+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I am in a battle with myself over whether or not there is any value to myself or to anyone else in my reading and transcribing my quarter of a century old journals. Part of me wants to burn them all. I think about how to contain the fire I could make of them so no smoldering ashes would escape and float away to light some part of this dry high desert landscape around me on fire.
Maybe I could tear them all into tiny pieces and soak them in water and then cook them into papier mache mash and make something beautiful out of them. Maybe I could tear them up and dig them into the damp earth of my composting pile where I know the hungering masses of worms and slugs there would chew them up gladly and digest them into soil.
Maybe I could box them all up and take them camping when my sister comes next month to visit. We could burn them more safely in the contained campground fire pit, have a little releasing ceremony and let all the words that record what all the versions of Linda talked about for 25 years vanish as if they had never been.
++++
What is the value of this journaling process that so many therapists (and others) seem so fond of recommending? We could just as well write our words on an area of flat dirt and then sweep them away when we are finished. We could just as well write them with chalk on slate or with grease pencil on a mirror or a piece of glass, and erase them as soon as they no longer hold any meaning to us.
Who are we telling the intimate details of our lives to as we sit alone and tarry over our silent words so studiously copied as if we are creating lessons for ourselves out of nothing but the contents of our minds?
Does journaling help us tolerate our hard times, I would say ‘better’, but I really mean ‘tolerate them at all’?
Or does the writing simply contain the passage of time as we transition through all the changes that happen to us along the way of our lifetime, both outside of us and within?
Does journaling help us to think more clearly? Do we create a dialog with our self because we are so alone there is no other person alive we can trust enough to pass ourselves on to?
What is it about writing the words our souls tell us in hidden places between two covers of a journal that helps us or heals us? And in today’s world where keyboards replace ink or lead, our words simply join some cyber network, taking their place in simultaneous land where they enter themselves into an invisible cue, waiting for whom to go back and read them?
++++
Or do those of us who write do so simply because we are writers? Could we find a writing gene somewhere in our constitution if we knew where to look for it? Do we write because we care about certain things in a particular way that non-writers can’t even imagine?
++++
That would be all fine and worthy if I could SEE what matters about the process of journaling for me in the end. What I am finding instead is that the same concerns I wrote about 25 years ago are really right here inside of me today if I let them be. Questions. I asked thousands of questions on those pages that I had no answers for.
I recorded my inner conflicts and turmoil and suffering. I recorded how it felt to be so lost from myself and others that I could only ask the questions themselves and could never find any answers, no matter how committed I was to finding them. The answers were intangible. They were invisible.
++++
My journals portray my journey, each word on a line in the order I could see them. Writing was my way of trying to organize and orient myself in my body in my life.
Time has moved forward. My children grew up, left home intact, and have orchestrated their own lives free from trauma. Because I was their mother, far from perfect but ‘good enough’, their journey will always remain connected to mine but not central.
In the meantime my journals reveal all the turbulence, all the missteps and attempts I have made to catch up to a Linda who was living a life that never has been coherent or integrated or cohesive or well planned. I know now that I was always trying to make sense of myself in my life even though I was missing all the most important pieces.
I mistakenly thought I could create an ordinary life without knowing the extreme, long term abuse I suffered from birth and for the 18 years of my childhood had changed the way my body-brain developed, and had therefore changed me.
Not only was the development of my right and left brain hemispheres changed, and the corpus callosum that connects them and transmits information between the two changed, but also the development of my higher level thinking cortex part of my brain was changed, as well.
I have avoided writing about the development of my ‘executive cortex’. When I am ready to do so I will have to consider how child abuse deprived me of an ‘ordinary’ ability to process information about the future and affected all my choice and decision making abilities.
Normal, ordinary brains that form without a history of severe abuse and trauma continue to grow all the way through the teen and early adult years. A normal, ordinary cortex does not finish its development until somewhere between ages 25 and 30. A severely abused and traumatized child’s cortex atrophies early and never finishes its development to become normal and ordinary.
++++
Nobody was there to stop me just as I crossed the threshold out of my parents’ home and into my own life when I was 18 to tell me that what I had just endured of a childhood was hell, wrong, and extremely hurtful to me. Nobody explained to me that the trauma I had suffered from birth had so changed the way I had to grow and develop so I could survive it that it meant I now have a different brain that works fine in terrible, toxic, malevolent, threatening, dangerous and self-obliterating conditions but was not designed like an ordinary brain to work well in an ordinary, benevolent world.
