Something Was Wrong - S5 E6: It Was All Kind of Hidden | Kelly
Episode Date: July 16, 2020Support SWW on Patreon for as little as $1 a monthFollow Tiffany Reese on Instagram Music from Glad Rags album Wonder Under*Please note, it came to my attention after the release of this epi...sode that the quote "When people show you who them are, believe them" comes from the original quote, by the great Dr. Maya Angelou, "When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time." See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, prime members, you can listen to something was wrong early and add free on Amazon music.
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I'm Candace DeLong and on my new podcast, Killer Psychy Daily, I share a quick 10 minute
rundown every weekday on the motivations and behaviors of the cold-butter killers you
read about in the news.
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Something was wrong is intended for mature audiences. Many episodes discuss topics that
can be triggering, such as emotional and physical abuse, suicide and murder. Please take caution
when listening. I am not a therapist or a doctor. Opinions expressed by guests of the show
do not necessarily represent the views of this podcast.
If you or someone you know is being abused,
please contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline
at 1-800-799-7233.
If you or someone you love is experiencing
a suicidal crisis or thoughts of suicide,
please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255.
Thank you.
Hi friends. Before we get into the last chapter of Kelly's incredible story,
I wanted to share a few updates. As you've probably noticed, the cadence of which episodes have been releasing has varied
quite a bit this year. Like many parents right now, I'm balancing working from home full
time while caring for children full time, which is like really hard. We also recently had
some personal stuff going on as well and had to move unexpectedly and while we are on the
mend and getting settled, like many of you,
this year I have felt extremely anxious, depressed, isolated, and uncertain. That said, I appreciate
your patience with release cadence as we continue to navigate 2020 together, and all of its
fuckery. When I'm not working on recording, writing, or editing episodes, I'm working on the small
business side of funding the podcast, as well as responding to messages and aiding listeners, and finding resources that can help those
who are navigating leaving abusive relationships, or the abuse that often follows, divorcing,
abusers, narcissists, and gaslighters. I'm honored and so thankful for how many wonderful humans I have
met through this podcast. I'm wanting to find more ways for us to connect with one another and support this community.
So I've added a private forum to the something was wrong website,
where listeners can connect with and support other abuse survivors.
If you're interested in joining this free virtual support group,
head to somethingwaswrong.com slash forum.
Thank you so much.
Hearing Julia and Kelly share their stories
these past few months has been so eye-opening to me.
When I first started looking into this quote
church and its pattern of abuse, I really didn't know all that would be uncovered. I knew something
always felt personally off for me when visiting the church, its previous venue, and its services.
But I truly had no idea the depths of abuse and the pain the members of this church were navigating.
I've heard from many
others who have attended this church, and like Kelly and Julia, they too have told me of
their spiritual and emotional abuse. They're continued therapy to combat the trauma which occurred
while attending this church. I have learned so much about their experiences and my own self
through their words, and I hope the same is true for you.
Thank you again to Julia and Kelly for their bravery and vulnerability.
As always, please take care when listening.
I'm Tiffany Reese and this is Something was wrong. I'm not classify.
Oh no, yeah I would call it no. I don't know what to call it because I consented to it. But um
it was a demeaning act.
Um this one might actually get me emotional, but I visited our apartment that night after
maybe a month of being separated, and we sat down to talk for a few hours.
And then we kind of mutually decided that we would spend one last night together and then that would
be the end.
So we go into the bedroom and start to have sex, but he doesn't want to look at me.
So he has me flipped onto my stomach. And he started hitting me. Not enough to leave bruises, open palm, smacking my skin,
my skin and calling me a bitch as he did it and I
Felt at the time like that is the treatment I deserved
So I'm laying with my face in the blankets sobbing
He can hear me crying.
And he is doing that.
And then he finishes and goes take shower.
And I lay on the bed crying some more.
That was the last night we were together.
The church was paying for my counseling sessions as well. So not only was the counselor ignoring real signs of abuse, not only was he encouraging
me to further submit to financial abuse, not only was he inserting religion and my lack of a document that seals me to this man, he was letting that be the justification
for why I was being abused.
He was also beholden to the church financially for my sessions.
This conflict of interest, I cannot abide that he was everything that I experienced in those
counseling sessions was immoral.
He had a responsibility to protect somebody who was being abused and who was hurt and
he chose consciously chose not to protect me. After my counselor would talk to my father-in-law, violating so many
confidentiality laws, then Lance would go to my mom and talk to her about what was going on in my
counseling sessions. And what is Lance's understanding of what's happening?
That I do not know because the man has not talked to me.
