Tag: Trauma

  • Innocence Lost

    Innocence Lost

    There is no art without staggering emotion: Rage, Love, Fear, Joy, Pain, Heartbreak, Loss. Emotions that will bring you to your knees, all but break you. I’ve never been able to write well without giving too much of myself away. It’s uncomfortable. It’s vulnerable. I delete it. It’s too much. This time I did not. This time I turned it in. I got a B.

    I wrote this story about 15 years ago, just about the time I had my daughter. I was a much heavier-handed writer back then. I had no grasp of the subtle. I was still processing a lot. I wanted to find meaning in my experiences, or maybe find a reason in them, or at least explore who I wanted to be instead of simply living with the coward I actually am.

    The assignment was simple, write a story. That’s it. The class would read it and the author would make edits based on their critiques. The thing is, there is no story without a change, a growth in character. You, the author, had to clearly demonstrate this change. That was the hard part since your story could only be a few pages.

    I was in my third semester of German and learning about the history and culture. I was listening to German music and watching movies with English subtitles. I was definitely enthusiastic but not very good at picking up the language. I mean, I was three semesters in and all I could confidently say was, “Sagen Sie das auf Englisch bitte,” which I am not positive is correct. So, I set my story during the fall of Berlin in WWII. Because that seemed reasonable for someone who was excelling in the class, obviously.

    I thought I was writing a story about the fall from childhood, a loss of innocence. But I wasn’t. I thought I was writing a story about a woman reflecting on a traumatic experience from her past. But that wasn’t it. Looking back on it from this far removed, I wrote a story about the child I was, the moment that childhood died. And also the woman I wished I had been. A woman who had made a choice. Who didn’t freeze. Who faced her fate unwaveringly. Afraid, but resolved. The woman I would be if ever I were in the same position again.

    The Fallen

    You see, friend, that may be the end of the story, but it wasn’t the end. Momma didn’t die. She got up and she soldiered on. Bent? Yes. Broken? No. Momma was not a victim. She chose her fate. She could have fought. She could have died. Instead she chose to live. Live with the trauma, with the pain, with the memories. Live another day. With hope or without, it didn’t matter. Just Live.

    I was as much Momma as I was the child and the woman reflecting on her life. Of course, I wasn’t even alive during WWII so this story is completely fiction. The experiences of these characters are not my own. However, at the remove of these many years, I realize how much of myself, my heart, my emotions I put into this story.

    Life is precious and we have so little time. Survival is paramount. You have to grasp every moment, cherish every breath. “Rage, rage against the dying of the light.” When I wrote this story, I didn’t believe that. I thought there were worse things than death. I hated living in fear. I hated myself for not fighting, for being too afraid to fight. I blamed myself. I hadn’t come through to the other side.