Tag Archives: mentalhealth

The Story of my Life – Episode 2

I’m going to back up just a bit to the Spring of 1990, when my mother and stepfather met. They met in AA, both recovering alcoholics. At the time, my mother was 33 and my stepfather was 25. My mother was pregnant with my middle brother at the time, and they married very quickly – while she was still pregnant. (My brother’s father was not around, not sure of the full story there.) My brother was born in July, and she put my stepfather’s name on the birth certificate and allowed my brother to believe that was truly his biological father until he was in his 20s. (More details on that in a future episode). In Spring 1992, they had my youngest brother. So, although there is about a 6–8-year age gap between me and my brothers, they are very close in age.

I met my middle brother for the first time at Christmas 1990. My mother made a trip to NC to visit, along with my stepfather and new little brother. He was about 5 months old at the time, and I was obsessed with him! I was 6 years old, about to turn 7. My friends had baby siblings, and now I have a baby brother!

So, it was after my youngest brother was born in the Spring of 1992 that my mother and Peepaw had the discussion regarding me moving to Texas. I had met one brother and already fallen in love, and now I had a second brother that I had yet to meet. It sounded so exciting! For Christmas 1992, instead of my mother coming to NC, my grandparents and I flew to Texas. It was an opportunity for me to see where I would be living. My mother, stepfather, and brothers lived in a single wide trailer in a trailer park. I thought that was kinda cool at the time. I saw lots of kids around so I saw a potential to make new friends. My brothers shared a room with a bunk bed, and the plan would be for me to also share that room and for them to share a bottom bunk and I would sleep on the top bunk. We drove to the elementary school where I would go, explored the area, and in my little 8-going on 9 year old brain I was excited! My grandparents and I flew back to NC, I finished out the school year.

On that day in July, I got on a plane and moved halfway across the country to what I thought would be a “normal” life, getting to live with my mother and brothers. However, at age 9, I was naive and unaware or oblivious to how great my life was with my grandparents. I knew they were loving “parents” to me of course, but I assumed I was just moving into another happy loving family that was more conventional with my mother and siblings. My mother met me at the gate at the DFW airport when I arrived (remember, this was pre-9/11 when you could do that, but I was also an unaccompanied minor.) There was no hug, no “I’m so happy you’re here,” my arrival was treated like just any ole other day. And so did my existence for the next several years.

A Lifetime Movie, or a Season of Jerry Springer? Just the Story of My Life – Episode 1

This post is going to be a little different, a little more personal. It’s a long one, so it will be divided into multiple parts. This is part 1. I don’t talk about this to get pitty, or a pat on the back, or anything like that. I share this in hopes of helping others that struggle with past trauma, cutting off toxic family, or if you know me, maybe it helps you understand where I came from.

 This is a topic I said I would never talk much about while my Peepaw was alive. I did not want to give him any reason to feel guilty, or feel bad, or tarnish the way he thought of his daughter (my biological mother). Once he made it to a certain age, I felt he deserved to enjoy the last years of his life. I grew up, survived trauma, and bettered myself. My trauma did not define me, it’s just a story of my past. It was pointless for him to know the trauma I endured at the hand of his own daughter. What good would it do him, or me, or anyone?

But now I feel free to speak my truth.

My biological mother is a narcissist with likely a whole array of undiagnosed mental health issues. I think she was missing the “mom gene.” She birthed 3 children, but I don’t think she ever wanted to be a mother. She was 27 when she had me, a fugitive of the law at the time, gave birth to me in Florida with an alias on my birth certificate. When I was 3 weeks old, she took me to North Carolina and along with my biological father, signed over parental rights to my grandparents (her parents) – my Meemaw and Peepaw. She then went back to Texas, turned herself in, and served 4 years in prison. My Meemaw took SO many pictures (I guess that’s where I get it from), but remember back then you had to actually get it developed! There is picture album after picture album of my every move when I was little. It was clear they loved me, cared for me, and I felt it too. I always felt at home with them, it was safe, stable, and they were loving parents to me. My Peepaw played catch with me in the yard, never missed a t-ball or softball game. They never missed a dance recital. Peepaw retired when I was in Kindergarten and Meemaw was a homemaker. I had several friends that lived on our street, and my house became the “hang out” sometimes after school. They were “Meemaw and Peepaw” to all of my friends, too. One year, my friends and I decided to put on a dance recital for the whole neighborhood – Peepaw had flyers made and sent them out to all the neighbors. My childhood with them was nothing short of unconditional love and support.

When my mother got out of prison, she stayed in Texas but would come to NC once a year and visit. She was basically like a stranger to me. I was always uncomfortable around her. Remember, this was the late 80s/early 90s when keeping in touch long distance was more difficult. She called occasionally, but I don’t remember any meaningful conversations. There were no “I love yous” exchanged between us EVER in my entire life to this day. When I was 9 ½, she had married my stepdad and had my two brothers. She convinced my grandparents she had her life together and requested for me to go to TX to live with them. I remember Peepaw presenting the idea to me. I still remember the conversation to this day. It was in the car after leaving a friend’s birthday party. I was 8 years old. I knew of my brothers at this point, had met one of them on my mother’s last visit to NC. Had never met the youngest one (they were babies at this point). I was at the start of 3rd grade. My closest friends had siblings, lived with their mom and dad. I was an only child living with my grandparents. I had a great life, but at 8 years old I had a desire to have siblings and feel “normal” living with my mother. Even though she was nearly a stranger to me. I was also young, and did not know her entire story and why she had been absent at the time. So my little 8 year old brain just heard “brothers, living with my mom like a normal kid, yay!”

So, on July 9th, 1993, after finishing the school year at age 9 I got on a plane, my first flight as an unaccompanied minor, and I moved to Texas. And that began 9+ years of pure hell.