Oh except for the one time I reached out to him and said hey I wanted me with you and then he
accused me of cheating. And like what do you know I didn't do that. I just...
100% he was victimized in childhood, 100%.
But we can look to so many examples of people who were victimized and childhood and became
better in spite of that.
And this person has chosen not to seek help for their trauma, but instead he's chosen
to traumatize others.
Did you return to the church at any time after that?
And what was that experience like, the
sort of separation between you and this church?
What was shared with other people attending the church about you leaving and you guys
separating?
After I left, I stayed away for a few months.
I felt like I didn't have the emotional capacity to return and look my ex in the face. So I took maybe three
or four months away where I didn't attend. I tried to go somewhere else in the meantime and didn't
find that it felt good so I just didn't go anywhere. And in that time of healing I gathered enough resolve to go to the church
and on a Sunday morning and visit with my friends that I had missed.
The friends that I had specifically cut contact with to protect my own heart
for that time. I thought that it was finally ready to go
and face the music, so to speak.
So one morning I got in my car and drove there
and when I arrived in the parking lot,
my ex was there and he happened to see me drive up.
So as I was parking, he ran inside and alerted his dad or whatever.
I'm not sure. So I composed myself and walked to the front of the building and
Lance and his assistant pastor associate pastor
cornered me before I had made it to the door.
The both of them planted big smiles on their faces
and attempted to appear happy to see me.
Lance's smile was insincere.
I could tell that he was kind of freaking out
about me being there.
It threw a wrench in the image that he had constructed,
I guess.
So he grabs me by my arm and says,
we are so happy to see you.
But if you're here to cause a scene, you can just leave.
That felt really horrible to hear
after months of no contact with this man who I have known
since I was five years old, who was my pastor since then,
who was my father-in-law, who was my boss, and that I just walked out on the job without a word.
That was the first thing he had said to me in months. And I started crying under the tension
and I took Umbridge with his word choice and thinking that my character was such that I would go in and
what did he think I was gonna do? YELL! It everybody over what had happened? I
have no idea what was going through his mind. But, um, and he doesn't have the full
story either. I was never open with him about the sexual and emotional abuse. And I have always
wondered whether he would support me or not. Because I think that he is capable of seeing other people's pain,
but he does run from those confrontations, if that makes sense.
So after Lance and the associate pastor cornered me and expressed that I was welcome, as long as I wasn't going to cause a scene.
I started to cry as one does.
And the assistant pastor pulled me aside and translated Lance's words into something more
palatable for me.
He apologized for Lance. By saying, we do want you here,
we just wanna make sure it's for the right reasons.
So I told him what I was here for.
I wanted to say hi to my friends.
I wanted to come back to the church that I had known
since I was five years old
that had been my entire world for that many years.
And so he sent me on my way,
and I got to spend the morning very tense,
but pretending to have a good time connecting with people
when I was just so nervous the whole time.
After the service was over,
I asked my sister-in-law to bring me to their mom because she had just had a baby that I hadn't met yet and I would I would like to connect with her and the baby.
So she brought me to Lance's office where mom was giving the baby a bottle and we exchanged
hello's and how are you's and then before getting into anything deeper
she looked at me and says you know I just want to apologize for
how Lance talked to you he told me what happened
and I want you to know that we love you and he sounded more harsh than he meant to be.
So in the moment, I was like,
oh, thank you, it's okay.
I love you to whatever, moving on.
But after I left, I had the realization
that instead of lance taking accountability for
the words that he said and how they made me feel.
Two separate people apologized for him.
Two separate people that are close to him in his life that are his accountability.
Chose to let him get off scot-free.
Is it scot-free?
Scot-free?
How do you say that phrase?
I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know.
Two people in his life chose to let him walk away
without consequences for his words.
And that is one of the most concerning trends
that I see in his life is the people that are close to him
who have the opportunity to tell him when he messes up
and to make him make reparations.
They choose instead to allow him to escape those consequences and apologize for him.
His associate pastor is pretty well known around the church for being his translator
and for talking people off of the ledge after Lance has hurt them.
They would not call it hurt, they would call it offense, which is something else entirely.
But it really reminds me of a toddler who's never told no that never has to experience the consequences of hitting their mom or whatever
it is, they think that they're entitled to whatever actions they do. They think they're
entitled to living a life without consequences. They think they're entitled to moving forward in life without ever looking back at the damage they've
caused. And that is Lance to a T, especially in that moment where he had to be, he absolutely knew
how what he said made me feel because I was crying in front of him. And he knew that what he had done
was wrong because he went and talked to his wife about it. And still, he was not able to come to me and express
that he knew what he had done was wrong.
