+CHAPTER ONE, BOOK 2 OF “THE DARK SIDE OF MILDRED’S MOUNTAIN” (‘Angel’)

The Dark Side of Mildred’s Mountain series – Angel book 2 beginning with the POP!  Goes Alaska letters – chapter 1

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1.  Whole Rainbow

While this is the tenth book of the unfolding Lloyd family saga, it is the first one in which I face myself in the story of my own childhood.  As I begin this book I find myself wishing I was about to tell somebody else’s story.  There would be no personal risk or emotional investment then.  No howling raging banshee Mother to lie in wait to attack me.  I would not struggle to both carry defenses against and to remain open to whatever I might discover next.

All of my writing in books preceding this one has been in reaction to my mother Mildred’s descriptions of herself in her life.  That she was unable to separate herself from me, her first born daughter, the second of her six children, has created for me the unique challenge of having to separate overlapping edges of our shared story to find my own.  I was the devil’s child figment of Mother’s imagination.  I was not a child in my own right in her mind.

Because Mother never let go of me as the all-bad projection of her I lived as an exile in my own life.  Any time I was not under direct attack from her I was a refugee as an outcast from our family.  While all of Mildred’s children were her possessions being no more than toy dolls who were trapped as prisoners in her Borderline Personality Disorder mind, I served the master of her psychosis that had removed the threat of the devil coming to get her from Mildred’s life until I left home a month after my 18th birthday.

As I have written in Story Without Words it was sometime during her difficult birthing of breech-baby me that Mother’s psychotic break happened as it caused her to believe that the devil had sent me to kill her.  At this time an irrevocable split was created in her mind that divided her reality into two worlds.  She could live in her “upper” all-good world because I existed as the replacement for her all-bad self in her “lower” world of hell.

I found only one faint glimpse of the pervasive underlying light-dark split in Mother’s mind within her writings.  On March 29, 1960, while on our mountain homestead, Mildred wrote of her recent dream:

“The whole family was out walking and suddenly we looked up to see a dark rainbow appear – then it got bright and behind it a skyline appeared outlining massive dormed buildings such as I’ve never seen and skyscraper buildings – then it all disappeared and a big wind came.

We realized it was a hurricane.  We could hardly stand up against the wind. We saw big apartment buildings on the sides of the streets but the entrances faced another street and we were on the wrong side.  The wind grew stronger – finally a door appeared and we went in the building and the person asked us what was wrong?  We told her of the great wind but as we pointed outside – all was silent and the wind was gone … and I awoke.”

The upward brilliant arch of a rainbow is matched by its invisible arc that completes its circle below ground.  If Mildred could have equally buried me underground she would have.  She could not do that because she needed me to be the living all-bad “invisible” counterpart of her all-good “visible” self.  Her ongoing life demanded this of me.  Yet it was only my body that Mildred could allow to live.  No part of me that was a person separate from her version of who her psychosis demanded me to be could exist.

There is nothing about my child abuse story that is not about Mother’s Borderline Personality Disorder psychosis.  At the same time, however, I do have another story of myself in my childhood to tell.  I remained alive as a person separate from Mother’s pervasive, invasive psychosis about me.  No matter what she ever thought, felt, or said about me, nothing she ever did to me could change the fact that I experienced the 18 years of my childhood – my way.

No other alternative was ever given to me.  Nobody ever helped me once we moved to Alaska and left my grandmother behind in Los Angeles.  If I had ever taken any route other than the one I did through those years I would have either died or lost my own mind as Mother had lost hers.  Yet my capacity to endure and withstand suffering seems even to me to be beyond comprehension.

There is evidently a force of life itself that both pushes and pulls a person through the unendurable at the same time it provides protection against destruction.  Life itself sustains life itself.  Not only did I live to tell my story – I will tell it now.  My task does not appear so insurmountable to me if I think about finding only one word at a time with which to tell it.  Even so the next word that comes to mind is this one:  Scary.

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+(ROUGH) INTRO FOR BOOK 2 OF “THE DARK SIDE OF MILDRED’S MOUNTAIN” (‘Angel’)

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

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INTRODUCTION

August 1957.  I was a month away from my 6th birthday when I first met the forest surrounding the log house in Eagle River, Alaska.  It was deep with lacey green ferns taller than I was.  Fronds, light as air, swayed over my head brushing my hair, my cheeks.  Fragile.  So soft, the moist ground under layers of aging fallen leaves.  I made no sound walking slowly around the yard among white papered trees with dark little spots and curling frail torn bark edges.  Blue sky and shadow.  Immediately I was a part of this land.

Quiet.  No pavement.  No traffic.  We had left Los Angeles behind.

Splashing over stones and rotting branches, the creek down below at the bottom of the bank.  Together our family walked the black earth gentle path down there.  Climbing on fallen trees.  Searching for berries round and red.   Sour highbush cranberries.  All of them the same.  Shiny.  Bunches easy to pick without stickers.  Handfuls plucked with small fingertips, tumbling into my pail.

