Something Was Wrong - S5 E12: Anathema | Rachel
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For more resources, visit somethingwaswrong.com-resources. Thank you so much. You know me, you know me, wait. Let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let it all, let So you started college.
What I would love to just hear what the culture was like for you and what the experience
was like for you.
Going from being, I don't know if sheltered is the right word.
If you, I don't know what adjective you would use to describe it.
You're the same thing.
In a way, I had this, I was this weird dichotomy of being very controlled and isolated and sheltered,
but having more almost like worldly experience in other people.
The way the ministry that my parents had, they had a lot of people from different cultures and countries come and stay with us,
like different missionary groups that came to Britain.
So I was constantly surrounded by people from, you know, we had people from
Nepal, we had people from Kenya, we had people from the Middle East, we had people from Iceland. So
for me being around foreigners was normal. I felt almost more comfortable there. And, you know,
then when I was 13, we moved all the way to Hawaii. And then two years later, we moved all the way
back. And I mean, this should tell you how isolated we were that even when I moved back to my home country, it felt the same
as when we moved to Hawaii. You know, like even though I lived my entire life, I was not connected
to the culture at all. And so it was as equal a shock when we moved all the way back from Hawaii.
So by the time I moved to college at 17, this is like my third time immigrating, you know,
it's like third time doing this.
So I felt like an old pro in that way.
And I was very at that point, I had honed my skills of talking to new people and introducing
myself to a new group.
Like I was almost more comfortable like that than I was actually building like longer stable
relationships.
And it's not even something I've tried to do.
I don't know if it's just the way my brain function
to try and help me emotionally,
because there was so much change in loss
when it came to losing people that you were close to.
I imagine it felt free and freeing in a way.
It was the first time being on your own.
And I know the last time we spoke,
you talked a bit about like,
when you would get on the phone and your dad would give you,
you do a rundown of like,
are you doing everything correctly and all this kind of stuff?
But it probably did feel pretty good to like,
be able to have your own space,
find a way to make your own decisions.
It was a lot of different emotions in some ways.
Like when I talk about becoming very skilled at like,
going into new environments and new cultures,
like it was almost like it was on,
like it was a standup comedian going on to like, you know,
do my set.
It was not something that actually came naturally to me
and it was like, okay, I performed this thing,
I've introduced myself for kind of friends.
I don't know what to do now.
And so it was like I made a lot of initial friends,
but they kind of stayed at that same level
pretty much most of the way through college.
I just didn't know how to continue growing the relationships.
So I really, I think, clung to the things I could control,
which are my grades.
And I was terrified coming to college.
I had never had a lecture in my life. I'd never had to take notes in my life. I'd never even used
like a computer to take notes. Like we had a computer in the house, but it was never used for that.
I grew up being homeschooled and I had workbooks and I just wrote everything down with a pencil.
That was it. the entire way through.
So I was terrified I wouldn't be able to pay attention. I was terrified I wouldn't be
able to write notes fast enough and I wouldn't be able to keep up with homework and the curriculum
that we grew up with was just awful. Like when I went to college, the most I had written
was a three page paper and that was only once. And I had no idea how to do it. So, you know, way I came in
kind of like a blank slate and luckily, you know, to my great-join surprise found out that I really
love the classroom environment and I did really well and I became that annoying kid I think because
I've never had an actual teacher to converse with and go and discuss topics with in class. Like, I was the kid that like, could not shut up.
There was a lot of pressure, I think, like I said before,
on me to not fail and to do well,
and I was really concerned with that.
But I really had, I felt like people who saw me
and believed in me and like really spoke
to me and not at me.
Juck's supposed to be like my love for the actual school and the process was I was completely
mystified by the whole interpersonal aspect of college, you know, like the friend groups,
the parties, all that kind of stuff.
That just made zero sense to me.
And I just really struggled with how to like interact with people. And I remember after my first semester, someone said to me,
like, well, you just seem so closed off and so like unapproachable. And I was like, absolutely
stunned. I was like, I don't understand. Like, what am I doing that makes me seem that way?
Like, you know, but you know, I'm not like that. And I'm like, yeah, we just seem that way.
And I could never understand why I seemed like that. And I'm like, yeah, we just seem that way. And I could never understand why I
seemed like that. And I again began to feel that like a level of like hopelessness that I kind of
felt and Hawaii, where it's just the sense of something is so off with you. And you can't even
figure out what it is in order to fix it. Like it was just like, I don't even know how to AP or like
more open because I don't know what I'm doing that makes me seem not. At that time, you know, I was also struggling because on one hand it was a lot of people
and cultures and ways of thinking and acting that I wasn't familiar with.
I considered myself a feminist at the time, but even with the way I was brought up by my
father, any time anyone even sounded like a valley girl or liked pink or like to be, you know,
act like a girl,
there was this level of like,
to stain and disgust in me that I look back now
and I'm like, oh, that is such like internalized sexism
right there.
One, I was very much like, well, you know,
I hang out with guys.
They don't hang out with girls.
Like I find guys more funny.
And the majority of that is that I,
guys were more simple.
I think for me in my brain to figure out. And so I
knew my lines with them and I knew what to do in order for them
to be okay hanging out with me and girls, it was like I could
not figure it out was so complicated. And I was just
terrified by them, I think. And you met your now husband and
college, right? I did. Yeah. Actually, I think my husband
started hanging out with me because the guys knew
that I what they would call a poddy mouth and they just love to see like what I
would do and like I think there was that aspect of like ooh looks you know she's
edgy will hang out with her as she's daring and we were close friends but he
actually had a crush on this other girl and I wasn't even looking at him at
all like that and everyone else was like oh my gosh you guys are best friends
and so thank you and everyone else I like, oh my gosh, you guys are best friends with some cute.
