I wrote the original version of this about 15 years ago and have re-edited it a bit. (I've had a few more insights into relationships & forgiveness in the intervening years). I have practiced forgiveness long enough that I have forgiven all the people who hurt me as a child, and myself for the ideas I once held about myself as a result of an abundance of the difficult events I reveal here. What a freedom comes of forgiveness! We don’t have to let those who once hurt us suppress our lives, limit our choices or dim the luminous nature of Love that is borne in each of us and seeks to express as us…
She Hit me: Forgiving My Mother
Rev. Dr. Susanne Freeborn
I changed schools 27 times before I dropped out of high school. That was only 45 days before graduation. This was not because my father was in the military. It was mainly because my mother was single–with 5 children by the time I was in high school. My parents never married. It wasn‘t for want of a proposal by my father that they did not marry. He begged my mother, but she was having none of it because her first husband had deserted her when she was still a teenager, and she was not going to let that happen to her again. It mattered not to her that my father loved her or that they had two children together. She was not going to be hurt again. Then my father killed himself a few years after they had separated, when I was only seven years old. He drove his truck into an enormous Coastal Live Oak tree at 60 miles an hour somewhere near Fresno, California in the great San Joaquin Valley. He left a suicide note they said, I wasn’t allowed to see or hear it.
There is not much point in going too deeply into a description of the pain and suffering of my childhood, just a sketch will do. Remember the Fifties and Sixties? Being a single mother was not common then, nor was it understood, supported and God, there was no respect at all. We would be called “That woman and all her brats.” Women didn’t make even close to equal pay, child support was not enforced, nor was it reliably collected by the state even if there was a court order in place. Our family life was a serial travelogue of spots between a rock and a hard place.
We were all bastards. One of my two sisters still doesn’t know her father’s name. None of us had five different sets of school clothes, and making friends was a dangerous business if you knew that you were only going to end up moving away right after you finally made some friends. And leave we did, because we were evicted from our home repeatedly when my mother ran short of cash. During my sophomore year of high school in the spring, when all the promise seems to be returning to the planet, we had to eat corn meal mush for two months straight because there was nothing else. We were very desperately poor and it was very hard for my mother. She came home exhausted from her job as a cook and beat all of us out of her frustration and anger.
At one time we were taken from her by the state and sent to live with our grandparents after a neighbor saw her beating me with a stick of lathe. A couple of years went by and then they sent us back to her, though nothing had really changed, except what house we lived in. During those years I fell prey to sexual molestation by two of my uncles and a male babysitter. When it was discovered, my grandmother acted as if a nine-year-old girl could actually be provocative to her sons, who were much older than I, one of them in the Navy. She taught me to feel guilty about the inappropriate behaviors directed toward me by men. She said men only wanted one thing. I didn't feel safe in the world unless I was with my Grampa, but I couldn’t always be with him.
I tell you this so that you will understand why I had to come to know forgiveness intimately. Children who have a difficult childhood usually think that they are in some way responsible for what went wrong and we blame our parents for what we perceive as their failures to love, protect and provide for us. We, and our families, are fundamentally wrong in our own eyes. My poor mother was damned from the beginning. If the circumstances weren’t difficult enough, Freud was let loose on the world prior to her arrival and I was taught to profoundly blame her for everything. However, blaming Mom and my father brought me no peace, and only more suffering and a state of perpetual victimhood. I loathed being a victim.
I don’t remember exactly what it was that brought the miracle of forgiveness to me. But sometime during college, when I was around 28 years old, I was pursuing Women’s Studies at the University of Maryland and I began to see the culture that my family had lived in a wholly different way. I saw the terrible economic and societal pressures my mother had faced and saw that she had not given up on taking care of us, even though she was alone and without much help. Even if she had to lie to the landlord or creditors, she had always done her best to keep us safe. No matter what. And I began to realize why she had been angry and that in her grief and anger she had hurt us.
I became a little less overwhelmingly angry and disappointed with her and began to forgive her. I began to let her love me the way that she did instead of the way that I expected her to love me like June Cleaver. I began to love and respect her for how she had taken care of us, swallowing her pride, setting aside things that she had been taught, like honesty, so that we would be OK. She didn’t expect much from life, so she didn’t, couldn’t, have great hopes for us in matters of education or future professions. I saw the price she paid. She simply ensured our survival. She thought life was hard and so it was. She really didn’t have much time for being a soft, warm & loving mother. She was more like Sisyphus, continually rolling our family up a hill, never reaching the top, never being able to relax or to rest. Love does not always fit others pictures of what it ought to be. When you live only to survive many things look as if they belong only to others. Still my mother kept a roof over our heads that had a door to the world.
Realizing this allowed me just enough space to see another possibility for my own life. That I had all the say in the story of my life. My barely blessed mother let in just enough light under the door for me to see another kind of future. My life was very hard when I was young, but it has been one miracle after another since the day I began to forgive my mom.
I had to forgive my mother so many times that it seems like I have made that choice an infinite number of times. Yes our life was hard. Yes, I was horribly, overwhelmingly angry. Yes, I thought for a very long time that it was all her fault. Then I thought it was my fault. Along the way to forgiving Mom, I forgave myself into a life of freedom and joyous self-expression.
