Tuesday, May 08, 2018

A CRY FOR HELP

Each summer during my mother's vacation from work my family would go stay at my Aunt Leah's camp on Eddington Pond. My family wasn't fortunate enough to own a camp so we had to rely on her generosity. As I got older, my brothers stopped going to camp and opted to stay home so they could have legendary parties. While the cat's away the mice will play and play my brothers did!

I hadn't reached the "I don't want to go to camp" stage yet. The highlight of my days at camp as I got older were the boys who had a camp next door. As with any 13 almost 14 year old girl, I immediately developed a crush on one of the boys named Jimmy. I've always had a run of bad luck with guys with that name, but I finally learnt my lesson after marrying one.  This "ginger" Jimmy gave me my first real taste of what rejection felt like. How humiliating it is to feel like the ugly duckling and the odd man out. I hated feeling not good enough. I hated being me. Why couldn't I have been born a small, dainty beauty instead of a lanky-legged, awkward ugly duckling? 

I've always had self-destructive tendencies as far back as I can remember. Although I've only halfheartedly tried the big "S" a few times, I now wonder what was my actual goal when I downed a whole bottle of aspirin chased by a massive amount of straight whisky. Did I have any idea that it could have killed me? More importantly, was I disappointed when it didn't kill me? 

My mother brought a whole gallon of Canadian Club whisky to camp that summer and now I wonder why she did that. My mother wasn't a drinker. Did she have plans of entertaining after the children were tucked snugly into bed in the loft overlooking the pond? If so, I never saw any evidence of it. Were my actions a cry for help or was I just looking for the attention I obviously wasn't getting? So many questions in hindsight, but never any beforehand.

After going on a very animated teenage tirade that probably resembled the Tasmanian Devil going after Bugs Bunny and ingesting the only things available to me at the time...a bottle of aspirin and whisky, I remember continually vomiting until all I could do is dry heave and heave and heave. At that point the desire to die was more than just a fleeting impulse. I felt so bad, dying would have been a welcome relief. The next morning when asked about my "illness" I passed off what was wrong with me as being some type of intestinal ailment when in reality I probably should have been in the hospital. 

It always amazed me how strong my mother's sense of denial was. She was a nurse and never "saw" all the classic signs I exhibited of a teenager in crisis. All my stunts went unnoticed until I eventually overdosed on barbiturates at school less than two years later and was rushed to the ER. Since she worked at that hospital, it was out of the question for me to try to cover up that one. Oops! I got too high and forgot how many pills I had taken! Actually, that was the truth. In those days, I ate pills like candy. If 3 were good, 6 or more were spectacular. Who knew how many drugs I had in my system at any given time? Like an alcoholic, one could never be too high unless it resulted in being unconscious or comatose. Oh, what a wonderful gene pool from which I come!

My ears rang so loudly for the better part of a week that I could hardly hear anything, but the ringing. I felt like I had a severe case of the flu. I hurt all over and I couldn't keep anything in my stomach for several days. My best friend, Margie witnessed my descent into a dark, dangerous place. She had accompanied me to camp that summer and fretted over me. When I look back, I wonder how close she came to ratting me out. It must have been difficult for her to watch me be in so much pain and to self-destruct without saying a word. How frightened must she have been for my well-being and ultimate survival. (I'm sorry for doing that to you, Margie! I'm sorry for doing that to myself.) 

Now, I look back and wonder where my mother was during all my brouhahas and why she had left Margie and I unattended that evening out in the boondocks in a place without a phone. The unattended theme carried through the next summer as well. By that time, I had a boyfriend (BTW, his name was not Jimmy) and that boyfriend was allowed to come stay at camp with me. Oh, what a summer that was! Skinny-dipping, frolicking in the summer sun and lazy nights and early mornings spent listening to the loons echo their cry across the pond while wrapped in each other's arms. For awhile, I got the attention I needed and wanted and then poof! It was gone and so was I. I stayed "gone" for quite a long time until I eventually allowed myself to start healing, but to this day, just a faint aroma of whisky still makes me nauseous.

12 comments:

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    1. Yes they do and no one should overlook anyone who is in obvious distress. Too many kids are just labeled "bad kids" and nothing is done to help them. They didn't start life being bad. They got that way due to the things they experienced. Sometimes too much is really too much!

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    1. Hmmmmm! You deleted your comment here. Oh, I wonder what you were going to write.

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  3. A lot of typos and stupidity.

    Actually, I simply wondered if most of errant behavior starts out as a need to be seen and noticed. Most parents who work have a hard enough time spending time away from the family without children acting up but, truly, don't children just want to spend more time with their parents? If they don't get it maybe that's how it begins.

    Four kids in my own family. Both parents worked. What we wanted more than anything was something we never got...time. Especially, time alone.

    I know that own behavior manifested itself in ways I didn't understand until I was grown.

    My smart mouth was my own worst enemy, but it got me noticed and the parents had no choice but to deal with me. I believe now that some sick need in me knew exactly what I was doing to make them SEE me. I wasn't mature enough to realize that I went about it the wrong way. I could have avoided a lot of punishment if I had learned to play the game.

    Anyway, I love and hate it when you make me think, dammit!

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    1. I think you're right on in your thinking. You had a smart mouth? Really? I never would have guessed. Thinking is a good thing, so deal with it! :)

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  4. I would have given anything to be left alone by parents. My mother was up in my business nonstop. She was over zealous and abusive about it too.

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    1. I probably could have benefited from my parental attention when I was little but by the time I got to be about 11 or 12, I didn't want or need it. At that point, it just wouldn't have mattered much.

      I'm sorry you bore the brunt of abuse. That sort of stuff really sticks with you!

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  5. Actually, what I meant was we wanted to spend time alone with the parents. In my particular case, I would have loved that to be only my mother. I was deathly afraid of my dad. Now that I'm approaching old fart-hood I believe I would enjoy being left alone by everyone.

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    1. I wasn't fearful of either one of my parents. My father was just the man who lived underneath the same roof as me. The discipline fell on my mother and she could be a real bitch at times. I won't say any of us deserved it because I don't think anyone deserves to grow up being physically and/or mentally abused for any reason. Yes, I believe in discipline, but not in torture. I also don't think anyone should grow up living in fear of their parents. WTF is that supposed to do? All it does is eventually make kids rebel and act out. I could go on, but I won't right now. Perhaps in some post sometime in the future I'll return to this topic.

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  6. Stop, stop, stop, do not ever apologize. I was just a kid myself and had no idea what to do, I just wanted to be your friend which makes me wonder if I truly was YOUR friend why didn't I say something! So you see I should apologize to you. I m sorry you was hurting and I failed you. Weird because I wanted to be just like you. Bold and brave!

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    1. Let's just agree that we both were just clueless kids. You wanted to be just like me? Reckless and misguided? lol

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