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Monday, February 29, 2016

Leap Year

This is my 100th blog post!  While I had planned a different sort of post for this milestone, I think this is appropriate.  Thanks for journeying with me on this road to healing and activism.
 
Thirty days hath September
April, June and November;
All the rest have thirty-one,
Excepting February alone
Which hath but twenty-eight, in fine,
Till leap year gives it twenty-nine.

In the quest to keep our calendar year synchronized with the astronomical and seasonal year, an extra day is added to February once every four years.  Adding a day to the year is a corrective measure since the earth does not orbit around the sun in exactly 365 days.  A number of superstitions and traditions surround this four-year phenomenon, including:
  • A woman can propose marriage to a man on February 29
  • Marriage and divorce should not occur in a leap year
  • Couples should avoid having a baby during leap years
  • Natural calamities abound in leap years
  • Children and the elderly are especially vulnerable during this time
The last leap year was in 2012 and it was on February 29, 2012 that my life was drastically and dramatically altered.  Before the sun was completely awake that cold winter morning, the police broke down the door of the house I shared with my daughter and now ex-husband in their quest to serve a search warrant.  They had been investigating my former spouse for a number of months, documenting each time he downloaded child pornography.

There are things I will never forget about that morning:
  • the crash of wood splintering
  • my daughter's scream of terror
  • thundering footsteps of officers with weapons drawn headed for the bedroom I was in.  In their eagerness to secure the scene, they ran right past the room the target of their investigation was sleeping in.  With the help of Ambien he was oblivious to the terror my daughter and I were experiencing.
  • opening my bedroom door in an attempt to get to my daughter and seeing so many men in black, shining a bright light in my eyes
  • my embarrassment at only being in a nightgown and feeling the need for a robe
  • the humiliation of being forced to sit with bedhead and morning breath for hours while the sanctity of my home was invaded
  • the impatience I felt at the chatter of the officers assigned to sit with my daughter and I
  • maintaining eye contact with my terrified daughter, trying to communicate love and strength to her
  • her stoic and resourceful presence even after they had forced her to the floor at gunpoint when they entered the house
  • my helplessness at no longer being able to protect her from the knowledge of her father's secret and criminal behavior
  • my screams of rage and terror when the officers finally left and I was alone in my dismantled life and house

Scene from "The Impossible"
These are the things I will forever associate with leap year, specifically leap day.

In a technical sense, one could argue that today is the first anniversary of our world explosion day but I'm glad I am further down the road of recovery now than I would have been one year after that fateful morning.  This blog has been part of my solitary healing journey; it has provided a venue for processing what happened to me.  And it has proven that even the most heinous pain can be redeemed.  I have seen that redemption process in the many women who contact me or leave comments because they are in a similar life explosion.

February 29, 2012 was a pivot day for me.  It was preceded by 33 years of marriage to a man who had a secret identity but who worked hard to create an illusionary facade as a successful family man and professional.  The days that followed were filled with trauma, betrayal and scandal.  This event did not begin and end on that 366th day of 2012 and while we are healing, it will always be the defining day in our family history.

My story is not just about a marriage that went south or a husband who misbehaved and was caught.  It is also about organized religion's failure to respond appropriately, colluding therapists, the criminal justice system's zeal and then compromise and society's discomfort with the fact that predators do not fit the comfortable caricature we have created for them.  My story is not an anomaly, unfortunately.  The major systems involved have fatal flaws in them when it comes to really protecting, supporting and defending victims, including secondary ones, against predators.

http://www.comfortprints.org/
As I reflect today on that event four years ago, I grieve.  I grieve that while much as changed in my personal life, little has changed in our societal response to predators.  I grieve that so many other families are experiencing their own world explosion days silently and with little or no support.  I grieve that very few are willing to get in the cesspool of pedophilia and addiction with wounded and betrayed partners and children.  It is lonely and frightening, stinky and messy--not a suitable place for good, law-abiding, church-going citizens.  I grieve that so many of these cases seem to be occurring in churches and that the response is often exactly that of the predator--minimize, deny, rationalize and deceive.  I grieve for the women who are made to feel responsible for their husbands' deviancy, for the innocent children impacted either directly by the molestation of the predator or by his betrayal of trust as their father, or both.  I grieve and I truly believe that Jesus grieves as well.

When will we get it right?  There is too much at stake to keep hiding our heads in the sand--too many lives are being decimated.  Our children are vulnerable--not just in leap year but every day of every year.  We need a multi-pronged approach to this insidious problem and that must include the predator's partner and his children.  It is time, way past time.

6 comments:

  1. I identify so much with your post. This brought back so many memories for me of my day of horror, sensations and feelings that will be forever etched into my soul. Thank you for sharing your experience Brenda...

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  2. Dear Anonymous,
    Thank you for your kind words but I am sorry that you can identify. This is not a "club" anyone willingly joins but it is always good to know that we are not alone.

    Hugs,
    Brenda

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  3. You have nailed! I feel like the church has turned their back. N one talks to us. Acknowledges the pain the hurt. The needs of a single mother

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  4. Hi Sheila,

    Thank you for stopping by. I'm sorry that you are experiencing neglect by organized religion. You are not alone.

    Hugs,
    Brenda

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  5. Thank you for expressing about how nobody really addresses this situation for what it is. My ex was the head of our congregation (bishop). The bishop who replaced him down-played what had happened over the pulpit and said not to believe everything you hear in the news. I couldn't believe it. It was a cover-up. When I met with him, instead of listening to my pleas for help with my ex's addiction, he wanted to know how our sex life was. I have felt until now nobody understands what this was like. Thank you for bringing it out in the open. Church leaders have no clue how to respond to pedophilia, so their initial reaction is to deny it happened, which is devastating to the spouse. Love your blog. I was married on Leap Day::( A not so fun day anymore. Sorry for all you have been through but encouraged as I read your healing journey that I can get through this too. Thank you!!!

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  6. Dear Louise,

    Thank you for stopping by. I am so sorry that your church minimized your ex's crimes and had the audacity to ask you about your sex life. I was asked that as well by an ignorant church official--it was intrusive and offensive. I am happy that you are on the path to healing. You are making it, my friend.

    Hugs,
    Brenda

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