My Mom lived with me after having experienced a series of strokes, and I took care of her as tenaciously as she took care of me when I was a child. I kept flowers in her room because she said that “they look like happiness” and because, for me, flowers symbolize the grace of God. A grace that allowed me to see the error of the judgments I made as an innocent child against her and against myself. Mom died in January 2000. I am so fortunate that I used my time and my life the way I did prior to her death. That the wisdom of forgiveness revealed itself to me and I was able to share it with her, I couldn’t be more grateful for the peace that existed between us when she made her transition.



Salon.com
Comments
I wish my mother could have read this years ago.
I wish I had read this years ago, glad I did this early morning.
Think it's why I was meant to still be awake! Thank you.
Thanks again.
Grandma, There is little that makes me happier than to serve as a source of inspiration. I am going to sleep well tonight. Thanks so much.
I've read many a time that children don't blame their parents, they blame themselves. Maybe this is true of most children; how would I know? But I know for certain that I never blamed myself. I knew very well, even at seven, that there is no crime a seven-year-old is capable of committing that deserves to be punished by being held on the ground and kicked in the head. I was mad as a struck bee, I hated my parents, and I prayed for them to die. I know all this because I've always been a writer, so I wrote it down. My experience wasn't loving my mother as a child then finding anger as an adult, but the opposite.
Your photos are lovely.
Thanks for coming by.
I do heed the words of Christ from the cross "forgive them, for they
know not what they do".
Life's journey takes us to many places...
And your blog allowed us to share with you
Thank you so much.... I am so glad you found a peace inside, that came with understanding, wrought by age and experience....
((hugs))
I forgot to thank you for the lovely photos...
{rated}
:)
Thank you each and everyone.
Dakini, I can always count on you to get to the heart of the matter.
Thanks Tink. Sometimes I think, do I really need to be this strong. Apparently, still, a day face down in the sand at the beach, priceless.
Tasha, I think we all have our work to do, and it is how we find ourselves, how we know ourselves.
Moana, it was so kind of you to take your time to read this. It amazes me how far a reach we have with our blogs, I bet you feel the same way.
Thanks again.
I am also a witch (Wiccan) and as such am influenced by
Celtic traditions. The Celts had a saying "I'll forgive you when
your head sits on my mantle" I like the Christ's way better.
You're rendered your mother compassionately, but with a clear eye. not an easy thing to do.
Your intro statement is really something to ponder "What a freedom comes of forgiveness! We don’t have to let those who once hurt us suppress our lives, limit our choices or dim the luminous nature of Love that is borne in each of us and seeks to express as us… "
Thanks for sharing this with us
"All that we are is the result of what we have thought; it is founded on our thoughts, it is made up of our thoughts."
Our circumstances are not who we are, unless we think that they are persistently. My childhood merely happened to me. I've had my hands in the clay of my life a long, long time now and find a lot of love and joy in it to be expressed.
Thanks.
I'm so happy for you though
love of New Thought. You...are ten ft tall in my mind and heart.
Yes-- I would take the time to read every word of what you wrote.
And yes, yes, yes..... to your wise counsel.
The pictures were so touching-- and so like a zillion others. No one knows do they-- ever. Why we are to reach out and touch another's
hand-- make a difference if you can...... I always loved that song.
You are the light that many see by. Know that my dear friend.
Colleen
More hugs.
Thank you for sharing your story.
rated
To my mind, among the writings by you that I’ve read, this is some of your best writing. It’s intimate, revealing, but not overdone, and nicely seems to avoid some of the clichéd expressions often associated with this type of self-exploration of the concept of “forgiveness”.
Forgiveness is a concept I think about a lot. There have been times in my life when I have felt the results of revenge against someone, either by my own actions, or as the result of something else unrelated to anything I did, and do not recall a time when that feeling was “good”. As you point out, understanding the underlying motives of another is usually a key to “forgiving” their actions, but I have often found the sense of forgiveness simply through the knowledge that revenge doesn’t feel good to me, which usually allows me to let go of angry feelings of blame more easily.
RATED
I also have great respect reading this for your mate, as I understand given my own experience (As recorded on my blog under the title ON MY WIFE, JOAN) that he must be an extraordinary person as well.
While my wife forgave her parents (not so much her father) I can't say I've been able to do the same. I'd enjoy pissing on their graves to this day with the hope the urine reached the carcass. Yes, I'm not nice, but to those who know of what I speak, I don't think I have to make excuses.
Ben, while I forgave my uncles, I didn't hang out with them. Why would I really? When my one uncle had a daughter, I wrote to him and told him that I had forgiven him but I would rain hell down on him if he ever failed to keep it in his pants around her.
As an oldest child, I was the protector of my siblings when necessary and I would puff up like an Adder and threaten any of them I needed to by the time I was 4'8" and 14 years old. Being smart helped. Awful as some of them were, they knew that I would do exactly what I said I would do, like call the cops or turn them in to the proper authorities. My youngest siblings had it somewhat easier, though things could easily happen when I was away in foster care. I always felt a bit guilty when I wasn't there to defend them and that was something I had to repair in myself.