And everyone else I think was shipping us,
but we were like, whatever, no, I don't care.
And I think for me, having such intense feelings
about guys and you can't even get into relationship
without knowing you're gonna marry this person.
I think for me, having a friend who I felt like there was
no attraction or there was no pressure, it was just so freeing and so lovely and I really enjoyed hanging out with him because of that.
And I think he eventually asked me out and we went to Panda Express and had our first little get together.
But that was just to see how we like each other. Then he had to go away and think about his future and whatnot. And I remember, as someone who feels like your dating relationship should always be leading towards
marriage, I was like, if this doesn't work out, we can never be friends again. And this is someone
that I value their friendship so much. And I remember being in the shower before class and almost
feeling like I was going to throw up because I was so stressed out about whether this relationship was right or not
or whether it was God or not and it just being such a kerfuffle and then
He finally got his act together and asked me out again and we went on a date and had the whole thing of like
I like you and I like you too and I swear I've never drank so much water in my life like I was so nervous
I was sipping like every five seconds
I was so nervous, I was sipping like every five seconds.
My husband, when we first started dating, he had a very hard time connecting with me. And I just conversations where how are you?
How are you feeling?
We're like not something my brain computed.
I became very clear that I didn't understand how to care about someone emotionally.
And not even that, but like how to interact with them.
So, you know, he would be like, you have to ask me how I'm feeling or how I'm doing it.
And I'd be like, okay, I said, no, you have to take, you have to ask questions.
I'd be like, okay. And he would ask me stuff and it just wouldn't go anywhere.
And there wasn't much I, he was getting out of me. And I think he just was like,
I, there's something so off with you. Because I think I seemed very normal until until we got to that point where it was like interacting with
just each other on an emotional level outside of all the excitement and like, oh, we're holding
hands or we're calling each other babe. And it was just so that he was like, well, what is happening?
And one of those nights of him really like credit to him, the boy stuck through it. He really
just like sat me down and was like,
no, we're gonna find some way to talk to each other.
And he got me on the subject of my family
and my siblings.
And I don't know how we got into the subject,
but I was talking about how I felt like
I had been a horrible big sister.
And when I left that,
you didn't have any relationship with my siblings other than Hannah and I felt like I had been really cruel to Rebecca and it was like
a floodgate opened and I was just bawling and like all this pain and all this fear and
all this grief that I think I couldn't even I couldn't even look at because I made I
felt like I was a monster and blessed his heart, you know,
he held on for dear life through the waterfall that was that moment.
And that was also a crazy partner relationship because it was like my personality changed
after that night.
Like when you have gone from not having any emotion, like when I cried that night, I hadn't
cried since I was like 13 since my friend died. Wow. Yeah, and it wasn't even like a
Consisting stuff would be sad and I just couldn't cry, but once I started. Oh my god
I went from being so objective and so cool and so unbothered and so like and like who go for end of being like
And being so emotional and being so hurt by everything and taking everything personally,
it was in reality, it was my part of my personality being turned back on.
Everything just was so much more intense because of all the years of just not engaging at
all like that.
And so for him, it was kind of insane because I literally changed overnight to be a completely
different person. Thankfully, be a completely different person.
Thankfully, he selects that person.
So we have like a really big breakthrough.
Yes, very much so and I only happened because of that night.
And so after that, I think there was this feeling of guilt of I left my siblings,
but there was still this sense of, man, I got away and I'm so excited to get away,
is that I don't even want to think about what's going on back to it. I can't even look at it. I can't even like, I have to pretend
it's not there because it's still so fresh and so terrifying and it was like kind of that feeling of
when you've woken up from a really bad nightmare and you're trying to do anything to distract yourself
so that you can fall back asleep and you're trying not to remember the dream, but parts of the dream are still coming back.
And you're just desperately trying to do something to distract yourself from that.
So that you can calm down enough to go back to sleep.
That's kind of that feeling that I had growing up.
We were told actually that you were supposed to pray for your husband every single day.
And that you had to make a list of things that you wanted in your husband.
And you were supposed to pray over that list
And I remember everyone had these lists and stuff and the only thing I could ever think about was I just
Want someone who will love me and someone that is like not loves me because he has to but it's just like can't help
himself
And I think that came from much of my parents just it always seemed like a chore to them or, you know, seemed like they were stuck with each other and didn't really like each other.
And just, all I, that was the only criteria I had was someone that loved me.
And so with my husband, it was like the character trait I saw in him that I could not get
enough of was his kindness.
And I, he was that way with everyone.
Like he would take the time to
talk with everyone and he was that kid who would tell everyone that he loved them. But it was just
he had such a depth of care for everyone around him and genuinely loved his friends and genuinely
wasn't afraid to show it. I found that very compelling and I felt so like safe as time went on.
I came to recognize that desire just to be loved.
It seems like such a basic thing, that's all I wanted was someone to really love me and care about me
and think I was the world.
I do feel that way.
About Jake, he really is a lovely person and has,
it seems like no matter what I put him through or how much stress whatever he puts, I put him
through, he's always only concerned with making me happy and taking care of me.
And you totally deserve. Well, and I still don't feel bad because, you know, for a lot of times,
I wasn't even healthy enough to recognize what was happening.
I wasn't healthy enough to take care of him as well.
We've done a lot of therapy and I've worked really hard and that's something that we've
worked a lot on.
Good for you.
Yeah.
Well, and being my diagnosis of autism actually saved our marriage because there were so
many things that just didn't compute in my brain and he couldn't understand why they didn't compute.