I would part with all I own to return there to that land if I could.  Just to walk where I did when I was a child.  To see and smell what I did then.  To have my heart open again to all I knew.  To find pussy willows soft and gray peeking out of their red winter wrappings.  Fuzzy.  Hopes of coming spring.

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My oldest brother John left a week ago after his early March 2013 week’s visit with me.  I had hoped that because of the current stage of my writings he and I could talk about our childhood.  John so detests Mother that he refers to her as “the one who shall not be named” and has no desire to think or talk about his childhood.  He has since told me that he is willing to help me verify the reality of our shared childhood in hell if I send him very specific questions that he can answer on paper over time. 

I hate to further trouble him with my “project” about the “miserable childhood that was had by all.”  I took the following notes during the very short discussion we had while we were together as I asked him if he remembered anything about the log house.  John had turned seven six weeks before we arrived in Alaska:

I have forgotten and repressed my childhood so deep that I really don’t even like to think about it.  I have very few memories at all. 

The log house was on this little bluff right over the creek.  I used to fish for trout in the little creek, threw a lot back in that probably didn’t make it.  Sometimes I used cranberries instead of salmon eggs.  I’m sure the fish knew the difference. 

There was a well there in the laundry room off of the kitchen.  In the floor, opened up a trap door with two hinges and there was a dark hole down there – a hand dug well.  I’m sure right next to the creek it was water that filtered over from the creek.  Hope it wasn’t the well we used, downstream from Vanover’s hog farm – all their dead hogs.  They left them lying around.”

I have no conscious memory of the hole in the floor.  I wish all six of us Lloyd children were free to share with one another our childhood memories good or bad.  I crave the healing of our story as if a kind of redemption of the purity of our young innocence could be pulled out from the horrors we experienced, as if we can free ourselves from the rubble trauma heaped upon our lives. 

Although I remember abuse, one of my prime motivations for writing my story is to locate my own experience of myself as a beautiful child living my life separate from Mother’s madness and the abuse I suffered from her.  Traumatized children not only have great parts of their childhood stolen from them during ongoing trauma, but also often cannot freely return to their own memories of the goodness that was in us and in our own experience of our early life.  If we are barred from remembering our own goodness as children we suffer from a perpetual theft of what is truly ours – and not our abusers’.

It was very difficult for me to watch my brother struggle with painful memories of his childhood.  I know his agony.  Yet his description of trout fishing in Meadow Creek by the log house is exactly the kind of wonderful memory that belongs to him.  If we can’t return in memory to the joy and loves of our childhood because the trauma is still too overwhelming we are left only with the awareness of hardships we lived through without the grace of goodness present in our childhoods.

I asked my brother one more question, and that was the end of our conversation: 

How do you feel about Mildred?

“Oh, God.  I’ve already reached a point where my brain has started to freeze up.  I couldn’t stand her.  She was probably the most dislikable person I have ever known.” 

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Although Mother’s writings run “unmolested” with minimum commentary from me in the seven books of the Mildred’s Mountain series, I now set myself free to describe what I know of her mental illness and of its impact on me and my siblings.  Because Mother’s Borderline Personality Disorder and its abusive psychosis continued to powerfully shape me throughout my childhood in Alaska until I left home at 18, I will insert my commentary about how I see patterns of her sickness appearing in her letters in this second book of The Dark Side of Mildred’s Mountain series.  I emphasize parts of her letters using bold type, delete sections of her writings that are irrelevant to me and paraphrase her words where they provide important details related to my story.

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+ADULT REACTIVE ATTACHMENT DISORDER: LIVING WITH IT

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It has been a week now since my brother left from his visit here.  My reactivity is finally starting to calm and settle down.  But what a ride and what a lot of work (and agony) it has taken to get to this point.  It feels like such a terrible waste of time, such a waste of my life when I could be doing OTHER living, to so often be triggered into the disruptions of a “traumastate” from events that have no present-day threat or trauma in them whatsoever.  I HATE this!

But this Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) is real.  It is how my body was made and I was never offered an alternative.  Nor do I have one now.

I have various descriptive images popping into my mind this morning about what being triggered feels like to me:  Being a balloon filled with air — end untied — let loose I zip zoom spin twist and inevitably fall.  Being thrown upon the back of a powerful bucking horse for the duration of the ride.  Having a burn that even a few drops of water will hurt.  Experiencing a unique kind of limbic right brain kindling that brings “emotional seizures.”  Stepping over a threshold to find a floor that WAS there — GONE — and falling.  Walking a shaking high tightrope wire in a hurricane with no safety net.  Busy at a job and the ladder falls out from under.

Yet all the time I am aware that this is happening to me and I cannot easily stop it.  (I believe my mother’s brain changed with her mental illness to keep her from being able to be aware of her own “traumastates.”)

I am called to locate every piece of information I have ever found, every tool, to work as hard as I can to settle myself down, to sooth and ground myself, searching for a glimmer of calm and following that feeling in any way that I can.

But these reactive states steal away the time of my own life that SHOULD be going on instead.

