For many years, I would have told you that yes, there was drinking in my house while I was growing up, but I got out just fine, and it didn’t really affect me. Then when I was in my early ‘30s, I started to see signs that such was not the case.
I worked for a time with a prison ministry, where we would go into Texas prison units and spend most of a weekend talking with the inmates. Something odd happened – the inmates treated me with a certain respect and awareness that I couldn’t understand. I realized later that they could tell I was intimately acquainted with violence. I had that killer look.
My three sisters all married violent alcoholics.
Somehow I knew I carried a time bomb in me, but I couldn’t identify what it was. I felt tightly wrapped, like I would explode if I ever let go.
One time I became suicidal. I also carried around a darkness in my soul that I could not explain.
Finally it all broke through and I began attending meetings for people who had grown up around alcoholism. I started to get to the bottom of how much alcoholism had affected my life. I was in so much pain I went to the first meeting on my birthday. I began to remember incidents from my childhood – an escalating level of violence from my Dad. I watched the movies “Platoon” and “Full Metal Jacket,” because something about them felt familiar.
By 1987, when the events in my book “Freedom’s Just Another Word” were taking place, my world was falling apart. I had sabotaged my successful career for no reason I could explain. I had realized I was walking around with most of the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder – yet I had no traumatic event I could point to. I had an incident where I was suicidal, and got closer than I ever had – an alarming wakeup call.
Then my Dad died. He had been sober and in recovery for 20 years, but something still plagued him. It was my belief he was still suffering because he was eating his anger. He had his first heart attack when he was 44, open heart surgery at 47, a colostomy at 51, and died of a stroke at 59. I knew if I didn’t get to the bottom of what plagued me, I was headed down the same road.
In an incredible and I believe spiritually guided sequence of events, I remembered the most violent incident with my Dad – which had happened on my birthday. It involved guns, and violence, and imminent threats of death. Suddenly the current events of my world began to fall into place and make sense. Yet in a way, it was only the beginning – I knew what had happened, but now what to do about it? Several weeks later, I had a dream.
Excerpt from Freedom’s Just Another Word:
I dreamed I was inside a house, and watching it for someone—I wasn’t sure who. It was a long, low rambling house away from other houses, very isolated. There was a pet tiger in the house. The owner, an unidentified male, said the tiger wouldn’t bite, but the tiger became startled and started chewing my arm. I would feel the size of his teeth, the strength of his jaw. I was very scared. The owner left, and put me in charge of the house, and of the tiger.
Suddenly, Rebecca was there, a woman I knew from ACA. I felt like she was a stranger—like she didn’t know who I was any longer. I invited her into the house, and she didn’t know her way around. I showed her to the bathroom. Suddenly I remembered that strangers startled the tiger. Then the tiger was there and he was chewing on my arm, and I feared he wouldn’t stop until he ate me. And then I knew—the tiger was my rage.
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The tiger dream disturbed me deeply, and I knew that I had a deep rage within me that would eventually destroy me. I feared it so much that I buried it deeply and only rarely did it surface enough to confirm that it was there. But I could tell. It was the legacy of anger my Dad left me. Threatening to devour all who entered—and me. Uncontrollable. I knew then that I was dangerous—to myself and others.
So there it was – the time bomb that had to be defused! It was no longer about my Dad – it was about me; and it was something that was my responsibility to deal with. Working through that anger and deep rage became my commitment over the next several years. I got backed into a corner where my anger had to be dealt with (the topic of a future book, “The Tiger Unveiled”) and it became a life or death issue for me – there was still the specter of my Dad’s early death, and I knew it was still dangerously close for me. I made a commitment and signed it in front of witnesses – an Anger Contract. In it I stated how I would and would not express my anger. I committed to work on releasing that anger in safe ways, while restricting myself so that I would not hurt anyone while I was so angry.
I did so, and eventually bled off the anger, to the point where I could heal and be at peace with my Dad. I had come to realize that he had been blacked out drunk when the violence occurred, and he didn’t know any more than I did what had happened between us. We were both harmed by the effects of the alcoholism. It put a wall between us we never could understand in his lifetime. I wrote a short work called “A Conversation With Dad,” an imagined talk where we made peace with each other. It worked!
Yet on the other side of the scale from the alcoholism and violence, it was a powerful symbolism for me to realize that the Dad who abused me when he was drinking was the same Dad who illuminated my path to healing and recovery by his example of perseverance in sobriety.
I feel very blessed!
I checked out the magazine with your article. Wow! You did a great job. Rage can destroy so many lives.
I am so glad that you got to see your dad in recovery for 20 years before he died. That is a blessing. My dad died as an active alcoholic. His death certificate basically says that he died from alcohol and smoking cigarettes. I told him that I forgave him a year and a half before he died. He died alone living on the side of a small country road in southern Arkansas in an old school bus that someone had converted to live in. He had a friend, probably also an alcoholic, nearby living in another old bus. He was the one to find my dad after he died. It took about a week to finally notify family. Someone knew who my mother-in-law was and contacted her. She called me and one of my dad’s younger sisters.
Thanks for the compliments on the magazine article. It just fell out in about half an hour, so I guess it was time for it to be written! Yes, rage can have devastating effects! That’s why when Cyrus focused on the tiger dream in the radio interview, and tied it to current events (it was right after Fort Hood) it was so amazing!
