Sunday, March 3, 2013

Celebrate Everything!

Is it so hard? We are supposed to find the wonderful things in every day - even if they're small. Waking up. The sun shining. A hot cup of coffee. A snuggle from a pet. A crisp newspaper. And that's just the first 15 minutes.

But it is difficult to notice every tiny thing that crosses our path that should or could make us smile. Sometimes, at the end of a day, we have to really search for it - that thing that uplifted us, even if for just a brief moment.

Children who are abused often retreat into themselves and/or a land of fantasy. The folks at Voices Amplified work tirelessly to help children speak of abuse. It is never easy. Since the maltreatment I suffered as a child was emotional rather than physical, it's even harder to recognize (say, as a five-year-old) that you are being abused. It is simply normal. I can only imagine the sheer pain of children who are physically or sexually targeted. That is why I just completed my application to become a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) for children in the foster care system. I want to help be their voice, especially when they are battling against danger they may not even recognize.

As a child, my outlet was the creative arts. The family members that are still in my life say I do as an adult exactly what I did as a kid - I write and draw pictures. Fancy that ... I write and draw pictures - still. The fact that I could do it for a living was a tremendous gift; so out of pain grew beauty. I am thankful.

When I first started writing my memoir, I was grumbling and griping to a graphic designer friend how hard it was to get started. He sent me this in an e-mail: "One woman. One brain. Two hands. 26 letters." I wrote it on a sticky note and still have that faded scrap of paper near my desk. It always makes me smile. Only 26 letters? I can conquer the alphabet, I thought.

In my area, a woman recently knifed her seven-year-old daughter up to 30 times before slicing her own throat, killing herself. The child survived. Today, it was revealed that many years earlier her sister had shot her own five-year-old son to death and then turned the gun on herself committing suicide. Psychologists trying to explain the very rare phenomenon of a mother taking the life of her own child along with her own say that the perpetrator has a sense of protecting their baby because they don't want to leave them without a mother. It sounds preposterous, doesn't it?

Why Would Mothers Want To Kill Their Children

The final sounding bell in this article, however, is that the survivor - the child - whether it be of attempted murder or abuse - always thinks: "What did I do wrong?" This can not be. I remember trying to be a better daughter; a jester of sorts to cheer up my downtrodden mother, gifting her with all that I had - my stories and my drawings. Even a brief smile from her would please me.

This blog was not supposed to be so dire. I do believe that there is something in each day that reminds us how wonderful and short life can be. So, in the meantime, I have decided to simply celebrate everything! Can you do it, too? Throw a party! Get yourself some pampering. Take a child out for a day and talk to him/her; really have a conversation. It could start with: "What do you see today that is truly beautiful - something that you would like to put in your pocket and keep forever?" 


2 comments:

  1. Amy! Congratulations! We do have commonalities that I am just now discovering! Writing is my passion as well. My voice, my sense of healing, my solace when I'm by myself for too long... The fact that you are well on your way to finishing your memoir speaks volumes along the road to healing and helping others. We can do little about the chronic nature of the disabilities we are given....but we have to make the best of what comes.... You and I are good at "making lemonade" it seems.... I'll be rooting for you with the completion of every page! I know SMM would be very proud of you too!

    Fondly,

    Donna "Ladyjustice"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thank you, Donna, from a place deep within. I look to moving our respective visions forwards and drinking ice cold lemonade with you in Myrtle Beach.

      Delete

Please comment! I'll write about what you'd like. Let me know.