Repeated horrific early traumas and chronic threat and terror built me this way.  As small and simple as my life is (much to my regret), I cannot avoid every trigger.  How can I live that carefully and have any overall quality of life or well-being?

When the “traumastate” is triggered I am in a state of emergency.  All my priorities have to shift and give way to just one:  Make this reactivity STOP!

Was there any other word I needed to scream for the first 18 years of my life other than — STOP?

Just as my own experience of myself in my ongoing life was repeatedly interrupted by trauma in my childhood, my ongoing self-life continues to be interrupted every time I am triggered now.  The sound of a door slamming, the shrill yap or loud bark of a neighbor’s dog, even the visit of my brother — nearly ANY disruption can create an anxious reaction that can so easily take off on a reactive diversionary track that shakes and spins me away from myself in my ongoing life.

How to get back to my SELF?  I will never stop learning how to do this because there is too much “trouble” built into me.  Living this way is a fulltime job — and no matter what good sports we survivors are, the truth is that what happened to us was a tragedy that causes a continuing tragedy for us and for those who love us for our entire lives.

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+BREAK THROUGHS AND BREAK DOWNS

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My oldest daughter (age 42) shared her recent insight with me the other day:  Break throughs are so closely connected to break downs that it can be difficult to tell which one is happening at any given time.  The trick is to clarify the margin of confusion between the two so that the break downs can be eliminated.

I know what she means. 

After my last post I took a hard look at my fear.  I reminded myself that insights are only useful if I use them.  As I consider how I see anger, fear and sadness as each of them can be activated in response to a stress response, I think about how my fear is telling me that I need to find other ways to change my life other than dumping myself into chaos.

I know how to survive through chaos and trauma.  What I have the hardest time learning is how to live peacefully, calmly and wisely.

Either-or thinking and reacting cannot help but stimulate trauma drama.  There must be other options to solving the problems my recent posts have discussed.  I can develop other tactics for living other than trauma-based survival ones.  I can learn how to use these tactics.

Is there a way I can travel up north, spend time with my grandsons which will free up time for my daughter to edit the books waiting to be published?  Why tear my life to shreds to chase up north being nearly financially destitute if we are this close to possibly generating adequate income from the books to end those kinds of traumas?

That seems like a possible solution.  THEN we could see what happens next.

WHEW!

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+INNER QUAKING: MY LIFE FEELS SO MUCH BIGGER THAN I AM RIGHT NOW

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I can hear what I call a patient, measured very thoughtful approach in the responses readers post in their comments to this blog.  Patient and measured.

An image comes to mind from several years ago when I was visiting a friend who lives in northern Minnesota.  One day we meant to have the leisurely enjoyment of paddling kayaks down a meandering shallow river among sprawling forest and shallow soggy grasslands.  While I did not consider our day fun I do look back at myself that day and know that my frustrations were funny.

My guess is that a full third of the beavers in that region knew I was coming.  They got together and made plans for my arrival.  Then they went to work with that special determination, focus and energy for which beavers are famous. 

Perhaps I exaggerate when I say there were 50 beaver dams stretching across that river, all especially constructed to force me to stop at each one in utter ill-humor.  Not one of them could be smoothly glided over or around.  Oh, no!  No beaver fun in that!

Reaching each dam I had to grab onto some broken or skillfully chomped stick of wood poke into (handily) the mass of logs and branches my foes had left behind them so I could extricate myself from my floating coffin.  Into the water up to my waist I stepped as I awkwardly scrambled over and over again over dams dragging my vessel with me.  Reaching the other side yet again I found a way to get my tipsy-turvy craft balanced again as I inserted myself back into my wayward little boat.

Off I glided peacefully (finally) down the next stretch of river, startling snapping turtles off their sunlit perches into the water among water lilies.  By the time I caught up with my friend hours later I was an irritated hissing whining sputtering fool!  My assessment, as I clearly communicated it to my friend, was that while kayaking that river might be some people’s idea of fun it sure wasn’t mine.

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This memory leads me directly to another one.  Several years earlier when I lived in that area myself I had driven my old car along an abandoned logging road into a forest one gloriously warm and sunny spring day.  I reached a point where the high dirt of the old trail had once been passable.  Not any more.  Beavers had built a dam to flood the low land of the forest and I could drive no more.

Now HERE was an opportunity for play!  Out of the car.  Off with my shoes.  Up rolled my jeans.  Into the water I stepped as I went to work.  I spent half of the afternoon dismantling that dam, yanking and twisting logs and branches out of their places one by one until still water on the high side let loose to race off in a gurgling hurry to who knew where.

Then I had the bright idea that what a furry beaver could do I, as a human being, should be able to do better.  I spent the remainder of the day trying to put the dam back together again.

Yeah.  Right.

As the tall trees began to take the light of the day away around me I gave up having made not one log stick back into the foundation of that dam.  I left the forest feeling a great deal humbler with a much higher respect for the wizardry of beavers.  Of course this appreciation did not accompany me on my kayaking adventure several years later.