Maybe nobody told me this in 1969 when I left home because nobody knew it. Certainly if all the infant and child development experts didn’t know these basic facts, if the human brain development neuroscientists and physiologists didn’t know, I need not blame myself for not knowing this critical information about my chances for achieving any quality of well-being in an ‘ordinary’ life, either.
++++
So what exists in the last 25 years of my journals in their piles on the shelves beside my computer desk is a simple chronicling of one severe child abuse survivor’s disorganized, disoriented incoherent life story about how the changes my body and brain had to make so that I could survive the hell of my childhood could not possibly have prepared me to live any kind of an ordinary life.
++++
I look up above me right now as I sit here outside my door writing in the high desert gentle sunlight of this early November 2009 morning and watch the wispy tendrils of clouds drifting, white against the distant blue sky, and I know that’s the same sky that caps the lives of everyone living below it. At the same time I know there are two kinds of people on this planet, plain and simple, no matter where they plant their feet on this grand planet earth.
There are those whose early caregivers loved them and cared for them appropriately when they were an infant-child the way human evolution has dictated in order for an ordinary-functioning brain to grow and develop. They provided safe and secure attachment for their offspring.
And then there are the rest of us who were not loved, who were treated malevolently by our early caregivers. The traumatizing circumstances of our early environments demanded of our growing early body-brain that we change and adapt or we die.
There are degrees of change just as there are degrees of trauma, but because I know so clearly what the circumstances of my infancy and childhood were as a result of my mother’s psychotic break when I was born and because of her severe mental illness, I no longer have to ask the thousands of questions I used to ask in my journals without being able to find any answers.
There remains only one single answer that matters to me now. It’s the same answer for every one of those questions I have been asking all of my adult life as I tried to make myself into a ‘better’ and a different more ordinary person who could then live a more ordinary life of ordinary well-being.
The reason I cannot become an ‘ordinary’ person is because I have an ‘extra-ordinary’ brain that had to grow, develop and form under the ‘extra-ordinary’ circumstances of severe trauma and abuse that was my infant-child environment. My trauma-changed-body and brain does not receive ‘ordinary’ information from the environment in ‘ordinary’ ways. It does not process information in ‘ordinary’ ways, either. There is very little about severe-abuse-and-trauma-survivor Linda that is ‘ordinary’ or can EVER be ‘ordinary’. Just because I look ordinary on the outside tells me nothing about how I am different on the inside.
If I continue to ignore what I now know about being a changed-by-severe early abuse and trauma person, I will condemn myself to the continued struggle of asking questions forever that I will never find the answers for.
++++
I realize now that all my journal writings up until this point in time have created a chronicle of my journey through adulthood with a changed body and brain, and what this has been like for me. Continued research is now chronicling the life long changes severe abuse creates for its survivors on a much larger scale. The outcomes appear extremely bleak and grim for survivors. We have to put the facts together and realize that the very foundation in our body and brain has been changed, and these changes give us a changed life outcome.
It is not possible for us to escape the consequences of what was done to us until we begin to understand how we changed and how those changes continue to affect EVERYTHING about us and our lives.
++++
For those of us who journal, we will see in our own words how exploring ourselves in our life will change as we begin to include this vital information in our thinking. Just because everyone else has remained ignorant of the changed body and brain because of early trauma and abuse survival information, does not mean we have to remain ignorant of the facts ourselves. We owe it to ourselves not to continue archaic patterns of thinking about ourselves in the world.
In fact, those of us who experience this ‘extra-ordinary’ reality are the REAL experts. We know, down to our last cell in our body, what being changed by child abuse and trauma did to us. We know our truth. Now we have to empower ourselves to know what we have known all along.
Together we can define what living in a trauma-changed body is like. On this planet earth, under this arching blue sky, we have to begin to understand that what humanity’s right arm might know about being ‘ordinary’ is balanced by what humanity’s left arm knows about not ever being allowed to both be ‘ordinary’ and remain alive. We can no longer afford to let ‘ordinary’ condemn us to a lifetime of suffering because of who we are – different from ordinary.
We can join together to learn how to end the suffering of all of us. A reality of privilege can no longer remain the standard we measure survival against. If what happened to us had happened to ‘them’, they would have been changed just as we were or they would have died. That is the reality of being human in an imperfect world. What happens – and happened – to infants and children that causes these changes must become the primary concern for all of us.
Otherwise we will continue to ask all the wrong questions for which there are no answers. We need to ask the right question, “How does severe early trauma and abuse change developing humans into ‘extra-ordinary’ beings, and how do those changes affect them for the rest of their lives?” This IS a question we can find the answer to when we are willing to consider the truth – both individually and as a species.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
PS. What will I do with my old journals? I still do not know.
++++++++++++