Read Love Rewards The Brave Online
Authors: Anya Monroe
166.
Walking into that room
BoomBoomBoom
the noise going heavy on the bass
trying to find the right place
to shake.
Shake me.
Because I should have waited for that
car ride pep talk
until I got backstage
because this place is packed
and it’s already pulsing
BoomBoomBoom
goes my heart.
I gravitate to the desk
sign-in sheet before me
name tag, number, roll call
ready
set
go.
I am #22 out of 24.
So many performers before
me.
Ms. Francine and the rest of my
motley crew is busy finding seats.
I’ll be sitting in the back
with the rest of the teens
who are waiting for their shot in the limelight.
Shot in the dark.
The other performers
offer their hands for me to shake
repeating names
repeating jokes
talking about nerves
anxiety
times they competed before
they all seem so far
ahead of me.
“Louisa,” I say.
They smile and nod.
“No, this is my first time. Have you done this before?” I ask.
They answer:
My third time
My fourth
I’m on a team at school
A club
I went to summer camp
My mom knew this guy who helped me out
Iamalloftheeabove.
But with that they also say:
I love that dress
I’m so freaking out right now
Even if I don’t win, I’m taking that class over summer break
I made my mom promise not to take my picture
Did you see that video of that one performance on YouTube?
And I feel that
that feeling
I had when I saw Margot with her friends
at the club
when she performed.
A camaraderie
a sense of in-it-together-artists-forever
spirit that took away the competition
who is the best vibe
and replaced it with an
I-believe-in-you-even-though-I-don’t-know-you
kind of high.
I’m smiling away my nerves and I’m
looking all around.
And for the first time in my life
I don’t want my eyes to face
the ground because
I-don’t-want-to-miss-a-thing.
When did full on
contact
sports start to
feel
so. damned. good?
167.
“Ladies and Gentlemen, welcome to the Annual Young
Poet’s Slam! The students here tonight are thirteen to seventeen years old. For some, this is the first time on stage and some have been practicing for years. We have twenty four performances tonight along with a lovely panel of judges.”
The emcee motions to the table
of five adults, none I’ve ever seen
sitting side-by-side
waiting to
watch us
spill our guts.
The house is full tonight
there’s a buzz in the air.
“Without further ado, I would like to welcome our first act of the evening, Abdul Jamon!”
The room claps
loudly as can be
and nothing’s even started yet.
God.
I hope they’ll clap for me.
168.
The competition starts
off with a bang.
These people are good.
Like
good:
#5…A silvery girl
with white hair that glows under the lights
on stage.
She barely whispers when she speaks
yet her voice commands the room
and her words reflect the
feelings she felt
the day her parents divorced
the day her world fell.
How she thought life was over,
but now
three years later, she sees that they
(her parents)
are finally happy.
And so is she.
#12…He stood over six feet tall
his smile revealing the moment
on his face
when he was most happy:
the day he got his driver’s license.
Speaking in simple terms he
explained how his life changed that day
because he was
for the first time ever
free to be
sixteen.
#18…The room was cracking up from the first
line until the last.
He was honest –– brutally so ––
about his first job ever
at McDonalds.
He compared the first shift
to when he goes shit.
Really crappy.
He ended and
they
we
clapped wildly as he took his bow.
#22…Me!
169.
Breathe, Louisa, breathe.
First things first
I move the mic a little lower
glance over my shoulder
wanting to look anywhere but
out.
Somebody shouts
in the crowd
my guess is Markus.
Brushing aside pieces of my hair
I push away my fear.
Benji’s words echo inside:
“I wish I’d said something sooner. Told the truth sooner. But I was scared. I’m sick of being scared.”
I’m so sick of being scared, too.
I look at the crowd
my cheering section
each nodding their heads.
Suddenly the words they’ve been saying
start echoing inside of me too:
“You are the strongest person I know.”
“Louisa, this is not pathetic-this is your story. It’s beautiful.”