And he's like, does she just not care?
Is it just, you know, is that why she's not remembering
when I'm telling her not to put the spoon like on the sink
or, you know, buy the sink in the sink?
And we've been in therapy for like about a year
before I was diagnosed and literally like after I was diagnosed,
it was like a switch flipped.
And all of a sudden we were able to actually work
through things together and like the understanding of, this is the way you are and it's not because of that you don't
care enough about me, it's just the way your brain works and like being able to release
each other from that burden I think was really great. And I think allowed me to be like,
oh, this is something I'm not very good at and let me work harder on it without beating
myself up of like you're a horrible, worthless person. Even in those moments where it was like,
I truly didn't remember it was like,
well, if you cared enough, you wouldn't remember it.
If you cared enough, you would have noticed
that he was feeling sad.
If you cared enough, you would try harder.
So when I got diagnosed first with ADHD,
I remember like crying because I felt such joy and relief
of like, I'm not a bad person.
Like I suck at these things just because of the way my brain works. It's not because I don't care. It's not because I felt such joy and relief of like, I'm not a bad person. Like I suck at these things just because of the way
my brain works.
It's not because I don't care.
It's not because I'm lazy.
It's not because I'm not trying hard enough.
It's just the way my brain works.
And to be like released from that feeling of
that you're just at your core horrible person
and you keep hurting those around you,
like it was incredible.
You know, like there were some people who like,
you know, I told I got diagnosed and are like,
oh, how do you feel? I'm like, it told I got diagnosed and are like, oh, how do you feel?
I'm like, it's amazing. And they're like, oh, okay. I think that
Unfortunately, something that has happened so often is that because mental health is stigmatized
I don't know as much about stigma regarding ADHD
Personally, but with autism. I feel like some people associate diagnosis as this
horrible bad thing. Yeah. Really, when you talk to people who are autistic or for
myself, from a parenting perspective, diagnosis was one of the best things that
ever happened to make me a better parent. So I could see my child and what they
needed from me and understand and feel like I'm not a
piece of shit parent.
It turns out my child just needs to be parented different than is intuitive to me.
And I need to get to know what they need instead of expecting them to perform the way that
I think or society thinks is the correct thing.
Yeah, and no one's doing a bad job or is a shitty person because, you know, it's just the way it is.
My life is like 5 billion times better for knowing
why I am the way I am.
And as a person who was taught that like,
you're the way you act says about how you truly feel
about people or truly feel about the world.
And, you know, you can have good intentions,
but the devil's always trying to use,
always trying to use those bad qualities you have
to mess you up or to mess those around you,
to be released from that and being like,
oh, it's not because I'm a horrible person
and not trying hard enough.
It's just the way my brain works
and there's nothing wrong with that.
Do you feel like there were any other parts of your identity that you came to terms with
that had an impact on your life and how you sort of live your life today?
Oh, huge, yeah.
So my first night in the dorms, I had been traveling for over 24 hours, completely jet lagged, but it was kind of middle,
it was like early evening when I got there.
And so there were two ladies who were dorm leaders and they were very excited and I was very
excited.
And so we set up and talked really late into the. And they were talking about the different experiences
they had. And at some point, they got into like horror stories of being dorm leaders and
like things they came across and stuff like that. And one of them started talking about how
she walked in and these two girls were kissing. Everyone was like, oh my god. And it was just like
massive big scandalous thing.
And I at that time was very much homophobic
and very much of the belief that let was an abomination.
And whether or not I believed that people should have rights
or I think I was always more progressive than my family
in that way, it was just that is not something
that is going to lead to you having a successful life,
and it's not the best way. And my parents also believed that like if you suddenly turned gay or
became gay, that it was an actual, like spiritual attack against you, of the devil and that the devil
would get inside your mind, like they basically preferred to is. For people who didn't believe in mental
illnesses, that was the one thing they were deferred to as a mental illness. Wow.
And I love that it's always turn gay, not that you're born that way, of course.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
With the choice, you know, whatever.
So that was the first time that dorms.
And so that wasn't super shocking, but it definitely was like,
okay, this is very much like they're not okay with anything like that.
And in some ways, because my family, I knew my family were very conservative,
I didn't really fully know like how everyone else felt about things. I knew some people were super
conservative and some people were a lot more like accepting of that, but it quickly became very
clear that like you would get expelled if anything like that ever happened. And while I was at college,
there were multiple people that like, there were rumors about them. And I think I remember one girl, like, there were rumors about her being a lesbian and everyone was talking about it.
And you were kind of either taking a side and mentored and, like, saved from it, or you were kind of ostracized the point where you left.
And it was this thing that was just very sad.
You know, it was always the sense of, like, oh, it's so sad that they're having to deal with this.
This is a struggle.
And, you know, we just really need to pray for them.
So cut to, I think, around my end of my first semester and going into the second one,
I began having dreams where I was romantically involved with females.
And I was like, what in the world?
Like this has never happened before.
It's come out of nowhere.
And of course, instantly I'm like,
it's an attack by the devil.
I'm finally away.
It's because I haven't been as diligent
with serving the Lord or whatever
because I'm getting excited by being away
from my family or whatever.
And I told my mother, which I know with everything
you've already heard about my mother,
it's probably shocking that I would go and talk to her
But that's they were still like my
Confidence and still the people I went to when I didn't understand something sure and so she was like well
You know, there's just concept of like when someone suddenly starts having homosexual feelings and they've never had them before
It's could be because there's a demonic entity that's attached
itself to you and is putting those thoughts into your head.
I'm so sad.
