Head Held High, Being Me.

I wonder what the Guest Speaker will say tomorrow evening at the Dial Help Gala?  I wonder what parts of her 7 1/2 year journey out of dysfunction will come to mind? What would the donors who support Dial Help most want to know?  How often does an event such as this have the opportunity to hear a victim share their story…and what parts would be the most helpful to the community at large?  

I have begun many speeches in my head and when I recognize the lack of an audience, it fizzles out.  

What I know is that I can't prepare more than I already have, that trying to know before I am standing there is impossible.  If I can focus on who I am talking to, I will know what to say.  

I have designated myself, as the unofficial voice of the victim…and I feel that the oppressive silence needs to be broken, and I am the one who is cracking a chip into the wall of shame or fear that holds others back.

I want to put a normal face on sexual abuse victims.  Maybe even more than normal…a face of courage.  I want them to know about our journey and what we are up against and what would be helpful to us.

I want them to hear how keeping silent about abuse locks you into the land of no truths.

I want to stand tall, strong, confident and articulate as me.

It isn't about what I wear, how my haircut makes me look so put together, but rather can I express adequately how abuse changes who you are and then how claiming your truth flips you back to who you were meant to be.

What most victims yearn for is a hearing ear….I will have 100 or so listening to me.  

A message was sent to me today that said,  "I am very proud you are a crusader for victims of abuse.  You are using your energy for a worthy cause."  This is from someone I have not had contact with for many years.

In my response back I found this. 

"You have no reason to feel nothing but proud of me. I am proud of me.  I have walked great distances inside of me to get here.  I have done nothing I am ashamed of."  

I own this to the depth of my being.  I am proud and not ashamed of being me.
I own this!

What I thought of the other day, was about the day I stood pumping gas in my mail car, knowing I had to enter into the gas station.  And at the table there were the locals who knew me, and had just been informed by my husband, that the sick man who was arrested for CSC in the paper was my father.  I had to straighten up my back, reach up my neck, take a deep breath and hold my head up…even when the greatest pull was to crawl away and hide.  Looking towards the morning sky that day I vowed to myself, "This will not define Me!"  

I knew that I had to find a Me besides the one who was left fully exposed, whose dirty underwear was in the paper for all to see.  I had to find a way to rescue me.
I had no experience or knowing HOW I was going to do this.  But, I felt that my father would not steal one more moment of my life.  That I would not be a coward in fear.  Nor would his reputation be mine to carry.

I believe that I have reached the point where I am now fully claiming that right. That in the local paper there will be the daughter of the sick man….standing up and telling her story…PROUD of who she is.  
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I don't know what I will say, but I know that they will get to see the victim behind the headlines…standing tall, head held high, being Me.

 

 

Comments

4 responses to “Head Held High, Being Me.”

  1. Ann Sandberg Avatar
    Ann Sandberg

    Beth,
    You will be a wonderful example of what a previously victimized woman can become. Victim just doesn’t describe you. You were a victim many years ago. Now, you are a woman whose life is full of roles that many women experience: wife, mom, friend, worker, artist, writer—so many, many words describe Beth. Victim—nope, that adjective no longer “fits.” You threw that one off. You are a role model to help others do the same.

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  2. Carl Huhta Avatar
    Carl Huhta

    That blog is just AMAZING! I hope to do the same as a Bikram Yoga Teacher.
    Thank you for showing me the way forward.

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  3. I M Perfect Avatar

    Thanks Ann. But, I do have much wisdom to share about being a victim. Not that I am one today, but I lived a lifetime as one….and the journey to become free.
    Carl, you will do like me. You are doing the prep work today so you too can stand tall and proud with your head held high. We did it. No one can take it away.
    When the credits role for our lives, we can say that we played our parts well, we gave it all we had and more.

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  4. grow-taller-4-idiots.com Avatar

    It’s never too late to improve your information and your contents inspire me.

    Like

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