“You can do this because your heart’s telling you this is what you need.”
And I clear my throat, ready to speak.
It’s because of them that I can
do this courageous thing.
It’s because of them that I believe
the words
Ms. Francine echoed to me all along:
Be Brave.
I open my mouth, and begin.
170.
“There are some things we all like to talk about.
Who is gonna win the football game,
the guy we think is cute,
our plans for summer break,
what girl’s in hot pursuit.
We can easily ask for
fries with that
or can you turn the volume up?
We can ask if dinner’s ready or
if the door got shut.
These are the easy things in life to say
and it’s easy to spend our days
obsessed with the trivial details
of who got what, who said what, shut up
but
there’s more that needs to be
said.
Did you know one in three girls
has been sexually abused?
I read that the numbers are declining every year.
Less children are victims of abuse but
does that fact do
anything to change
the life of the girl living with the
hollowed out dreams
because she was beat against the wall
forced to do an act
that should be only reserved for a lab rat?
Wait a second, scratch that –– lab rats have some
sort of code they live by.
I’m a friend of PETA and an animal enthusiast
and so I wonder if the lab rats have rights
why the children
who are living in the cycle of shame
are not being treated the same way?
I lived my life talking about the things
we’re all allowed to say,
“The weather’s nice,
the rain stopped, thank God,
I got a new job.”
See how with those words the subtle
message is that
the big things, the scary things,
are not to be said?
You wonder why the kids don’t talk or why
the abusers aren’t caught ––
but the truth is
the kids
are too scared to say a word.
So you may have caught on that this is about me.
My abuse was real.
Really physical
Really hard
to escape.
And even when you think you have,
the truth is
it’s gonna haunt you for
days
weeks
months
years.
And the people want to help ––
social worker, counselor,
foster mom or dad,
teachers, friends at school ––
You want to scream the truth
but the words
all the words
get caught.
Make you choke.
Everything gets caught inside
because it’s the safest place to hide.
My little brother
good little boy.
The one I spent my childhood trying to protect.
The one I’d tuck in at night, sing
sweet lullabies
always made sure he stayed in my sight.
Except ––
except the times Dad called for me
and I’d have to leave him be.
I always thought Mom was there
wanting to help keep him safe but the truth is
she was doing the exact same thing
to him
as my dad did to me.
Did you know one in every seven boys are
sexually abused?
Wait, was I supposed to say that?
Is it the same as saying ‘Have a nice day?’
Is that the same as talking about the weather
or whatever trivial things we say
to keep the terrifying truths at bay ?
Did you know that boys who are abused are
thirty-two times more likely to attempt suicide?
That those boys are thirty times more likely to commit a violent crime?
I tried to protect my brother by going to my dad
in place of him.
But what does it mean when someone else found him
instead?
When he was violated just like me
that I couldn’t do anything to protect
my family?
That fact crushed me to the core.
The kind you can’t ignore.
The kind that breaks you down.
But I am seeing that that is just the place our abusers, our perpetrators,
our mother and our father wanted us to be-
BROKEN.
I can’t let that happen
to anyone else.
Not under my watch.
If I’d known then
what I know now
our abusers would have been on lockdown
so. much. sooner.
But I lived in fear.
The paralyzing kind that makes you want to run away
makes you want to hide.
The kind that keeps the truth far away
from the surface
keeps lies the only thing you believe
keeps abusers walking the streets
waiting to find another kid to defeat.
I won’t let that happen, not if I can help it.
And I’m beginning to see the only way I can change
the face of my abusers
is to speak loud and clear
forget the fear
that I’ve been walking with
because I am brave.
And you can be, too.
The weather, yeah it’s nice.
The gray clouds are trying to move in,
but I’ll tell you this once
and I’ll tell you again
I’ll tell you as many times as I need
because it’s the only way
to let the good find a way in.
There are lots of things in life that are
gray like the clouds ––
but there are just as many things that are
black and white.
Child abuse
is one of the things we must bring to the light.”