“I don’t have to be here, I could leave and be an absent father?”
My fist clenches and I bite the inside of my cheek; willing my eyes not to spill the tears I have been holding since I first asked my question, “why don’t you pay attention when I talk to you?” I forbid myself to cry in front of him because I have seen what happens when my mom does. I have heard the things that have been said.
“You are crazy and demented in the head!”
The window my head was once resting on is replaced by a pillow. I close my eyes thinking, he’s right, he could just leave me; I wish he would just leave me. My tears create puddles on my pillow as my fourteen-year-old eyes began to swell.
“What’s wrong with your face? Why are there so many pimples? Boys don’t like girls with acne.”
My fifteen-year-old heart, after being filled with the love of Christ less than ten minutes ago, shatters in the church lobby in five seconds. Yet …show more content…
I learned although I can’t see the pain someone is in doesn’t mean it does not exist. I recognized that emotional abuse is just as bad as physical abuse, especially when it’s from the person who was supposed to protect and provide and help shape me. When I decided that I wasn’t going to let dead relationships determine my destiny or happiness, I decide to put life back into myself. I set two goals; one to never again allow a negative situation to change who I am and to only release positivity to others considering that I could be the only source of happiness for them. What I have taken away from my father’s emotional abuse and what he’s lost due to it is that words are like arsenic and only lead to a mind damaged by decay and that my wish to spread optimism is far greater than the need to claim myself