Submitted by rlp on Tue, 03/25/2008 - 11:33.
I have a friend who is 73 years old. He told me that his grandmother ran away from home when she was 16. She walked down a country lane in Tennessee. There was a black car, she later said. A man got out and raped her in the bushes by the side of the road. She stumbled home and told no one for fear that she would get in trouble. But months later her belly began to swell. She told the truth when she had to. Some people believed her. Others didn’t. Nine months later his father was born.
“That was in the year 19 and 8,” he said.
I thought about this for a few moments and felt pretty overwhelmed by the revelation. His life, it seemed, was held together by a ragged thread of evil wound through a series of long shots. Like rolling snake eyes 6 times in a row. Why did she choose that day to leave? Why that hour? Why that lane and not another?
“If she hadn’t run away from home and had that happen, you wouldn’t have been born.”
He snapped his chin down to his chest and bounced it quickly up again. It’s a gesture I’ve seen old men make when something is said that is surely true.
“That’s right,” he said. “That’s exactly right. Not me, not my children, not my 12 grandchildren, nor the 5 great-grand-babies.”
“So...” I left a long pause to soften the question that was coming. “Would you say that you’re glad it happened? I mean, surely you’re glad to be alive.”
“I don’t rightly think it’s a fair question,” he said. “The past is dead and gone and all that pain with it. A pile of manure might be lucky enough to have a flower grow out of it, but that doesn’t change its basic nature.”
I ran the tops of two fingers underneath my chin against the grain of my whiskers. I felt the stubble grab at my skin and heard the rasping sound. It’s something I do when I’m thinking.
“I don’t know how things were for her. My father didn’t tell me much about that. I know it was hard for him. He was either the bastard son of a rapist or the bastard son of a ruined girl. Whatever people thought, none of it was good. And folks wasn’t nearly as kind about them things back then. Sometimes you hear people say how the world has gotten meaner and people are less kind today.”
He shook his head.
“Theys lots of ways that people are much kinder now. About children such as my father, for example. Nobody blames the children anymore, but they used to. Kindly looked at them funny all their life. Most of them would end up leaving those parts and their people and start somewhere fresh. That’s what my daddy did. Brought his mother with him and came to Texas. He got married over in Bastrop. We still got family there. He lived a respectable life. Was a good man. Course, by the time us kids were born, it wasn’t nothin but an old story no one remembered. I only know it cause my daddy told me when I was older. He thought I ought to know it for some reason.”
He pulled a handkerchief out of his back pocket, blew his nose loudly, glanced at what he had deposited into the cloth, then folded it up and put it back in his pocket.
“There ain’t much of it left now. She’s dead. He’s dead. The man with the black car is surely dead. The only thing left is a story in an old man’s mind. And I think I’ll let it die with me. The story is dried up. All the pain is gone. I see no call to tell the children about it. So I think I’ll just take it with me.”
“Only you told me,” I observed. “So now I know it.”
He smiled. “Yeah, but you aren’t family. With you it’s like pushing a caboose down a side track with a dead end in the woods. It’s just a story to you.”
He laughed.
“Just another one of all those stories you got in your head, all that writin you do.”
I smiled and nodded and got to working my fingers under my chin again.
“No sir." he said. "The blood of Jesus and good living covered those sins long ago.”
I nodded very deliberately, the way men do when they agree and there’s nothing left to be said.
It seems to me that every act of evil is a cosmic event, a kind of big bang unto itself. There is the moment of evil, a moment so filled with dark energy and pain that no one can stand to look at it. It explodes and sends its ugliness out in every direction. Sometimes evil begets evil, and sometimes good people snuff it out.
There was a moment in time back in 19 and 8. It was a thing no one wants to look at or remember. A man in a black car grabbed a girl and dragged her into the bushes. There was the reality of his lust and anger. There was the reality of her panicked fear and pathetic cries for help and mercy. No one heard her. Her clothing was torn and her flesh abraded on the rough earth. And God help us all, there was the raw biology of the act itself.
That is a moment that no one wants to see. Everyone turns their face away in horror. It is like an explosion of pain and suffering.
Then the camera of time pulls away from the scene, mercifully we think, and we can look back again. There she is, running down the lane, bloodied and weeping. There she is confessing the truth and falling into her mother’s arms. There are the gossiping neighbors. There is the sorrow and the beauty of his birth. There are the stares and the shunning he was too young to understand. There is his anger and determination when he figured it all out. There they are, packing their things and leaving for Texas.
The camera draws back faster now. We see his joy at meeting a girl who did not know his history. Their courtship, their wedding. His mother weeping with joy and saying to herself, “I endured it for him.” Her death, we hope a gentle one. His children and grandchildren. His aging face and hands. His last telling of the story to his oldest son, bequeathing it because he was not the one to decide when to bury it.
For years the story lived like a wraith in the mind of a happy and good man. His father loved him and taught him, and he made good. And now the story is severed from the family and lives in me. It lives only in these words between you and me with no power to hurt but only to bear witness as a testimony to how things sometimes happen.
For this is the power of evil and the power of goodness and the power of stories and the power of redemption and the power of time.
rlp
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"the blood of Jesus covered
"the blood of Jesus covered those sins a long time ago"
sometimes when people say stuff like that I kinda wince. Im not sure what to make of attonment theology when I hear about from alot of people.
But coming from the mouth of your peaceful old friend...it just feels comforting.
Inner Light
-
Oddly, this post reminded me of my favourite Star Trek episode, titled Inner Light, where the captain (Picard) gets caught up in the beam of an errant satellite and is forced, in his mind, to live out an entire lifetime on the planet of a deceased people which was destroyed by its sun going nova. Their last ditch effort to leave a mark on time was to launch that satellite in the hopes that it would do what it did.