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I think about the upcoming move I will make sometime in the not very distant future (exact time of departure as yet undesignated).  Down the stream of my life I have been gliding until last Sunday I rounded a curve to find — change.  Damn change.  Big change.  Demanding change.  A foreshadowed future ahead I cannot begin to name with much certainty at all.  There are too many unforseen variables to contemplate.

I gaze around my desert garden I have worked so hard to build — alone.  I can see around me a warm, sun-filled world surrounded by the morning shadowed sculptures in the distance of silent brown stone mountains.  I turn to see the Mexican-American border fence running along the back edge of my yard.

What future awaits the plants in this garden when I turn my back on them and drive away that final time?  Each stone I have carefully placed around these flower beds lining my adobe walkways, all washed clean by our frequent winter rains — will another human being appear to notice, appreciate, tend and care about this small place on earth?

Which native plants will thrive here on their own no matter what because they are designed that way?

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I cannot build a beaver dam.  I am not a beaver.  I cannot sink the newest tips of my roots deep into this amended desert soil.  I am not a plant.  I am a two-legged wander pacing the distance and time in my mind between what I see around me at this Mexican border as I notice how I also feel about my loved ones who live so near the Canadian border so far north from here.

What life is this I lead that yet again I remember that in spite of the 13+ years I have felt comfortably and gratefully settled here I will soon wander again?  I choose to trade away my love tied to my southern friends and the natural world here for a life that will soon include shared love between people who are not free to join me here.

I will clamor over and around my own obstacles.  If I can’t do that I will tear them down.  If I had the money I would find a way to keep this home while I went north to make yet another one.  (I have no respect for the popular, often-mouthed idea that “money can’t buy you happiness.”)

I am one soul breathing among billions.  Even if it doesn’t seem real in present moments, in retrospect all any of us do is measure our lives as we patiently move forward in time.  Once I leave this area I have walked upon with welcome growing familiarity over these years of my life I will carry with me only what is uniquely mine in memory.

What will that be?

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I would prefer to blink my eyes as I clicked the heels of mythological ruby slippers so that I could skip this entire “leaving” process entirely.  Now here!  Now there!  Would suit me perfectly.  I have moved too many times in my life to enjoy ANYTHING about the process. 

Nobody has made this decision for me.  My choice is entirely based on love for my daughters and grandsons and my desire to share my life with them as they share their life with me.  Yet I make this “safe and secure attachment” decision being completely familiar with the horrors of the Siberian climate I am returning to.  Nothing but the deepest love and my longing for its ongoing expression in my and my loved ones’ life could motivate me to make this move.  I am not sure that any previous move in my life had to rely on my faith in the essential goodness of life as this one will.

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A clear memory just returned to me of one of the moments of purest joy in my life.  On the autumnal equinox in September 1974 I stood alone with my feet apart in a wide open northern field at sunset.  My arms reached straight out, palms down, as I faced due south.  I looked to the east where a rising full moon rested at my left fingertips.  I looked to the west where the blazing orb of the setting sun rested at my right fingertips.

I am probably standing in that state of perfect balance right now.  I just don’t feel that way.  I hope my current trepidation will be replaced with assurance.  I deeply feel confusion right now.  This move has nothing to do with left brain logic.  How scary is THAT?

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+ADULT REACTIVE ATTACHMENT DISORDER AND CHOICES OF THE SOUL

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Life can initiate huge changes in people’s lives without giving as much warning as the earth gets before a lightning bolt slams into it bringing life-sustaining nitrogen to the soil.  While it would be traumatic for a human to be so bolted, the earth never winces.  I have had the equivalent of a lightning bolt hit me in my life and I never saw it coming.

Or did I?

I find myself increasingly using the term Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) to describe HOW I am in my body in the world.  Because so few “professionals” even recognize this disorder passing through childhood and into and through adulthood for survivors of severe early abuse, neglect and trauma I find myself tempted to throw “insecure” into the mix making this term as it applies to me into Reactive Insecure Attachment Disorder or RIAD.  But for my purposes today I will stick simply to RAD.

I did not anticipate that when my older brother came to visit me on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 and left on Tuesday, March 5th that my life would blow up in my face.  Now I know all the signs and clues were in place within me for this internal storm I am now in the midst of to hit me in exactly the way that they did.  Someone more astute than I have been would have predicted that what did happen would have happened. 

If I didn’t suffer from RAD nothing about me in my life would be as things are.  That other ME would have read the tea leaves in the cup of personal significance and meaning and would have been proactively prepared rather than reactively triggered by recent events as they have tumbled over me.  But, no.  Here I am in the center of my own reactive storm whose resolution is going to tax every possible inner and outer resource available to me — and then a whole lot more.

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I first arrived in Fargo, North Dakota in December 1971 to visit a friend who had returned home.  I had met her in San Diego in September 1970 right after my 19th birthday.  It would take several riotous, complicated chapters of a book yet to be written to describe all I had lived through between those two dates I just mentioned.  Oh, what a troubled life I had lived already by the time I reached the flat shores of the long gone Ice Age Lake Agassiz that bosoms Fargo.

