WRITING OBSTACLE

Write a descriptive passage about the feeling of comfort or escape that can be found when reading a story.

Maybe you remember getting lost in a good book - try to describe this unique feeling!

Abuse…?

Glasses shatter, screams echo.

My sisters cry in the next room.

I’m too scared to cross over.

I’ll get caught. I’ll get hit.


I’m in my room again, I hear them screaming again. It’s normal. They’re divorced, yet somehow momma is still here. She sleeps here, because all her pill popping friends won’t let her sleep there.


Doors slam. It gets quiet. Then like an explosion, it starts back up without a warning. Tears pull in my eyes. Is momma hurting daddy? It would never be the other way around. He loves her too much.


She’s searching for those pills diabetics take. I already know because I was there when she found them the first time. Daddy was so, so mad at her.


Last week I saw her take a handful of coins from the savings jar in the kitchen. She took those to her friends and they gave her pills. I know because I saw. She locked me in the hot car for an hour and came back out with two guys and pills.


It’s okay, I had books. Hours of words flowing from the pages. I forced myself to learn when I was four. By the time I was seven and in second grade, I was reading on an fifth grade level.


By the time I was in fourth grade, I was reading on a high school level. Before I could read, I would cry over the books and try until I got it right.


Now I sit on my stuffed bed, mismatched blankets and stuffed animals all around me in the baby blue room, scratched, mismatched furniture and the thirty year old lamp giving me light at five in the morning.


“Come on,” mom pushes into the room throwing the book from my hands and slinging me out of bed. I try not to cry or show emotion, because weak people do that. I bite my lip as tears fill. “If you cry, I’m whooping you.”


I suck the tears back in and rush to the bathroom. I hear my smallest sister, only a few months old, getting beat because she’s crying. I shut the door that doesn’t have a knob and step on the green stool to see myself in the mirror.


“Rylee, hurry up. You have school sometime today. If the bus leaves without you, I’m not taking you,” she snaps. She comes into the bathroom and I cower. She takes a handful of hair and jerks my back to her stomach.


She yanks a brush through it and pulls it up into a ponytail. She turns me around, sighs angrily and pushes a hateful kiss onto my forehead. I smile sadly, scared of her bloodshot eyes and strong hands.


“Go to the bus,” she says. I’m confused. I haven’t ate. It isn’t time to go to the bus. But I know she wants me gone. So I go outside and sit on the ground. Tears come quick, fast and angry. My scalp hurts from her hands.


That day, I went to school hungry. My dad walked me down to the bus. The bags under his eyes visible. He knelt, hugged me tight and told me he loved me.


While he was away, my mom found his diabetic pills. She popped too many. She got her high. And she blew her brains out three hours later.

Comments 10

I think it is very brave putting your story…your life out there like that there are many people who wouldn’t be able to do that my heart goes out to you and I just hope you know that you deserve love and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise and I am sure that all of us here in the comments will be here in whatever capacity we can you in my thoughts and my prayers

I don’t know what to say besides sorry. I am so sorry that this happened, I am so sorry that she threatened to hurt you, I am so sorry that both of them screamed at each other. I know that this is not enough, nothing I could even think of saying would be enough. All I can say is I am so, so sorry.

You have nothing to apologize for. Stuff happens.🤷🏼‍♀️🖤 Thank you.

All we can do is stand with you and help you bear with and be there when you need to vent…

I don’t even have the words to say.

I want to say something, but it won’t be enough. I’m so sorry, Rylee. I’m truly sorry.

It’s no biggie. Stuff like that happens all the time. It happened to me, but I also wrote it thinking of a cute blonde boy around four years old, that I met a few days ago. I think he’s my cousin if I went back on the family tree right.


His mom is a needle addict. She tells him she doesn’t want him. The woman is so strung out, she can’t add 2+3 with blocks. She has a daughter. And she only loves the daughter.


They had a kitten. The mom wouldn’t feed it, the kids didn’t know how. So it died of starvation in the house.


The boy wouldn’t take a stuffed animal from his mom, so she beat him until he did. When she left the room, he threw it in the corner.


The dad says quote; “I’ve just accepted the fact that I’m going to come home one day, and she won’t be here anymore.”


So see?

Stuff like that happens all the time. You just have to try your best to push through it… I hope to God he doesn’t remember what she’s doing… 🖤


Maybe he’ll get lucky and forget her. Some of us aren’t so lucky.


In the time in the story I wrote above, I didn’t put the fact that my mom tried to kill my dad with a knife. Or that she tried to burn down the house.


People say she wasn’t in her right mind, but damn. I think she was. That was like her. To burn it down.


If she couldn’t have it, no one could.

Just like happiness.🖤

Can I give you some advice?

Ofc.

Okay, I uh, I don’t want you to take this the wrong way at all. I’m not any better than you or anything like that. I’m probably far, far (far) worse, but I just wanted to say that, while this stuff does happen, it isn’t normal. It’s all over the place, yes, but it’s important to recognize that you’ve been through horrific abuse. I’m guilty of minimizing my childhood as well (especially when people try to help - I get all squeamish and ‘normalize’ it). I’m not here to accuse you of this! I don’t know how you feel about it. I know that you’re young, and these scars are growing with you. I guess I wanted to say that it’s okay to not be okay. For a long time, I really thought my scars were normal as well. To normalize them is to attempt (often times in vain) to diminish their effects on you. Again, I have no idea where you are in your processing all of this trauma, but I care enough to (desperately) want to say all this. I also know that you are extremely intelligent (partly due to growing up too fast) for your age, and everything I’m saying may be stuff you’ve already thought of. I think it’s important to know that it’s not okay to go through what you’ve gone through.


I think you’d benefit from taking the ACE test. There are a thousand sites that offer the test for free. It’s essentially a 10 question placement test for childhood trauma. I think you’d likely be a ten. Depending on where you land on the test, most sites offer statistics for various different things as you approach adulthood. Personally, I hate how accurate the damn test is, but it does have benefit to know what I have increased risk of. Might be something that could give you some insight on what to be careful of.


Anyway, I know that’s a lot. But so is this piece. And so is your life. I know it can be hard to portray tone in text form, so please don’t think I’m speaking as if I’m some expert on you or your life, or some better-than-thou asshole. Reading this was horrifying, not only because I care about what happened in your past, but because I really care about your future as well. I know that’s probably weird, but oh well. It’s only weird to care about people because no one cared for me.


I’ll be carrying this piece with me forever, so at least you know that someone out there knows your story.