I'm terrified for my very humanity
and the fact that I'm beginning to have these feelings
and at first it was just dreams.
I was like, why don't understand?
Why I'm having these dreams?
I don't like girls at all.
And then it began to creep into everyday life
where it was just randomly noticing
that a girl was attracted,
we're feeling that way.
And I mean, like, oh no, it's getting worse.
Like, it felt like it was a disease
that was slowly taking over
and it felt like it was something
that I couldn't control and that it was doomed to.
And of course, then there's that aspect
of me always being terrified of demons being after me.
And so there was that very real fear
just feeling almost like hunted.
And my mother had always weirdly enough, she would always say the thing of like when you
were born someone told me that like you were going to be very important and that the devil
was going to try to destroy your life as soon as he could and she brought that up as
well and it was a thing of like this is a devil just trying to like destroy you and you need
to fight it as hard as you can.
And I like just a dating Jake around this time as well. And so it was doubly terrifying.
Because I was like, oh my gosh, like I found this amazing guy. And I can't stop dreaming about girls. Like what is happening?
But I was, you know, so attracted to him. So it was like I wasn't, I knew I was like, okay, well I'm not gay.
Like, I'm just keep dreaming about girls. And I keep thinking about how pretty girls are.
Dang it.
But it was also this thing of like, it was so hush and so taboo
at the college.
It was like, well, I can't even tell anyone that I'm struggling
with this because if I do, like,
they will never let me anywhere near them again.
And, you know, not that I don't even think I ever really
had a crush on anyone at school, but it's just a sense
of no one can ever, ever find out because you will lose what closeness to them that you had.
You will lose whatever friendship that you had. And so I think a big reason why one I never truly
got close to anyone or even tried to is one I didn't want them to find that out. It felt like it
would slip out eventually. But the other reason was that I still had all this,
like, pent up emotional issues and all these anger issues.
And I was scared that if I actually, like,
got into a fight with someone that I would snap
and they would see the rage come out.
And it was always a sense of, like,
sometimes I'd get into, like, a little argument
with someone and some guys would make jokes like,
oh, she's mad now.
And they were just like, oh, bitch, I'm not mad. Trust me.
Like, we're arguing, but if I was mad, you'd know what.
It was this thing of like, I can't let myself hurt anyone.
I need to protect them almost for myself.
I knew, especially with dating Jake, and seeing that the more I had mostly got attached to him,
dating Jake and seeing that the more I am mostly got attached to him, the more volatile relationship became and the more like everything I took everything personally and everything
like you know hurt me more, made me more angry. And there is a sense of like if I truly let
someone close then the minute I feel super close to someone and I feel super comfortable,
I'll begin feeling comfortable showing them
every part of me and that means they're going to get hurt because I'm going to become nasty
without even trying to. Do you think it's because you've because of the way you saw your parents,
you kind of saw yourself through their lens and kind of assumed that you were going to be like them?
Well, yes, but also like in the environment
when grew up it was very violent
and you don't grow up in a violent atmosphere
without also becoming violent yourself.
Not only to survive, but also to survive.
To control, yeah.
And so I was violent and I knew that was something
I didn't want, but I also knew it was something
I couldn't necessarily control.
And so it was very much the thing of like, I need to keep myself away from people so that they aren't hurt by
this. And I mean, we always talk about, you know, you always hurt the people you love the most.
And it's because they're the most comfortable around them. And so they see all of you. And so
no one ever saw me ever, ever, ever, ever. The word that was used in our theology classes to talk about people who were cut off from
God or like were lost, were like a nathema.
Like you are a nathema, you are cursed.
And that's what I felt like.
And I felt like if anyone knew that, then I would lose what connection I had.
And I didn't want to lose this beautiful world I've become a part of.
And in a way, I was kind of acting how my father did,
when we lived in Hawaii, this idea of like,
you're in a more healthy environment
and you won't even engage in it
because you were terrified to lose a little bit
of light you have, even though you could gain
so much more if you did open up and let people in.
Mm-hmm, you're so terrified.
You're so scared of how You're so terrified. Yeah.
Yeah.
We went to Jake's house for something
and one of the youth group leaders at his church,
they came back and they did a speech and basically
talked about being gay and talked about like how,
you know, they'd come to accept that that was part of who
they were, but that wasn't their identity.
Like they considered themselves gay.
They considered themselves a child of God and a Christian.
And, you know, if that was what attraction they happened to have, that, you know,
whatever, but it wasn't their identity.
And people lost their minds like at their church.
Like I felt so bad for that person because I mean, they were so brave.
They literally they got up in front of a conservy youth group and said that.
And I so brave and related so hard to it.
And I know they got such backlash from that.
And but they changed my life when they said that because I came out to my husband at
very night driving back from youth group, bawling my eyes out and, you know, terrified
and feeling like, you know, definitely coming from the aspect of like this is a sin that
I'm struggling with or this not even a sin, but this is like a a default that I have, you know, a result of the fall where it's like this wasn't what got intended
and it's kind of this way. It's not necessarily my fault, but I'm not supposed to engage with it.
I'm just feeling so horrible about it and so feeling like I had to become more attracted to my boyfriend in order to stop feeling that way.
And it felt like the more I tried to stop like the heart, like the more intense it was
and the more I couldn't ignore that.
And we got married and as you can imagine,
two virgins who have never had any type of like activity
like that before wedding night wasn't that great
and the first year wasn't that great.
But we didn't have any help
and there was no one to talk to.
Like there's so many things like,
I wish the therapist we had like now,
I wish we had her back then
because like there's stuff we talked about
and she's like, oh, you just need to do this
and this and this and we're like, what?