I had experienced nothing in my life up until that point that had not been an ongoing reaction to trauma from the moment I was born.  In June 1972 I moved with my 18-month-old daughter to Fargo and began yet another long series of trauma-based reactivity patterns that should have left me broken into millions of incomprehensible pieces of a human being.

But, no.  I endure, survived and reacted through a divorce, more relocations, another marriage, birth of two more children, another divorce and move after move after move as one rotten boat I climbed into with my children after another fell apart and sunk leaving me (and my children) paddling for the next available shore.

In this nutshell movie-trailer account of RAD-me in my life I arrived down here with my 8th grader son in the gorgeous high desert area of southeastern Arizona in November 1999.  I still had upheavals and difficult changes to make it through.  In March 2004 my youngest left home for the Air Force leaving me alone at 52 for the first time since I was pregnant at 18.

It is this ALONE part that loops around and plugs itself into my brother’s recent visit and what has happened to me since his leaving.  At 7:00 pm last Saturday I snubbed out my cigarette intending that it be my last.  After 20 smokeless hours I began to cry.  When that kind of pain is triggered in me, by RAD takes over and my crying does not stop.  I know myself well enough not to fool myself into thinking those kinds of tears are temporary or passing.  By 4:00 pm yesterday I was smoking again.

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I have lived continuously in this area — content — and in this house — content — for the longest span of time in my entire 62-year life.  Yesterday the grand shock hit me that in the terrible sadness of my terrible lonely aloneness I am no doubt going to have to leave here and return yet again to Forsaken Fargo. (Oh do “natives” arise in defense at those words!)

My two daughters and my two grandbabies are there.  I am here, 1700 miles away.  They are not moving no matter how hard the frigid winter winds blow.

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If the building blocks (as I see things) of a non-trauma built person’s life get knocked down, if such an ordinary person’s dominoes begin to tumble, they could say, “Oh, no!”  True, everyone’s life has tough spots — for some, unbelievably tough spots!

If this happens to a RAD person something additional happens.  In our reactivity the falling blocks and dominoes are likely to disappear.  By definition we (I) do not have an internal safe and secure response system that reacts to stress, distress and trauma in ordinary ways that might allow for hope of a smooth ability to put the pieces of life back together again.  Repairing ourselves and our lives can be a most difficult process.

If I say to an ordinary person, “Sometimes life can be hard,” everyone agrees.  But having a body-brain-mind-self built and changed by responses to severe early trauma exposure gives survivors additional levels of difficulty in coping with tough changes that non-trauma-built people will (fortunately for them) never begin to comprehend.

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I have made a true home for myself here not only for the first time in my life — but significantly for the ONLY time in my life.  I mesh perfectly with the geography, with the climate and with the peaceful quiet tone and pace of this place.  I have found and built upon a niche. 

But the cold, hard, harsh truth is I cannot endure here being this ALONE.  If there was any possible resolution for this problem I would have found it.  I would NEVER choose to leave here if I didn’t personally have to.  I am a person with a most critical unmet need for ongoing quality relationship based on deep love that cannot be fulfilled in this location.

In all fairness I own the fact that I hate and detest Fargo.  I reserve that word hate only for use where it applies for me in powerful ways.  I hate the Siberian winters.  I hate cold and frigid darkness.  I am a mountain woman.  I hate flat land.  REALLY flat land!  I hate cities and city living.  I hate being confined within buildings, trapped in a cage.

I have reached the point of being nearly crushed in my unsolvable paradox.  Mine is a dilemma literally built of love and hate.  I have no delusions that anything more minor is at play or at work inside of me at this moment.

Having my brother come and go smashed into oblivion any more hope that I can find or create any solution to meet the deepest needs of my heart while living here.  I have known for a long time that if grandbabies appeared in my family that something drastic would change for me in my life.  My oldest grandson is turning 3 today.  I am not there to share that party in any way.

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I have pondered for years what call of destiny would have transported an Alaskan mountain wilderness girl to the barren-beyond-words (from my perspective) region of the northern prairie.  Divine wisdom?  Punishment?

There must be a point where reactivity transforms into equitable adjustment to the changes of life, or we could not survive with any quality of life or experience of well-being, let alone of joy.  We can call this “making peace” with something (or someone).  This process can be difficult.  It often is.

Returning to the place of Fargo will send me walking in alien ways upon the shadowy footprints of my so-troubled younger self 40 years ago.  There is a level (an opportunity?) for me to make peace with myself in my return to that place.  I have to dive into the deepest regions of my soul to follow into the future what feels like a blessed and a cursed decision.  I cannot imagine leaving here and not grieving with a homesickness very similar to what I still feel for Alaska.

I have never grieved for Fargo!  I do grieve for my loved ones.

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I do not live in an immortal body.  My soul knows better than to invest my true attachments to material aspects of my existence — and that includes mountains and warm climate.  The tests for my soul are meant to grow my spiritual qualities.  I wish I could say, “Oh Great!”  And mean it!

