Creating Myself

A medley of emotions washed over me when I was asked to tell my story: relief, sadness, pain, and joy. I’ve never told my story to anyone, and it’s a personal triumph for me to stand before you, albeit anonymously, and pour out my heart, even as I celebrate who I’ve become. It’s a bittersweet, concrete demarcation of where I come from and where I am today, like two polar ends on a globe, with a gargantuan swath of siyata d’Shmaya spanning both opposites.

Creating    Myself

I’ll try to begin from early childhood although most of it I’ve blocked out. I was the middle child quiet shy never really allowing my voice to be heard but hearing everything else around me. My parents had married under great stress and both hoped that their lives would ease with the passage of time and the addition of children. Unfortunately that hope was never realized. It isn’t clear whether nature or nurture gave rise to my parents’ temperament but they displayed behavior that way back when I was growing up I termed “difficult.” Today we call it abusive.

There was never enough food in our house never new clothing but there was always an abundance of wrath followed by long periods of cold bitter silence. I learned from an early age that love was a commodity. It could be bartered bought and of course taken away at will. I was the “good child” and thus I received ample portions of this strange “love ” but I observed my siblings whose personalities were not as quiet and submissive and what I saw frightened me into even greater silence.

I never heard the term “dysfunction” back then but I could have written a book on the subject by the time I turned five. In our house people did not communicate; they shouted. Behind closed doors and out in the open. We teetered around on egg shells never knowing whether my mother was happy or sad whether my father would come home yelling or bearing gifts. It was that unpredictable.

We children were caught in a real-life game of chess pawns in the hands of our parents who instinctively knew how to use us to fight their battles. “Who do you think is right Ayala?” I was constantly asked by my father who eyed me significantly. “Your father says this; I say that. What would you like to do?” my mother would exhort.

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