of LessThanZero on the Crosstalk blog wrote “… my mother stripped me of all my clothes in December in Buffalo, New York, and locked me out of the house, telling me to stand outside naked for the night if I wanted to run to my friend’s house without a coat on….” 

When I visited the site this morning there were many comments listed at the end of this post yet when I went back to look at them this evening they have all been erased!  In response to one of the commenters to her post LessThanZero added further information about the fact that she and her sister had both run to the friend’s house without their coats on.  While the author, the all-bad child, received horrendous abuse her all-good sister was coddled, given a warm bath and then wrapped in blankets by their abusive BPD split-mind mother who was, I believe, psychotic like my mother was or more so.

Another commenter to this post on Crosstalk wrote that when she was four her mother decided to teach her to swim.  The little girl didn’t learn well enough, quickly enough, so her (psychotic) BPD mother cast her out alone into the middle of a fast-flowing river.  I want to know how this child made it back to shore by herself so that she could stay alive – and no doubt suffer continued horrendous abuse by her mentally ill mother.

I have a lot of questions!  I can ask, “How did these children survive?”  At the same time I ask that question of myself even though the abuse I suffered did not match in horror that spoken of within the two accounts mentioned here.  I want to know the “crime report” stories that belong to such survivors.  I want to know the context, the bigger picture, details of who could have and did not step in to STOP this kind of insane abuse!  All I have to work with is what I can discover of my own story with my own psychotic BPD abusive mother.

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Please click here to read or to Leave a Comment »

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+”GIVE IT UP, LINDA! ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!” (lots of blog links)

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At first I thought I was going to post all of this as a comment which requires this format for links to be active.  Now that I have changed my mind and have moved all of this over here, I am leaving the “ugly” version of the active links — because I am too lazy to alter how this appears.  I have a whole bunch of vegetables crying in the fridge because they want to be all chopped up and cooked into soup.  (I am adding a few more links (not vegies) at the bottom in the old-fashioned format!)

I was trying to find past posts related to the topic of SHAME.  Well, I guess anything I have ever written about severe infant-child abuse and trauma is about shame.  So, while these posts might not be as specific as they COULD be, they are as specific a collection as will be the vegetables in my eventual pot of soup!

Posts on this blog related to what WE need to know about shame — and have a hard time finding:

+THOUGHTS ON THE TRIGGER POINT OF SHAME
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/2009/12/07/thoughts-on-the-trigger-point-of-shame/

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+EARLY ORIGIN OF OUR ONGOING EXPERIENCE OF SHAME AND FORGIVENESS
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/2009/05/23/early-origin-of-our-ongoing-experience-of-shame-and-forgiveness/

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+SEIGEL ON SHAME
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/emotions/the-shame-spectrum/seigel-on-shame/

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**Shame
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/?s=shame

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++ DR. SCHORE ON SHAME
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/emotions/dr-allan-schore-on-emotional-regulation-notes/dr-schore-on-shame/

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*The Shame Spectrum
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/emotions/the-shame-spectrum/

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+WHEN PEOPLE TRY TO SHUT US UP
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/2012/12/19/when-people-try-to-shut-us-up/

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+POST FOR CHILD ABUSE SURVIVORS: WHAT CAN WE KNOW FROM AN INNER ‘CRINGE’?
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/2012/03/09/post-for-child-abuse-survivors-what-can-we-know-from-an-inner-cringe/

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+HOP! HOP! THE BLOG FROG’S PICK OF PAST POSTS
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/2011/10/16/hop-hop-the-blog-frogs-pick-of-past-posts/

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+THE ESSENCE OF JOY IN THE ABSENCE OF PAIN AND SORROW
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/2011/07/28/the-essence-of-joy-in-the-absence-of-pain-and-sorrow/

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+HEALING FROM ABUSE: FINDING MY OWN GOODNESS AND STICK TO THAT
at

https://stopthestorm.wordpress.com/2011/06/20/healing-from-abuse-finding-my-own-goodness-and-stick-to-that/

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+A COLLECTION OF LINKS ON BODY-BRAIN CHANGES CAUSED BY EARLY INFANT-CHILD ABUSE

+PITY HURTS, COMPASSION HEALS: KNOWING THE DIFFERENCE

+AS HARD AS OUR ABUSER(S) TRIED, THEY DID NOT HAVE THE POWER TO TOUCH US!

+TO BE OR NOT TO BE — HUMAN OR OBJECT: EARLY ATTACHMENT PATTERNS DECIDE AS THEY BUILD OUR ANS

+DISSOCIATION AS AN ALLERGIC REACTION TO ABUSE

+RESLIENCY FACTORS AND THE ‘AT LEAST….’ GAME

+DISSOCIATION: THE SURVIVOR’S CURSE?

+SEVERE EARLY ABUSE SURVIVORS: LEARNING TO READ, IT’S MORE THAN YOU THINK

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Please click here to read or to Leave a Comment »

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