Perhaps it is exactly this text of my soul that is so narrowing my options.  To be a close part of my daughters’ and of my grandsons’ lives is a matter of spiritual significance to me.  I am related to and connected with my family through our souls for eternity.

Sooner or later I am destined to leave heat and cold, sunshine and darkness, flat land and rugged terrain behind me.  Sooner or later I will leave all this material existence including my body to then live in a world where only those assets of my character as I have chosen pathways and actions that positively impact the growth of my soul will come with me.  I cannot alter these forces.

Where my soul calls I will go.  I know that.  I am scared! 

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+AMERICA. NATION OF PRETENDERS

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This blog isn’t dedicated to the stopping of the storms caused by all traumas.  It is specifically dedicated to finding ways to Stop the Storm of traumas caused by adults passing their own unresolved traumas down to their offspring.  I believe this is a reachable goal, one that requires the involvement of all people within a society as they come to recognize that what happens in the lives of infants and children impacts the course of physiological development in critically important ways. 

Most of these changes are permanent and cannot be reversed.  They cause complications and difficulties that early trauma survivors will suffer from for the rest of their lives.  These changes were – and are – preventable.

If America wishes to be remembered as a nation of plenty that squandered its offspring to cause the disintegration of their society from the inside out, we are well on the way to recognizing our most negative potential.  But, then, we are a nation that founded itself on lies told to and genocide committed against the indigenous people who lived here to begin with.  Perhaps we have never been a nation with a heart — but rather have been a nation with a ridiculous ego.

As the links here indicate

WE the U.S. and the WORLD

America is sustaining, and even gaining, global negative status when it comes to our lack of regard for our offspring.  Are we capable of national compassion and common sense?

In the meantime, this blog makes a point of discussing the other side of the “perfect American nation” mythology.  There are troubles in pretend fantasy land.  We could address and rectify the conditions that allow terrorism into the lives of our offspring.  Yes, we could.  Are we?  Will we?

Why on earth NOT?

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+WHAT CAN I OFFER TO THE GREATER GOOD?

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Why do I question my need to give, to share, to not be alone, to contribute to the whole?  I wonder if I have a biological mandate to be a productive helper.  My abuse-trauma history has caught up with me.  While I don’t like to be alone my body needs me to be alone much if not most if not nearly all of the time.

I don’t believe the foundation of American culture is all that healthy, based as it is on the competitive struggle for existence.  This culture turns a blind eye to suffering in many significant ways.  It allows parents (and others) to harm children.  It has not bothered to create an adequate system to guarantee safe passage for all out of their early years of life. 

When people tell me that children are better off being left in their abusive homes because entry into the foster care system “is worse” I question the sanity of any culture that has created and sustains such an unsafe and grim reality.

I find no way to wake each day (in my trauma-altered condition) knowing that I can spend my life doing anything that truly makes a difference.  My “loneliness” is therefore tied not only into the competitive struggle for existence that never helped me or my siblings when we were in our horrible home of origin, but is also tied into the fact that I don’t know how to find a way to enter this same system now in any productive way that I can tolerate.

I am never satisfied by passing time — or rather by filling time — with pursuits that seem meaningless to me.  I seem to lack the requisite “selfish gene” that appears to me (as a virtual outsider to mainstream American culture) to be satisfying to nearly everyone else I encounter.

Being a mother of dependent children for 35 years evidently satisfied my deep, deep desire to contribute to the betterment of others.  My children grew up and now live a long ways from me.  They are independent and doing fine.  But living another life now alone and single does not suit my nature in important ways.

But then the way my body processes information, I would need a very orderly, kind and peaceful environment “out there.”  A sharing and caring environment.  A noncompetitive place — one I cannot find.

I think perhaps I have ancient genetic memory of tribal shared life.  Perhaps those genes were activated by the supreme isolation, abuse and trauma of my childhood.  Maybe those genes screamed for help from a social network of caring others.  I needed help.  There is no possible way to deny that fact.

I needed MY PEOPLE!  My people in the larger sense.  A people who would have been invested in my well-being and in the well-being of my siblings.  We desperately needed to be cared about, cared for, rescued, saved and cherished.  We needed to be noticed in our need.  We needed a community of caring others.

In our culture we are so often separated and divided, enclosed in individual houses, struggling in a competitive world to survive, not in one built of, by and for cooperation.  I often feel homesick for a different world that I am not sure even exists.

I do little things.  I am starting little rose plants from my climbers that can be propagated to give to a woman who comes to sell little plants at the farmers’ market faithfully every Saturday.  I grew jalapeno peppers last summer and made gourmet pickled relish from them that I donated to the booth that raises money to run the market itself.  I can give fresh eggs to a neighbor, bake cupcakes to leave off at the homeless shelter.  I can sew things, here at home, alone, to give to whom?

I don’t have the internal resources needed to volunteer or get involved unless I could find the most special situation that met my needs — my disabilities.  This saddens me.  All I can do is write, it seems.  I think of all this as I remain completely stalled in my book writing process.  I have always hoped those books could offer something of use to the greater good.