"The only thing left is a story in an old man’s mind."
Poignant and haunting
Gordon, thanks again for the wonderful storytelling. We all have some of this story in our own families, stories that are hard to tell but somehow still necessary to know.
Simon, I also thought of that same Star Trek episode. To this day, when I experience loss, I pick up a tin whistle and play the same tune that Captain Picard played, much like a piper at a funeral. That episode tore my heart out and still does to this day.
It's stories like this old man's that are so vital and that need to be heard. I love, in my ministry, to talk with seniors, to listen to their stories for there is a wealth of wisdom, humor, pain, suffering, strength and all the other qualities that make us human. Many of them have no families left or at all, and so their stories live on in my head as well.
the blood of Jesus
You know, I'm with you. That's one of the main parts of Christian theology I've always had a problem with (and always had trouble preaching). But at the same time I've always been incredibly comforted whenever I sing about it in the old hymns of the faith.
Brian Jones
www.brianjones.com
I wish you'd write my story
I wish you'd write my story for me. You are indeed a very powerful story-teller. Thank you.
Maybe not so trite....
The phrase "God works in mysterious ways" has always seemed incredibly trite to me, but as I get older and, if not wiser per se, perhaps a little bit less un-wise, I realize that it contains a deep truth. Perhaps the deepest: We CANNOT KNOW whether anything is good or bad. Period.
"When you've done things
"When you've done things right, people aren't sure you've even done anything at all"
-God
Here's something I've never
Here's something I've never understood, for 42 years now.
Why do violence and anger need another, overarching name? Why does the word "evil" have to be added? Isn't it as bad as things get when someone kills, tortures, or rapes someone else? What's insufficient about those words?
Every day I look into the
Every day I look into the beautiful eyes of one born of this same horror.
Every day I think of the day when I will have to tell her her story.
Every day I think of the woman who could not bear to raise her.
I know that one day their story will fade too into memories. But that day is a long way away.
For today, there is a lot of healing work to be done. The story repeats all around us and it is very real.
I often wince when I hear
I often wince when I hear people quote Romans 8:28, "All things work together for good, etc"...because it often seems to deny the pain in front of the one doing the quoting. There is a translation that reads, "In the midst of all things, God is still at work for good purposes" which, it seems to me, to come much closer to the heart of this extraordinary story. Thanks Gordon for sharing this gift, for careful writing, for listening to the story in the first place....
Usually I'm with you all the
Usually I'm with you all the way. Your stories are lovely and I'm nodding and agreeing and touched by the way you put things together and tease out a point. But today I'm having a hard time with the story. Maybe it's the snippets of conversation you chose to include. This one in particular left me cringing inside: “If she hadn’t run away from home and had that happen, you wouldn’t have been born.” I can't ever imagine asking the gentleman that question and having him to contemplate whether he's thankful that his existence came out of an incident that caused someone extreme pain and a lifelong scar. If you were talking with his grandmother, would you have asked her whether she was glad she was raped because she got a wonderful son out of it? And the followup question was wince-worthy as well: “Would you say that you’re glad it happened? I mean, surely you’re glad to be alive.” I just don't know what to say--I'm flabbergasted. Sorry, I'll have to write more some other time.
The key here is that this
The key here is that this man and I are dear friends. This actually came out of a long conversation. I just wasn't able to reproduce it all. I agree that such a question out of the blue is pretty harsh. But it wasn't like that. You'll just have to trust me on this.
Plus, this man and I have philosophical conversations like this all the time.
As always, Gordon,
As always, Gordon, wonderful.
Mmm
That's really really good.
"Anarchy wears two faces,
"Anarchy wears two faces, both creator and DESTROYER.
Thus destroyers topple empires; make a canvas of clean rubble where creators can then build a better world.
Rubble, once achieved, makes further ruins' means IRRELEVANT.
Away with our explosives,then!
Away with our destroyers! They have no place within our better world.
But let us raise a toast to all our bombers, all our bastards, most unlovely, and most unforgivable, then meet with them no more."
I used to teach creative and
I used to teach creative and personal writing workshops to survivors of violence. I heard stories everyday that tore at my heart. As the trust and caring in our groups developed, the disclosures became more heartbreaking.
None of these students wanted to be soothed or protected. Matter of fact questions and conversations about their experiences validated their stories. Shying away from the complexity of reality was insulting. Unless the person was in crisis, calm and rational discussion that challenged the writer and listener’s understanding of the world benefited everyone at the table.
Of course, this was all taught to me through the experience of these classes. Originally, I was a person who cringed at asking difficult questions. But that was my fear of being uncomfortable or of “doing the wrong thing.” I had learned to trust that the shared story was a generous and tough gift and not to worry about breaking it.
Ive worked with a lot of
Ive worked with a lot of survivors of violence. There are many paths toward a sense of healing. And there is not one pattern that fits all. But for some there is a moment of deep healing when they can forgive their violator. Not necessarily in the form of reconciliation, most often that would be truly unwise. But it is in that moment when they can say something to the effect of "I really like who I am. The abuse does not define me but if it hadn't happened, if my life had not unfolded in this way then I would not be who I am." It is a similar move as your question “If she hadn’t run away from home and had that happen, you wouldn’t have been born.”
In the presence of that depth of forgiveness I am humbled.
I can't comprehend that.
I can't comprehend that. Maybe no one can until they have to. Of course, in this story it takes two generations. We don't know about the woman who was raped. Nor do we know about her son who bore a lot of scars from it. But her grandson wasn't really touched by it. So even without trying, time and generations set things right.
Of course many times people become even more victimized and become perpetrators themselves. And the evil grows. But even if it grows for generations, all it takes is one person to stop passing it on.
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