Authors: Dave Pelzer
What are PCs? I inquired.
Penal codes. Thats why we couldnt remove your brothers or even slap your mother on the wrist with a warning. So in essence, as you say, she got off scot-free. On the flip side, because of cases like yours, there are now laws on reporting abuse, intervention, the works. A lot has happened in the last six years since youve been placed. Nowadays your mother would be hooked, booked, cuffed, and stuffed, if you get my meaning, Gordon had stressed.
Digging further through the file, reading a rare interview Mother had given before my court hearing, I came across an official form stating one of the reasons she may have been distraught was she suspected her husband was having an affair with a woman who was one of Mothers closest friends. Her defense also included how difficult it was for her to keep up with the housework while being left alone to raise
four
boys the report corrected that it was
five
while she worried sick when her husband was either at work or God knows where, whenever Father disappeared for days at a time drinking with buddies from work. Being alone with no one to console her might have, Mother claimed in the report, made her tip the bottle and fly off the handle a little more than she normally would.
As I rubbed the dried sweat from my forehead, I still could not fathom even now as an adult, over eight years after reading the documents, that my father had had an affair. As a mature person, I fully understood that anyone was capable of anything. So, as Mother continued to play the role as the helpless victim in her never ending life tragedy, I felt the affair accusation was another sinister excuse she had strung out for so many years.
You still have no idea of what Ive been put through, Mother repeated, but this time with reddened eyes. You think you had it bad? Well, she huffed, back in my day, my mother, that person youre staying with, well
when I was a girl, shed
shed lock me in a closet for hours at a time. She did! She most certainly did! Mother announced with a burst of tears. And sometimes she wouldnt feed me
for days. Back then it wasnt like today, when children at school have a lunch program. And if that werent enough, not one day, a single solitary day, passed that my mother didnt berate me, boss me around, telling me what to do and when to do it; what friends I could and couldnt have over for visits. My mother! she bellowed. My own mother! Can you imagine!
With my chin resting on my hand, I nodded my head. I could in fact understand. As Mother cried, she appeared lost in time, reliving her mistreatment at the hands of my grandmother. I could not help but think
if
what Mother said was true, she had in turn done the exact same things to me, but for far longer durations and in such obsessive, vindictive ways.
As much as I wanted to believe Mothers sobbing was partly show, in an odd way her confession did make perfect sense. From what I had learned, people like Mother abused their children in the same manner they were abused; thus becoming a product of their environment.
But only a few years ago, during the summer of 1983, when I had visited Grandmother, she steadfastly maintained that she had
not
mistreated Mother in any way as a child.
Could it be,
I thought,
by Grandmothers or even societys standard during her time, it was not abuse but no more than stern discipline?
Unless, I wondered, Mother was devious enough to concoct a story about her childhood in order to take the blame off her, transfer it to her mother, somehow freeing Mother from any accountability?
You know, I gently inserted, I spoke to Grandma and
well, Im not pointing fingers
but she was adamant that she never, under any circumstances, abused you.
Well, Mother coughed as she rolled her eyes, look at the source. You know how she is. Who are you going to believe?
The source, I repeated to myself. Look at the source. At that moment in time I wasnt sure who did what to whom and what for. Okay, I thought, maybe Grandmother was overbearing. When her husband passed away, leaving her to raise two children in the middle of a depression, Grandmother had to be stern. As a young woman, Mother might have craved her independence, tried to get out from under Grandmothers ruling thumb, then somewhere down the road became addicted to booze, got married, had kids, while still carrying some resentment
that ate at the core of her soul. With my fingers rubbing my temples, I was totally confused. But, I reflected, in the final analysis did it truly matter? My only concerns were that I make every day count, while trying to be the best person I could possibly be, and to make certain that my son would never be exposed to anything but a safe and loving setting. Period.
Imagining my son, Stephen, with his bright blond hair and giggling smile, made me want to recapture the essence of Mommy I had always longed for. I wanted to fall on my knees, wrap my arms around Mothers waist, as if she still held a lifeline to my soul. And by my openly granting her amnesty, it would free me from being tied to my past and allow me to close that part of my life once and for all.