It is cloudy, rainy, very windy.  Stormy and gloomy outside.  The earth is being prepared for spring.  For new growth and life.  Nature is by nature productive and giving as is the earth itself.  Why do I question my own desire, my need to be a part of that kind of life?  It matters to me that my life matters, not in competitive ways but rather in cooperative ones.  My challenge is to find ways to make that happen.

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+LIFE. WHAT DO WE HAVE TO SHOW FOR IT?

March 4, 2013

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+TREES AND STUFF

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While I am not yet ready to return to my book writing I am prepared to turn in that direction.  In my dreams last night which I do not clearly remember I “was shown” that my process of writing for the book is not unlike the growth of a tree.  After watching the horrible experience my older brother had when he was here and I asked if he might offer some of his memories of his childhood with me for this series of books I have grown to understand more how difficult this process is for me.  Yet I am motivated and determined to write this story to the best of my ability.  My siblings do not share that mission — and why would they be?  We are each different people with differing lives.

When I write the really hard stuff I cannot force myself to reread what I write.  There seems to be a powerful force of nature that prevents me from editing my own work.  This is the job of my daughter.

In my dream my sleep thinking showed me that each word I write for my books is like a living cell in a growing tree.  Not one of them can be changed, rearranged or removed once they have grown into the story.  There is something else about when the branches will poke themselves out in all directions and when the bark will form on the tree of my writings.  I will know more what that is all about later on, I suppose.

This means to me that I have to inwardly be facing in the exactly correct direction when I write words that belong to my story.  They are fixed in place within the story once written, and then I move on as the story (tree) grows.  I might not LIKE the way this process takes place, but this IS the way my book writing happens, which makes my preparation for return to the writing an extremely important part of this writing process.

I guess I could name my writing style as the “flow and grow” method of telling my story.  As with so many aspects of who and how I am in the world I know when something feels RIGHT and when it does not.  Writing RIGHT lets words fall off my fingertips if I am using a keyboard or off the tip of my pen if I am writing first on paper.  There is a pace to this, and if my mind feels impatient that I can’t keep up with thoughts, I am not correctly in line with the story.

Writing seems to have its own pace.  Different kinds of writing have different kinds of paces.  This is part of the reason why this blog is so helpful for me.  It can receive the overflow of my thoughts so that the other book writing channel can hold within it only those words that belong to that tree.

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Last evening I read the notes I took down on paper while speaking with my mother’s longest-term friend to my daughter who structured them into “something else.”  That March 6, 2013 spontaneous interview was the 4th time this woman has expressed her impressions and memories of Mildred.  Each time Joe Anne reads more of Mildred’s letters her comprehension about the severity of Mildred’s mental illness readjusts all Joe Anne experienced in her “odd friendship” (as she refers to it) with Mildred that spanned the years from early August 1957 to Mildred’s death in January 2003.

This is a tough road for Joe Anne to be taking.  Over and over again, as if speaking within a very private place within herself, Joe Anne said, “You poor children.  You poor, poor children.”  Is Joe Anne looking back and wondering if there was anything that she and her husband could have done to help us?  Is she going to eventually be able to tell me what she thinks might have helped her to do that?

I left home October 3, 1969.  Many of Joe Anne’s views of Mildred’s behavior as her Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) controlled her life, came from those years after I was no longer a part of Mother’s life.  I am left this morning as I go through my process of preparing to return to the book writing coming to understand that more than ANYTHING else — centrally and primarily these books are about the tree of BPD. 

Everything we six children experienced during our childhoods with Mildred as our Mother was influenced by that terrible disease.  I also think about a tree image in my mind today “as if” all six of us were little trees growing under the arching canopy of Mildred as she and her life had been made toxic by the way her brain had been changed as BPD took over her — as surely as cancer consumes cells of the body.

The little Lloyd forest image allows me to right myself in relation to my siblings who each of course would have their own story to tell about “she who cannot be named,” as my oldest brother calls Mother.  I can only write my own “take” on the overall, bigger story.  I might receive input from my youngest sister who is the only one of my five siblings who has offered to be somehow involved in this writing.

In following my tree-forest image I can say that Mother had a single “bad” tree forest, me.  She had a five tree “good” forest of my siblings.  Where the tree of Father would be placed in this image I don’t know — and at the moment I don’t care. 

In fact, at this moment I don’t care about any of it.  This is a gray rainy day in the high desert as moisture feeds the earth.  I hear drops tapping on my metal roof.  My concern now is to deliver a dozen fresh eggs to my friend as I head off to the laundromat.  I will bring along my spiral notebook and collection of ink pens – just in case….

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+GOOD MORNING FROM THE “TRAUMASTATE”

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A fellow explorer has discovered this blog and I am thrilled by her arrival.  In Gertrude’s words I am finding new ways to name for myself how I experience my own life as a severe early abuse and trauma survivor.  It is through the sharing of our experience that all of us are learning a new language that lets us reflect upon our unique journeys as they share characteristics most of us have felt so alone with because while we understand that we don’t experience our ongoing existence in ordinary ways we have so few people to share how our life feels to us.