I remember talking about how, you know,
I was in a lot of pain trying to be sexually active
and ladies were just like, well, you just need to relax.
And one thing that they told us, they like literally sat all the girls down and someone who had gotten
married the year before came into the speech and they literally said that the reason you
were supposed to wait until marriage to have any type of sexual contact or any type of
like romantic contact was that your body naturally gets excited. And if you do that stuff
before marriage, your body is going to get used to it and it
was not going to be as excited. And because of that, it's going to hurt because your body's not
excited enough. And so for hurt during sex, it was your full because you had like messed around
before marriage and you'd brought this on yourself. So many things are messed up with that, but of course, I'm talking about everything else.
Yeah, I'm talking about everything else.
I'm like, well, clearly I can't stop dreaming about girls
and this is clearly, you know, my body is like,
that's what I get for not fighting against that sin more,
for not, you know, truly getting rid of it,
which I don't even know how he would do that,
even if he could.
Spoiler alert, you can would do that even if he could.
Spoiler alert.
You can't.
But once we were married, like we didn't know what was happening, it was really no one
we could talk to.
We were just lost and I was so insecure and he was so insecure and everyone builds up
sex and you're wetting to this big magical thing, especially if you're... people make such
a big deal out of two virgins getting married. Let me tell you, my God, you would have thought like people,
it felt like people were living bicariously through you, it was super weird.
Pureity culture. Yeah, me, my husband literally said like if we could go back,
we would ignore everything else and just let a relationship progress naturally, you know,
and have sex when we felt like it was normal and right in our relationship, you know, or it felt
natural because there was so much pressure and so much like guilt and like you would spend so
long trying not to have sex that you had already had so much baggage and pain and guilt from
the times where you almost messed up or where you know, we thought like you weren't quite good enough
or that you should have been able to resist more.
And then when everything doesn't go quite how you want it to on that wedding night, you're
thinking, well, you know, it's because you didn't wait enough and because you like, you
did all of the stuff beforehand, which really was nothing.
But even that seemed like whatever it was, it was your fault for it happening that way.
The more troubles, you know, that we had through marriage, the more anxious
I became about having feelings towards women and the more that became like an escape and that also meant
the more like taboo it became. And I think around this time slowly I've been doing more theater,
I've been exposed to more people, I'm not just on the little college on the hill. I'm actually like getting exposed to you know gay culture and gay people and seeing you know a gay
couple that have been together for 40 years and are still so in love and our partners and
seeing that like dedication and you know also seeing a bunch of Christians get divorced and
wondering what how can this logically be correct that one thing is right and one thing is
completely not. Slowly I'm beginning is right and one thing is completely not.
Slowly, I'm beginning, it's kind of that thing where you begin to accept it and other people
before you can accept it in yourself. And so I never, you know, I got to a point where I was like,
I didn't really think it was evil or sin, but I wasn't ready to accept that I was that way,
and that that was okay. And so did you publicly, sorry, you didn't publicly come out only to your husband at that?
Yes, and that was because like he was going to find out one way or another.
He had to know like, he had to know I was damaged goods almost.
He had to know what he was getting into.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Um, so around this time things are just hard and rough and it feels like every time like
we feel like, you know, why is it our relationship working? Why isn't this working? I keep coming back to that in my brain and being
like, well, you know, because you're having these feelings and, you know, maybe this, maybe
you're actually a lesbian and you haven't known that your whole life and now you're stuck and
you're going to break this person's heart and what are you going to do? And I got to the point
where I got so suicidal and so freaked out that I thought it might be better for me to commit suicide
than to divorce him. Like I could take myself out of the picture and people would view him in a better light if I died and feel worse for him
rather than have him deal with the stigma of being a divorced person for the rest of his life.
Because there are some churches where they want to be a pastor if you're divorced. And I felt like I
Because there are some churches where they won't even want you to be a pastor if you're divorced. And I felt like I almost had to make it easier on him.
I had to protect him, which is more, I think of that old sense of like having to take care of everyone else creeping back in.
But my senior year, I mean, I was a developed insomnia.
I would sit in class and just have fantasies of like putting a screwdriver through my ear.
Just, I would have horrific dreams about committing suicide.
Like, it was just, I could not, I felt like I couldn't live.
And I managed to graduate and I graduated, uh, summa cum laude.
Like a fucking boss.
Yeah.
Well, here's the thing, it made my husband, we got married three weeks into the school semester,
and it was insane. and then we managed to both
and that semester with a 4.0.
And that's how I dealt with things, you know,
my life may be falling apart,
but you know, if I could succeed in that way,
I felt like I had some sort of like worth.
I was, I mean, I've been struggling with my faith
for a long time, but I hadn't slowly had been
gone to kind of verbalize it in like a very gentle way, but I came to realize that the way I thought about theology, like I hadn't slowly had been done to kind of verbalize it in like a very gentle way.
But I came to realize that the way I thought about theology, like I was, I understood how
it worked, the same way that someone might understand the rules for how a universe in
a D&D game might work.
Where like you understood all the complexities to the point where you could like write a
dissertation of how that, how the laws of physics worked in that universe and have complete knowledge that didn't necessarily mean I
Actually considered it to be real, but I didn't realize that
Until much much later, and I don't even you know, I'm not saying that it's not real or is real
It's just I realized the way I interacted with it was the same way I interacted with
folks of fiction.
I just didn't understand that at the time.
So then in my senior, my final semester, as I know, as soon as we graduate, we're going
off to Des Moines.
My husband's going to be a pastor.