I stopped myself before I gave in to my foolish emotions that I always seemed to wear on my sleeves. For years I had felt I was either overly proving myself or giving myself away in the vain hope that someone would like me. As if the acceptance of other people were going to make all the difference.
Although I harbored no hate or ill feelings against Mother, breathing in the fumes from her lair, while surrounded by objects from our mutual past, made me feel nothing but pity for the person who was once my mommy.
Abruptly I stood up. Thank you for allowing me to visit
Mrs Pelzer.
Mothers facial expression changed, as if she were deeply saddened. Come on now, she said, smiling, for old times sake, call me
call me Mom, she nearly pleaded.
I meant no disrespect, but I had to give myself some shield of protection. All I could do was extend my hand repeating, Thank you, thank you for your time.
Please? Mother begged while she took my hand, but this time with a hint of
Mommys
voice from years ago. I held my breath. I could feel the fingers from my left hand shake as I started to become light-headed. Part of me so desperately wanted to collapse in her arms, peer into her eyes, and hug her as if our lives depended on it. A moment later, although there was only an arms length between us, I knew Mother and I were worlds apart.
With a slight nod of her head, she let go of my hand. Mother understood. And yet I couldnt move. If this means anything, the one thing I can give you is this: You, I said, pointing, with tears seeping from my eyes, you made me strong. Because of
you made me want it more.
Mother cocked her head to the side. By her expression, I knew I had hit a raw nerve. Mother sucked in a deep breath, and I could feel the pressure build inside me. But a second later she let it pass. With the slightest nod, she understood my compliment.
As I walked down the stairs leading to the door, Mother burst out, David! With my hand on the doorknob I spun around. Yes?
Do you love your son? she asked.
Feeling choked up while a dam of pressure built up from behind my eyes, I stated, Yes! With every fiber of my being!
Just remember, Mother cried, at one time I did
I loved mine, too.
In the car I couldnt stop myself from shaking. A bone-chilling sensation crept up my spine. Once away from Mothers house, I pulled the car to the curb, opened the door, and threw up.
Not a single day passed since my visit with Mother that I did not think about her. Whenever I found myself alone, my thoughts always turned to her. Usually I ended up wondering whether if someone had stepped in early enough to actually dig at the root of the problem, then maybe things wouldnt have ended as they did. As Stephen grew from a toddler to a young boy before my eyes, I became haunted by Mothers condition. Part of me felt torn between the life I had with my son and the darkness of Mothers jail, as if someday, without warning, I could join her world. As if no matter what I did, no matter how hard I tried, I was destined to become like her. I felt in order to protect Stephen, I had to be a better person. I had to do more.
In a sense, Stephen was slowly becoming not only my outlet but my savior. When not at work, Id squeeze in every minute I could to be with my son. Rushing home after a flight, Id strip off my sticky flight suit, shower, then race outside to watch Stephen splash in his tiny play pool. When he wasnt playing in the water, hed play baseball. Dressed in his brightly colored shorts, tank top, and no shoes, Stephen would clutch his oversized plastic red Bam Bam bat and cry out that it was time for brasebrall. Since I had never played ball or any other games with my father, I was in complete awe of the smallest thing Stephen and I did together. Once, as the sun was setting, with Patsy across the street gabbing with her friends, I pitched a slow underhand ball to Stephen. He whacked the ball from the middle of our yard and across the street, zooming over Patsys head and landing a few feet behind her. As Stephen ran in quasi circles, with his hand smacking the tree, the bumper of our car, or anything that he believed resembled a base, I hollered to tell Patsy of Stephens accomplishment.
Since Patsy had seemingly missed Stephens monster hit, I sprinted across the street to tell her and to pick up the ball. As I reached the sidewalk where Patsy stood, one of her friends, Debbie, grabbed her own toddler by the arm and yanked the girl toward her. Put the ball down, its not yours! You stupid little shit! Youd better listen up or Ill whack ya till ya do!