Instead of sending our own voice out into what can feel to be an empty void we are increasingly hearing our reality flowing back to us in the voices of wise and informed others.

You will find Gertrude’s voice in comments listed to the right side of the home page of the blog.  The ones I am referring to in this post can be found at the end of this March 6, 2013 post: +BOOK WRITING: DAMN SICK OF CARING

I was captivated this morning by her combination of words, “triggered into the traumstate.”  Gertrude described my reality in those words.  I know what she is saying.  At age 62 I finally understand how WHO I am continuously lives in that “traumastate.”

Everything I experience is filtered through that state in one way or another one.  I live in a body formed in, by and for that state.  Early and continuing trauma built my body (with me in it) to withstand repeated, continued and horrendous insane abusive attacks by my mentally ill psychotic mother.  My body was sculpted by trauma so profound and pervasive that the act of being alive was (and still often is) a trauma trigger.

Before I sat down at my computer this morning to open my email and find Gertrude’s (and other) blog comments waiting there I had walked outdoors into the glorious warmth of high desert Arizona sunshine only to encounter sadness at that so-familiar verge of tears.  My eyes fell on the spot on one of my garden benches where for a week my brother sat to join me for morning coffee.

He is gone.  He no longer is here with me.  But still I can so nearly see him with me and feel his presence that I feel stuck in a present experience of myself in my life that includes my brother being BOTH physically here at the same time he is obviously not here.

Gertrude gave me new words to comprehend even this brief overlap in my experience.  I am always subject to a “traumastate” perception of the passage of time.  I do not remember myself in my life in ordinary ways.  I remember rationally and logically that time moves forward as it continuously changes the visible “face” of my life.  Yet in my heart where I experience myself in the world my body operates on a level of what I can only name as being “simultaneous” time. 

My memory processes include the past in my present as if my life is “concurrent.”  More than one thing happens at the same time, often exactly because I have been hyper- “triggered into a traumastate” by events that are exceptionally significant to me.

I live alone.  Every family member I love lives well over a thousand miles away from me.  When one of them comes to visit me suddenly my life takes on a cast of increased significance that makes every moment we are together gigantic in meaning, value and importance.  Compared to my usual life and its passage of time, attachment-companionship-time is a wide universe while “usual” fits into a nutshell.

Any such comings — which never happen sooner than a year apart — are triggers from my “traumastate” to go into high gear.  This state does not allow for easy transition back to my “usual” experience of ongoing life.

While in a heightened “traumastate” with its heightened sense of overlapping, concurrent, simultaneous passage of time, I am especially set up to feel “disorganized” and “disoriented.”  At these times, in this state, the sensation of “depersonalization” and of “derealization” leaves me swimming in a sea without visible shores where the sense of the ordinary passage of time no longer exists.  I wait for its return at the same time I know I am simply suffering from being overwhelmed by TOO MUCH INFORMATION.

That condition is how I understand living in a trauma-altered body.  I know where these complications came from for me.  As I lived my own ongoing life from birth forward to age 18 when I left home I was continually interrupted by the violent, overwhelming attacks on me by Mother.  I was forced to let go of my own self in my own life to cope with and endure these insane attacks which could often last a long, long time.

I was therefore forced to endure the experience of living two lives at the same time as they both took place as time moved with me forward.  I had all of my attention diverted from my own self experiencing my own life as I was repeatedly forced to endure Mother’s version of life as she attacked me.

Because her abuse was psychotic there was no possible way I could incorporate the overwhelming information contained in HER “traumastate” into my own experience of being alive.

“Dissociation” is a trite word to use in description of this kind of life — especially during critical early stages of infant-child body-brain development.  My memory systems were permanently altered.  I remember myself in my life differently, but when there is no great input coming in during “ordinary” times the changes in these memory processes do not cause me signficant troubles.

Thanks to the concept Gertrude has so succinctly, accurately and helpfully given a name to I can move forward through my life from this point forward with “this issue settled.”  Yes, this “traumastate” comes from “malevolent-world” experience.  But those two terms are not interchangeable.

There is no malevolency present in my sun-filled garden this morning, nor was there any present in my brother’s visit or in his return home (which my body translates into his disappearance).  What IS present is this “traumastate” that I live in all of the time in this body as it has at present been hyper-triggered by my built-in Reactive Attachment Disorder.

I am reacting to powerful forces in my body — as trauma built it.  How do I establish some sense of peaceful calm?  I am a native to the universe of the “traumastate.”  I am not an immigrant into it nor am I a tourist passing through its terrain.  “Traumastate” geography is my home in my body in my lifetime.  Yet now that I have Gertrude’s name for this I am better equipped to creatively and constructively work within my “traumastate” world.

Like I have done with my physical home and my garden (see: LINDA’S ADOBE PEACE GARDEN) I can look around for tools to use to improve my inner world to make it more beautiful, to make it better suit me, to give myself ways to reframe how I feel and how I live.

Thank you, Gertrude, for this gift!

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