That is so sad about your Dad, but it can be a sad ending like that unfortunately all too often! I had a friend who died of alcoholism while living in one of the wealthiest areas of Fort Worth – so it can happen without regard to economic circumstances! And one of my sisters died of liver failure due to cirrhosis, living in almost complete poverty! It can be very sad sometimes! Your Dad’s circumstances were very lonely and unfortunate!
It’s a blessing that you got to tell your Dad you forgave him before he passed!
Warmly,
Dan
I’m always awed by the cathartic power of art. Why is it that sometimes just writing something down can provide such a powerful release? Inspiring story!
Yes, K. M., this was a cathartic post – about how much healing I have had along the road to healing my anger! Thank you for your very kind words!
Dan, I am almost finished with your book. It has brought up so many feelings and memories for me that it is going to be awhile before I can process it all. The more that I learn about you and your journey, the more connected I feel. I wasn’t going to say anything until I finished the book but there is just so much going on inside of me right now and writing is my way of getting it out.
I didn’t catch that you showed Rebecca the bathroom in the dream house when I read the story here. It jumped out at me in the book. Here is what I got intuitively and from my little bit of knowledge from a dream class I took a few years ago. The bathroom has to do with internal plumbing—yours. It is another way of letting you know that the rage was hurting you. It is a really good validation of what you intuitively felt. If you didn’t let go of the rage, as in flushing it out of your body, it would do you harm. Your male half (you) and your female half (Rebecca) are both threatened with the harm from the tiger (your rage and your dad’s rage). Rebecca represents the poet and the writer in you that your dad tried to destroy. In the dream, you wanted to protect Rebecca, your feminine, creative side from the rage. You don’t want to let the tiger destroy your creativity. The tiger bit your arm, not Rebecca’s so it was attacking the male side of you. The male side of you carries your fears such as your fear of your rage.
I have to ask which arm were you bitten on, left or right? The left side represents either male or female and the right side represents the other. I always have to ask one of my friends which side is which. I never remember.
We are going to Louisiana for Daniel to work and me to spend some time with his mother for Easter. I won’t be home until sometime Monday. I am taking your book and a notebook for writing in as more comes up for me. I will be home until Saturday evening so depending upon how much time I have tomorrow, you may get more comments or not.
You are so very brave to do all of the hard work that you have done on your issues. Your book is going to cause me to go back and peel some more layers off of some of my own issues. I am in awe of the healing that you have done. I am going to have to start using my sponsor more to do some more intense work of my own that I have been afraid of doing by myself. You are truly blessed by the ACA friends that you have. I haven’t had that for a very long time.
Patricia – WOW! What great feedback and insight on my book! I really appreciate it! I’m glad reading it has allowed you to feel more connected with me! I didn’t even register the part about the bathroom in the dream, and that is amazing – yes, letting me know that the rage was hurting me. The tiger was biting me on the right arm, and we’ll have to see what that means!
Have fun in Louisiana, and we’ll talk more soon. Thank you for honoring my bravery in working on my issues! Yes, I am blessed by my ACA friends. Just got off the phone with Carl a minute ago. I’ll be interested to hear how you peel more layers off your own issues! It will be nice to share the journey! 🙂
Dan, I just posted my book review of Freedom’s Just Another Word on my blog at the following link:
http://patriciasingleton.blogspot.com/2010/04/freedoms-just-another-word-book-review.html
I hope you like it. Let me know what you think. I also had a new dream come up over the weekend I believe from the stuff that your book stirred up for me. My next article will be about that dream.
Please keep writing.
Patricia – Oh, this is wonderful! Thank you so much for your kind and great review! I’m going to be sharing it on Twitter and FB! I do like it – a lot! If you wouldn’t mind – since I’m self published, the only reviews I get are those from readers on Amazon! If you could post this on there, that would be super appreciated! 🙂
Amazon says my review of your book should be posted in the next 48 hours. I used bits and pieces of my blog article book review for the Amazon.com one. I also put my post on FB and Twitter.
Thanks Patricia! I can already see the review on Amazon, for some reason! Wonderful! I do so appreciate it!
Dan, thank you for this post. I, too, have struggled with that rage that others who are either experienced with or prone to violence see and respect. I’ve survived physical threats and after reading your post I am seeing how the alcoholism in my family played a much bigger role than I previously thought. How the addictive personalities created an atmosphere growing up that allowed me to grow with two persons in one, or so it seems, because when I feel the rage rising it becomes a whole other creature. I’m getting better, working through the healing path, but I am understanding I need some help in this area. I need someone who understands – maybe I can let the last secrets out? Great post, you inspire and encourage me! Bless you my friend.
Wow, Shanyn! I’m so glad you read this post, and stopped by to comment. I see so many parallels to my own experience. I know what you mean about “that rage that those who are experienced with violence see and respect.” I was involved with a prison ministry before my healing path, and didn’t understand why the inmates accorded me such respect – they could see my intimate acquaintance with violence!
It took me a while – like for you – to see how the alcoholism had a major role in how I grew up and the person I had become. Yes, I understand “two persons in one.” If you get a moment, check out a post on this blog called “Talk of Tigers/The Tiger Unveiled.” That’s how I characterized my rage, and how devastating and unfeeling it could be – unfeeling like a totally different person.
I think it’s wonderful that you’re talking about getting the last secrets out – wonderful part of the healing process for me to acknowledge the violence, even to the point of writing a memoir about it. It took me a long time to appreciate how healing that was! The tiger wasn’t me – it was my legacy and response from growing up victimized by violence! Keep me posted as you move along your healing path! 🙂
Dan