Like I remember one time at three o'clock in the morning just sobbing, sitting up in bed
and just sobbing my eyes out, just being like, I know as bad as it is here, it's gonna be worse there.
Like it's conservative as they are here, they're gonna be more conservative there.
Just like, I am going somewhere where no one can ever know me.
And I can't ever show anyone anything and I'm gonna embarrass my husband and gonna make
life hard for him.
And so that last semester was incredibly traumatic and things have been pretty rocky and with me and my father
for a while things are just rough and I kind of have pulled away pretty much and so I'm getting
ready to graduate and my husband comes in and he says hey your father just called me and said that
he's coming and wants to surprise you for graduation and And I was like, oh, wow.
I mean, I, at that point, you know,
was still not mode of like, all I want
is for us to have a good relationship.
All I want is to have a really good relationship
with my father.
And so I was like, elated and so excited.
And apparently the story is that my mother sat up
in bed one day and said, you need to go to graduation and you need to fix
your relationship with Rachel. Otherwise, you're never going to have one with her.
Like, if you don't fix it now, it's going to be over. And she said, you have to go.
And so he came over. And it was interesting. You know, I was very excited to have him
there and to have him be around when I was graduating. Like I was graduating summa cum laude.
I had won the theological award.
I was performing at my graduation.
I was singing like an Aria.
And there was multiple professors who kept telling my dad like how amazing I was.
And it was just like a real moment to suddenly have everyone around me like praising me to my father.
And he even told me he was like, I had no, like he's
like, I, I had no idea you were actually smart. Like I had no idea you were this smart. I was like,
gross. You know, he got to hear me actually like sing classically and you know, was so impressed and
like got to see all that I was. And but the flip side to that while it was going on, you know,
stuff is still just not jiving between us like like, help make comments that were really frustrating.
I tried to open up with to him about my thoughts about the people I was working
with in theater because he was saying that, well, you just really like doing
theater because these people are really accepting.
And that's the trap, you know, they accept you as you are.
And so then you go to them and that's how you get caught up in their sin.
And I was like, I don't understand how you can look at someone who had been together for like 40 years and they're still
Faithful to each other. How is that more wrong than a Christian couple getting divorced? He was like we can't sympathize with them
He was like if you you can't think about it like that because if you think about it like that then you'll begin to sympathize with them
Wow, I remember looking at him and being like so I'm not supposed to think of them as a human who has
emotions that I can relate to. Cool. And just being like, it was one of those things where I was so
affected, I was starting to cry, but I was doing it silently, so when we're heating, you've
been realizing, even though he was sitting right across from me, my husband knew, because around
that time it was like, well, I'm gay or queer, I guess. I'm still don't know if I'm quite okay with it, but like, I'm pretty, you know, and this thing of like,
oh, God, like, there's no way I can tell him, like, he will throw me away if he ever knows.
And later on that night, I was still trying to open up to him and say, like, you know, I just,
I don't understand. I'm like, graduating Bible college, but I feel like more disconnected from God
than I ever have. And, you know, I feel like I'm trying really hard in the morning,
learning the more I realize that like it's not, I don't see it as real and I don't
understand why. And it was like, well, have you been listening to non-Christian music?
Have you been watching like movies and stuff? This is all in your head.
And like, this is the reason why, like you let all those stuff in.
I was like, dad, I do Bible devotions every single morning.
Like, this was, I'm trying to tell you this is how I felt my entire life. I've just gotten to
the point where I've realized even going to Bible college is starting for four years to change it.
And he was just going backwards and forwards and somehow he said something like, well, you know,
you just, you don't start off loving God, but you just have to say it. He was like, you know,
when you got married, you told Jake you loved him, Like, did you truly love him then? I was like,
well, you know, I know I love him more now, but I know I loved him as much as it was. Then he was
like, well, it's the same thing. You just need to keep saying it until it's true. I was like, well,
I've never felt that way. Like, it's never it's never been a thing. And the first people used a lot
of was like, in the Bible. I don't remember
where it is, but it's in like the New Testament they talk about like come back to your first love
where I come back to your come back to how you were when you first became a Christian when you
first like fell in love with Jesus. I was like I never had that. I was never in love. I never had
that moment. It's always been like this. I haven't lost anything. I've just finally admitted that
it was never there. And we somehow got into the subject of like what had happened to me and what he had done
to me as a kid.
And we, I got like really like uptight and agitated and I felt like really kind of aggressive.
And he just looked at me across the room, straightened my eyes and said, I'm so sorry I did that
to you.
Will you forgive me?
And it was such a shock to have me, like, you know, I was acting badly in that moment.
And I just burst into tears and started bawling and he got up and hugged me.
And it was this amazing cathartic moment and we bawled and held each other.
And my husband was like, you know, in the corner being like,
oh my god, it was amazing.
And he was like, come on, like, we were gonna make Curry.
He was like, I'll show you how to make Curry.
And he showed me how he did it from scratch.
And we watched a movie and, you know, we snuggled.
And it just, it felt like almost how we were
before all this stuff went down with Shannon.
And it was very healing and it was wonderful.
And I felt like, man, he's really, maybe he's really changed, maybe like we've really
seen progress.
Like he's never, like he came, he spent money to come across the world to come find me
and to have this moment and to look me in the eye and like, wow, like he just just
feel like he has actually changed.
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Turns out people are as equally conservative and liberal.
You know, not quite as liberal as they are on the
East Coast, but there's pretty really cool people up here in Iowa. And it was good, I think,
for us to have the break and to move. I still really struggle for that couple of years and really
disseminating what I believed and what I didn't. And the more I learned about my family around that
time, I began to really connect with my siblings more and the more I heard about little
snippets of things happening.