Bending down, I thanked the little girl, Katie, as she dropped the ball into my hand. I could see her holding back tears. I stroked her head, turned up to Debbie, and said, Katies a real cutie! Debbie gave me a hostile look before huffing at me, then at Patsy. Maintaining my stance, without pushing too far, all I could do was smile at Katie, stroll back to Stephen, and take him inside.
Later that night in bed, the incident with Katie continued to gnaw at me. For months I had heard Debbie lash out at Katie and then the sound of Katies crying. At times when I played outside with Stephen, Id catch glimpses of Debbie, between her chain-smoking puffs, screeching obscenities at Katie while the girl played. Reminding me of myself as a child, Katie always responded by slumping her shoulders. But whenever Stephen played with Katie, Debbie seemed overly kind. When I brought up the subject to Patsy, she agreed about Debbies behavior, but brushed it off by saying, Debbies just a loud person. Since my upcoming deployment to Japan was only days away, I pleaded with Patsy to keep an eye out for Katie.
As much as my heart went out to little Katie, my mind was on my lengthy trip. As always, the evening prior to leaving, after packing, I sat down with Patsy to ensure all the bills were taken care of and she had enough money left over for anything extra. Saving the best for last, moments before heading out the door, Id cradle Stephen in my arms while rocking him to sleep from the music of my stereo.
I didnt give Katie any thought until over six weeks later, when I flew back home from Japan. While scanning a newspaper I came across an article about a stepfather who had accidentally murdered a boy, then buried the body. Years later when the family moved, both the stepfather and his wife dug up the remains before placing the child in the trunk of the car. In court the mans defense was not only did he have a problem with drugs and his temper, but
he
was a victim of abuse at the hands of his father. I muttered out loud, Can you believe this? This guys getting ten years for offing his kid, which means hell be out in
five, maybe six years for good behavior
cause he was abused? Man!
Standing beside me, a senior officer from my squadron overheard my outburst. After striking up a conversation about the article, Major Wilson slid closer, telling me his wife volunteered with kids who had been abused and were now in foster care. These kids come from scummy backgrounds. You wouldnt believe the stories my wife tells me. I gotta tell ya, its heartbreaking. Its obvious you dont hail from that arena, but if you ever get a chance, maybe you could do something talk to the kids, make em laugh, whatever. The smallest thing would mean the world to them. Patting my shoulder, Major Wilson added, These kids, they have nothing. You, David, could make a difference.
Before Major Wilson had even finished, I had already made up my mind. In the last several months it seemed that every day I either read, watched on television, or saw firsthand from my neighbor something that related to child abuse, as if there were a sudden outbreak of children being brutalized. Since Stephens birth I had become more sensitive and aware, but as Major Wilson spoke I realized the subject matter had always swirled around me, but I had conveniently shut my eyes. Yeah, Major, I could do something, I said, committing myself. I can imagine what its like
for them. Besides, I said to myself, Its time. Its about time.
Within a period of a few months, before Stephens third birthday, I found myself volunteering for practically anything throughout the state of California that had to do with kids who came from troubled backgrounds. I began by speaking to older teenagers in foster care about not becoming swallowed up by their negative past, while praising them for overcoming their situations by their own determination. And if you can do that as a kid, without any help, without a college degree, without any training, coaching, or guidance, Id ask them, what on earth could you now, as a
young adult,
not possibly achieve? A few times a tough-acting teen would interrupt, asking, Hey, man, what do you know? You aint one of us. Man, yous a fly boy, what do you know? I stopped for a moment to formulate my reply. All right, I have no right to tell you what to do. I may not know exactly what every one of you has gone through, but I do know whats its like to walk a few miles in your shoes. So in order to qualify my message, I felt I had to reveal parts of my childhood. I felt I owed them that much. And whenever I gave an illustration, I always told the audience what I had learned from the situation that somehow made me a stronger, better person. I had no need for bells and whistles or any other hype. I always spoke from my heart, treating every group like young adults instead of children. I always gave them total respect while challenging them to better themselves. My premise was never one of being a victim or exposing a dark secret for sympathy, but one of resilience.