I was in a marriage that was
unpredictably dangerous, as well as mentally debilitating. I married a man just
like my dad. My dad would get drunk and become destructive and smash up the
furniture in the house, the walls, everything thing that got in his way.
I remember one time after he had gotten wasted
and came home late, my mother was ready to leave him. He picked me up by my throat,
suspended in the air against the wall and held me there. My mother began to
cry. He reached in his pocket and pulled out his pocket knife, held it to my
throat. He told my mother if she left him, he would slit my throat.
This was my life at 5 years old. But no
matter what, children always love their
Dads. When I was eight my dad died of an aneurism in front of me and when my mother
was pregnant with my baby sister. I know my sister probably wishes she could
have met him. But I think because she didn’t she grew up happy and she even married
healthy.
My mother never did remarry. I am
starting to think she had a point.
When I met my ex-husband I had two
children that I was raising alone. I was on well-fare and public housing. I struggled
and was barely making it. My exhusband
promised me the world. A week or two later
he convinced me he loved me. Right away he wanted to move in and right away the
craziness began. Eventually, I ended up marrying him because he said, he would kill
himself if I didn’t. He promised that if I married him and had his children he
would change. I married him and instead of this great husband I wanted I got my
dad just in another body this time. My ex took control of my home. He never would
keep a job. He exploited my finances. When he wouldn’t get his way he would
make us pay.
He would
have these fits of rage where he would destroy my home; smashing everything in
sight. Oh,
especially
gifts from my mother and sister. Daniel was verbally and physically abusive.
One time he
kicked me
when I was pregnant with his son. The next day I delivered our son, not knowing
if he
would be
normal. After one of his psychotic fits of rage he’d calm down and he would
always be so
apologetic
and sweet but always claimed he didn’t remember what had happened. He would
have an
anger
outburst then disappear for days. He would never work and every three months
like clockwork
everything
would happen all over again.
After
dealing with this for years, Daniel threw his last fit of rage with me and my
children around; I
called
shelter with nowhere else to go. I wasn’t sure how I would be able to have a
different life or even
if that was
possible. Many times I had made my ex-husband leave but it was understood that
he could
always come
back because I could not afford childcare and a place to live. He knew that I
couldn’t afford
both. So, I
always would have to allow him back into my home. I was so scared. I was so
alone I
didn’t see
away out. I didn’t have any friends that I could talk to. I had his family but
they always
conspired
with him for me to take him back; after all, he watched his mom get beat up by
his dad for
years. She
always stayed!
I swallowed
my pride and went to the shelter. After shelter I went to The Bridge’s
Transitional Housing
Program. As
I quickly bonded with other women there that were in the same situation as me,
I
took
advantage of many of the programs you offered. There I was taught the cycle of
abuse; without
anyone
telling me I saw the whirlwind that this relationship had taken. I began to
understand and
learn how I
had married someone just like my father and if I did not break this cycle now;
my children
were
destined to repeat the pattern that I printed out for myself. I
had to break this cycle. The
Bridge
offered referrals for my children and me. Counseling from certified
professionals that I took
full
advantage of because I needed to completely reprogram my mind—for all this I never
had to pay a
cent.
While
there, I received help from you so I could finish my college education because
you taught me that
being
self-sufficient was another key to breaking hazardous patterns of
relationships. I began studying
Mental
Health and learned so much about drug use and different types of abuse in my
college
courses
that I was taking. People began to see a new me. I was beginning to see a light
at the end of
the tunnel
and after a while, I got a job at a local School District as a Teacher’s Aide.
It was an adaptive
behavior
program where the students were mentally disturbed. The things that I learned
in shelter
and in
college proved to be invaluable. The first year I was an aide our program
became so successful
that two of
the teachers over the next years both got hired at other schools as principals.
My supervisors
were very
impressed with my knowledge on the students’ mental health and the insight I
had
into the
issues in their homes. For the first time in my life my opinions were sought out
and I was listened
to.
I continued
to do to my weekly support groups at the shelter. I also took an assertiveness
class and this
taught me
how to say no to my ex-husband and to others who could drain you not even
knowing it. I took
parenting
classes; every resource I used there again was free.
When I left
the shelter I continued to see my caseworker and stay in close contact with the
shelter because I
I remember
my first paycheck as a teacher—I thought I was rich because my salary had just
tripled. I was so
Recently, I
just wrote my first book which will be out in less than two months and I have
been working on
I will always be a product of God and The Bridge.
Thank you for everything!
Contributed
by Tyra “Deanna” Wilson
Author of “A
Wounded Daughter’s Diary ( Exploring God’s Grace from the Strip Clubs to the
Classroom”
Editor’s
Note: Ms. Wilson is a very striking woman; tall, attractive and
extremely articulate.
She has
expressed a desire to “pay it forward” as a way of repaying those who helped
her in her
time of
need. Ms. Wilson currently works with Bay Area Turning Point, The Bridge and
people
everywhere
who have a desire to change their lives for the better.
If you would like to purchase
Ms. Wilson’s book, visit www.TatePublishing.com—the book is available in
January 2010 for $12 a copy;
proceeds will go to her Mothers’ Raising Children Alone non-profit
organization.