There are more abused children than most people realize. Generally, I think we try to establish a new normal and seek not to draw attention. I think what I did is common in that way. Thanks for quietly adding your voice Lisa.
Ben, my husband Dan met me after I had done much of the work that cleared this up for me. But I have to say, I am pretty noisy when I disagree, and he didn't run away or stop respecting or loving me when I was not a little wallflower about my own opinions and choices.
He was very kind to my mother and she loved and admired him very much. He made it much easier for me to help her at the end of her life and for that I will be forever grateful.
There is something about vengeance that gets us by the throat and won't let us go. It's like it owns some piece of us and gets in the way for being happy or satisfied with our lives. Even those of us who have been through some hellish stuff deserve to be free of the burden of those circumstances. One of the weirdest aspects of practicing forgiveness is letting go of our efforts to "get even" Nothing that we really want in life is accomplished in that way. The real joys in life are in doing the things that we really want to do as well as we can do them. All that Rambo stuff is crap, it doesn't make us feel better, it makes us feel smaller and meaner and more like the very thing that we thought we were 'righting.' It just isn't an effective way to deal with anger, sorrow and disappointment. Building a bigger source of compassion and a better accomplished person, that is the best revenge. It also gives us back our sense of humor and proportion.
After all, I didn't step on a landmine far from good medical care, I wasn't living in some God forsaken place where I had to hide from the rest of humanity to avoid being stoned. I lived here where we can set things right and build a great life.
It's incredible you were able to escape so completely the impact of this abuse and enter into a fully consummated union. I think that is the exception rather than the rule even if the person is fully committed to the path of recovery.
Washington Irving said "There is in every true woman's heart, a spark of heavenly fire, which lies dormant in the broad daylight of prosperity, but which kindles up and beams and blazes in the dark hour of adversity.”
I think this is possible for all of us.
A strong story, well told
Monte
I would be a big fat jerk if I didn't say how much it means to me that you were here and read these words. I kind of feel like I am 5'2" like the measurement still says when I go and get my physical. I really am, in my heart, the little happy girl on that tricycle up there, taking whomever will come with me along for the ride.
Rated.
that was very helpful to the problems in my life.
I am glad to read this, and it makes a lot of sense of your persona after the hitting noted in your poem. My husband grew up like this as well, but with an alcoholic father.
I have seen people crumble from these circumstances, and others blossom. Obviously, the gift of flowers is the perfect symbol of all that you have grown to be. As a friend once said to me, it is a strange but inspiring thing to find a rose blooming in the mud. (My thought is that mud is a valued source of sustenance regardless of how it appears...)
Thank you, this was a beautiful story of acceptance.
Our stories are similar, and your writing of it is so very good. Honest and direct, self-effacing. It lacks writerly tricks, and is plain poetry, unadorned.
All forgiveness is incomplete, and contingent.
Forgiveness is for ourselves, first, and while we reap the benefits of thus doing a good for others, it is only in limited and usually unsatisfying ways.
My mother destroyed her mother, my Nana, for banal, selfish reasons. My mother turned tricks and stayed away for days at a time when she had 4 kids, teen or younger, at home. We had no money. I forgive her as you did yours, to bring rest and peace to a troubled and compromised woman, a woman of her time, the 50s and 60s.
But I am also at peace with the piece of bitter flint in my heart that is all the choices she made for herself alone, her blind eye, her rationalizations, her thefts and scams, her denial, her terrible, terrible irresponsibility. And the years I spent raising myself, from 11 on.
I understand myself, at a remove, in the same way I understand her, and you understand yours, and so I also forgive myself, for the cold, cold place that is my love, and forgiveness, for my mother.
Thank you for your life, shared. And for your beautiful effort here. You write well.
Thanks so much. I think one of my sisters became like your mother. I don't know if she turned tricks, I don't want to know, but she had four kids who didn't get the mother that they deserved, and that made me cry a lot.
I don't think we can engage in forgetting what happened, there is only the cold comfort of acceptance sometimes, but that allows us to be who we are, and there is joy in that, in rising above those circumstances and choosing to outrun the absence of expectations.
Honestly, a lot of people don't have that and end up being destructive adults. Some do terrible and horrible things to other people or even to themselves because there's no way to get rid of that anger.
I'm now taking a child development course called 'alternatives to violence' and we're learning the horrible and terrible things adults do to children. And I often leave the class stunned and speechless.
Our professor wrote on the whiteboard: Each day one child dies due to physical abuse.
I think your piece really hit home with a lot of us in terms of forgiveness. It's so very, very difficult to do and I'm not going to say that all of should. Forgiving is a very personal decision and I can't never be the one to say to forgive or not to forgive.
But you've chosen to and that really made a difference for you.
Thanks again.
Peaches--Are you my sister???
Bravo, Susanne, for your journey! Isn't it amazing how many people we touch by telling our stories?!
Peace, love and light,
Kelly McMullen Strickland
XOX
Susanne
Thank you again.