And the summer before I got married, I went home to work because we needed money for the
wedding and I couldn't work in America on a student visa.
So I went home and I worked two jobs.
But during that time, I had seen things that freaked me out.
Like my mother had lost it on me
during a fight and I tried to lock myself in my room and she like, broken and ripped my blanket off
of me to the point where I had to go like, lock myself in the toilet to get away from her and I was
howling and crying and my dad acted like nothing was happening because he didn't know what to do.
But I also saw them like flip out my little
brother Daniel and there was one time we were at a friend's house and Daniel had either gotten into
a fight with one of the friend's children or they had both gotten in trouble together but the friend
was yelling at both of them and my dad was like furious that Daniel had embarrassed him. And he like dragged him into the car
and we were, people were yelling and shouting
and it was just like time to leave,
time to leave, we need to go, we need to go.
And my father put Daniel in his car seat
and was strapping him in and he stopped and grabbed his wrist
and twisted it to the point where I had to physically rip my brother's arm out of my father's hand
because I thought he was gonna break his wrist
just because he was so angry at him
and how old was your brother at the time?
um let's see seven years ago
he would have been I think like six maybe?
oh my god
yeah it was horrible and I think like six maybe? Oh my god. Yeah, it was horrible.
And I am like my brother's my baby.
I'm very protective of him.
And I like I physically laid hands on my father
and separated him from my brother.
And I don't know if he just didn't expect it.
Like he just kind of backed off after that.
I think he never physically engaged me once I got old enough.
And I think he knows because I would fight back,
and I think a part of him was scared of me.
So one or two things like that happened enough for me
to kind of be concerned.
And then as time went on and the more I reconnected
with some siblings, like they began to get phones
because I didn't get a mobile phone, I didn't think
I was 16, and it was kind of like the rule in our house.
I could have to be 16 in order to get a phone.
And so I had to wait for them to get old enough because once they got a phone, then they
could actually text me and we could have conversations outside of our parents listing in.
And I think that was not necessarily targeted against me as much as it was targeted against
them having connections to anything outside that my parents couldn't control.
But I began to hear every now and then.
And it would
swing between like, we've had this real come to Jesus moment and we sat down as a family and,
you know, we've really like talked it out and it was really healing and helpful and like,
we really like, you know, told each other exactly how we felt and we all apologized and whatnot
and it'd be like, okay, cool, everything's great. And then stuff will go on and I'd be like, hey,
how does things go? And yep, it's cool, everything's great. And then stuff will go on and I'd be like, hey, how does things go? And yep, it's cool. Everything's great. And then like six months
later, I would hear about something that had happened, you know, maybe three
months before. And I heard that my father had gotten into a fight with Rebecca
to the point where he was going to hit her. And he told my sister, Hannah, to get
out of the room. And Hannah said no.
And wouldn't leave my father alone with Rebecca because, you know, she knew she was going
to get hurt.
And my father kept yelling at her to get out.
And Hannah kept saying no.
And so then my father like hit her and threw her onto the ground.
And I don't think he'd really snapped that badly in a long while.
And the girls were old enough to like, everyone freaked out.
And I think he felt like shocked enough and bad enough that he kind of backed off.
The next morning, apparently, he wanted Hannah to apologize to him for being so disrespectful
and causing this.
And she was like, you attacked me.
And he was like, I shoved you.
She was like, you did not shove me.
You hit me.
And he was like, hey, you're right.
I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I did the whole thing.
And I found out about that much later.
And I was very troubled and very disturbed by it,
finding out that he's once again hit one of my siblings.
I was so angry, I was so frustrated.
And I actually called him up.
And I said, we need to talk. I was still in that point. I was so angry, I was so frustrated, and I actually called them up, and I said,
we need to talk. I was still in that point where I was still trying to reach him, and I had just began to
learn about therapy and understand the concept like they
they talked about this inner school, which I really appreciated the concept of like emotionally
healthy spirituality of like you can be a Christian for 20 years,
but not have grown emotionally during that time.
And you can still be as immature as you were
when you first became a Christian
as when you are now,
even though you may have learned so much more technically
about the Bible.
And that's really cool.
I think it's emotionally healthy spirituality.
It's a really good book actually, helping a lot,
helped me transition a lot from being someone who brought up in a culture that didn't believe in mental health
and didn't believe in anything like that to where they were like, no, this is a real thing.
It's just like, you know, if you believe that, you know, you need to go to the doctor for
this, you know, you can still be a Christian believe that you need to get therapy.
That's awesome. Yeah, changed my life and it changed a lot of people's lives who went to that school.
And so I was very much not laying off like, wow, you know, if you can just read this book,
if you can just understand, like, you know, if you can just go to therapy, you know, we could fix this.
And so I called them and I was terrified to do this, but I felt like we had really had a, you know,
one-to-one moment where like I spoke to him as an adult and he respected me as an adult and spoke to me
like that. And we had this like understanding of like, you know,
this, we had this respect for each other.
So I called him and I was like talking about stuff
and I said, hey, I heard what happened.
And I basically called him out on it.
And he did the whole thing of like, well, you know,
like the child needs to like respect and blah, blah, blah, blah.
And I like, stuff and I said, no, I said, no matter what the child is doing,
it is never the child's fault
that the parent snaps, loses control and hurts them.
I said, that's what we're talking about here.
And like, I really called him out and he like,
back down, he's like, okay, yeah, you're right, you're right.
And I said, dad, listen, I love you.
I know what a great person you can be.
I know how good our family can be.
I was like, I know you don't want to do this.
I know how bad you feel after instances like this happens.
I know how horrible you feel.
And I know that you don't ever want it to happen,
but it still does.
And I said, the reason it still does is because you're not
fixing what's causing that.
Yes.
And I said, like, you need to go,
you know, I said, you need to go to therapy and blah, blah, blah.
And he was like, you know, you're right.
And he was, you know, he said, like, thank you for go, you know, I said, you need to go therapy and blah, blah, blah. And he was like, you know, you're right. And he was, you know, he said, like,
thank you for calling me and talking to me about this.
I really appreciate it.
And it was just like, amazing moment
where I called my abusive father out.
And he was like, yeah, you're right.
I fucked up and like, thank you for actually like,
I don't know, I felt like I was talking to someone
as a friend.
It was terrifying and allating at the same time.
And my parents went to like to couples therapy after that.
And it was very much focused on dealing with past trauma
and why that, how that would affect you in marriage.
And I was like, well, okay, they still wouldn't go
to an actual therapist, but this was close enough
or getting us there.
And I'd been talking with my mom a lot
and sharing my own mental health discoveries of her.
And she was pretty supportive.
Supportive in terms of like she understood that physical things could affect you emotionally and
spiritually, spiritual things could affect you emotionally and physically, mental things could
affect you spiritually and physically. We disagreed on the fact that she believed if you fixed
the thing spiritually, everything else would be fine. I was like, well, no, you need to figure it out mentally and emotionally before it any of it
happens. It doesn't matter how much you pray. So we were in this weird tough spot of both of us being
on this mental health journey, but she was coming in from a side of like, you need to have to be
like delivered from whatever it was there. Around this time, she really fell in deep with like this
kind of like a, it kind of felt like more witch
doctorish new wage type of things where she literally had this book of prayers and she
would you have to pray specific prayers a specific way in order to like she would turn
it like you had to break soul ties with certain people you had to break soul tie with this
person in order to be set free from the trauma that was there and that was the reason why me and dad couldn't get along for is because I needed to pray and break the soul tie with this person in order to be set free from the trauma that was there. And that was the reason why me and dad couldn't get along fully,
because I needed to pray and break the soul tie that we had.
And she apparently had went to this deliverance meeting,
and she said that she had seen this evil dark spirit that had apparently been in my father's family for generations.
It was a spirit of murder and a spirit of suicide.
And it had been hunting us for generations
And of course I have had depression. I've been pretty violent and I have been suicidal
So she's like well, it's obviously like been passed on to you like we have to break it. I'm so sorry
Yeah, I was very I was like no not doing it basically like you're possessed with this demon that's been in our family for three generations
Or that it's like constantly coming for you. It's constantly trying to like,
Oh, so you know, it was coming for you, but God, that's not terrifying at all.
But it also meant that like it was the one like, egging my father wrongs.
After I've had that big talk with my father and it feels like things are growing and moving,
and people are, you know, healing and growing and whatnot.
My mother goes to this like conference or whatever and she has this moment where she says she
saw it like in a vision and she saw it like get like cut off from the family and she
saw she said she felt it physically leave her body.
I don't know the logistics of that don't even ask me to explain the logistics of how it was connected to her, but it was supposed to be from my father's side. I don't know.
Anyway, in her brain, the black dark thing was gone, which meant my father was finally free to
beat the man he was always supposed to be, which meant nothing that happened beforehand mattered.
It was a clean slate, and I just needed to, you know, it didn't, dad will hear you now. You just
need to go back and I talked to him again. He'll hear you now because the black thing's gone.
So that was really rough and was very frustrating. And we went back to Scotland for my sister's
wedding and we spent two weeks there and things were just odd, very weird. We were living in the
house and I was still trying to really connect with my dad and I felt like we had this like rapport and I knew they'd be going to therapy and things were better
and I remember one night saying like well how are you how are you doing how are you feeling
you're like what do you mean? So like we've been friends you know about politics forever and I was like
okay whatever we're not gonna we're gonna stop talking about all that how are you doing?
We mean well how are you doing how are you feeling and are you doing? How are you feeling? And he was like, uh, well, well,
I didn't know what to say.
Like, I didn't even know how to talk about that.
And it felt weird.
And he kind of skirted around some things.
Like, you know, we're doing really good.
And like, you know, I really recognize that.
Your mom's my partner in this.
And that I need to like give her equal
respects in the church and whatnot.
And all this stuff that sounded really good
and sounded very progressive and sounded like very hopeful.
But things just felt weird and it felt so tense
and literally the day after spending two weeks with them,
the day before me and my husband
leave to go back to America, my mom takes me aside
into the backyard and I can tell she's really upset
and she starts like being very emotional
like what is going on and she tells me that like a couple weeks before I came her and dad
got into this fight and like he pushed her and hit her and she had told her not to tell
anyone at their therapy because other people were there that were involved with other churches and everyone would know and so she wasn't supposed to tell anyone and she didn't feel right
about it but she felt like God told her to just do it anyway and so she did and
I was like no mom what are you and she was like I don't know and told me that
she was having visions and that she'd had this vision of social workers coming
to take my brother away and that she was scared that things weren't changing and that
people were gonna know and that my brother was gonna be taken away from us.
Next time.
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That's something was wrong.com. You can remain as anonymous as you need. Thank you so much for listening. They call me up on the telly, not around
I hang out at the bottom, no, that it's not the fun
It comes, the thing to know me, they don't know me well Let all of you, let all of you, let all of you, let all you don't know me, you may know
You think you know me, you don't know me well
You think you know me, you don't know me well I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna be your man, I'm gonna Hey, Prime members, you can listen to something was wrong early and add free on Amazon
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