When you left, what was told to the congregation
about your relationship?
I have no idea if anything was said.
I feel like it is such a disservice, specifically to the teens that I
worked with, for them not to hear what happened. A lot of my ex's messaging to the kids during services was
the kids during services was that we choose to love each other despite our differences and all of that stuff.
And so to completely ignore the fact that a person who is influential in their lives,
to do my own horn a little bit, but to ignore the fact that I was no longer there and they couldn't ask questions about it was
horrible. I mean some of those kids I really got on well with and
helped them through some really tough times in their life and
when I left and they couldn't ask questions, that must have been a really horrible feeling for them.
I left and they couldn't ask questions. That must have been a really horrible feeling for them.
To know that something happened, something was wrong, and nobody was
commenting on how a person was being completely erased from the equation.
Yeah, and I just wonder, what do you think Lance knew about your separation? He obviously knew some of it based on his behavior upon your return.
What do you think that he knew?
He knew only what my ex had told him,
which is likely that I was the abuser.
I had a few specific events held over my head for the latter portion of my marriage, in
which I behaved in a bad way as a result of being cornered and abused, and my ex used my
one-time actions as a reason to justify his stance that I was the aggressor in our marriage.
What happened was we came out of a movie and he asked me how was it and I said it was great but
would have been better if you didn't spoil the ending for me. Have you seen the movie get out?
I haven't. So he spoiled the movie and that movie relies on the thing
that he spoiled.
So it was made that much less sweet for me
because he told me how it ended.
So unfair.
So I expressed that I would have appreciated it
if he did not give me a spoiler.
And in the middle of the theater, he got very tense with me
and he accused me of being ungrateful.
He said, I brought you to this movie. I was so nice to you. We held hands with Kiss during the movie. It was all around a great
night. Why are you being like this? So I backtracked very quickly and I said, no, I was not telling you
that you are a bad person or that you hurt me in this great way, just that the movie would have been better if I was surprised.
And so we fought about my one little comment
in the car on the way home.
And before we'd even made it out of the parking lot,
he was screaming at me that I was ungrateful.
And I'm sitting there in the passenger seat with tear
streaming down my face telling him I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry over and over and he's
not relenting he is not giving me any leeway at all um for something that I actually don't feel I
needed to apologize for I feel like he needed to apologize to me in the beginning there and at the end of course. So I
had all of this pent-up energy. I was feeling incredibly invalidated hurt by not being heard.
And so I balled at my fists and I punched him in the shoulder, like three or four times in quick
succession. And he stopped the car and made me get out and he left me there. Okay,
that's a little more fantastic than the reality. He had driven me to my car and dropped me
off by my car and then sped off after I had gotten out. But he didn't realize that my backpack was in his trunk and so he left me without my phone
and my keys. So I was stranded. And then later he did not apologize for his actions that
led me to feeling cornered and put into a fight or flight response in which I hit him.
But he did make me apologize for doing the hitting. And then he made me apologize
for that for the rest of our marriage. Did he ever apologize to you for raping you repeatedly?
No, in fact, he was angry at the end for my description making it seem like that's what he
had done because he is a good person and he does not write people
from his perspective.
Further more, after I quit the job, quit working for the church, just stop showing up and
didn't tell Lance that I was going to stop showing up, the paycheck didn't stop.
I wasn't working, but he was still earning my money. My mother was the
accountant at this time, so she handled these paychecks and knew that her daughter
was not working to earn the money that this man was still collecting. So she brought
it up to Lance and my ex and they accused her. What did they? I can't remember what the specific accusation was.
That she was making a mountain out of a molehill, molehill, that she was being over dramatic.
You know, all of the gaslighting things. The accountant whose sole job is keeping the church financially in check and making sure
that they're following legal procedures to keep their non-profit status, this person
was making a mountain out of a mollail just so I'm understanding correctly.
Yes.
I obviously wasn't there, so this is a second-hand account, but my mom describes that the
time that she worked there during this time after she exposed the embezzlement, that she was bullied, that she was ostracized, and she was
made to feel like she was making a deal out of nothing. When in reality, him
getting paid for my work that I wasn't even doing. It was not right. It was never right
that that money was going to him instead of you. No, it wasn't. Your poor mother, what
a position to be put into. I was so proud of her when she quit. So proud of her.
What if you were trafficked into a cult over shot nine times, or fell in love with a vampire,
or went into a minor surgery and woke up one week later, paralyzed?
What would you do?
I'm Whit Missildine, the creator of this is actually happening, a podcast from Wondry that
brings you extraordinary true stories of life-changing events, told by the people who lived them.
From a young man that dooms his entire future with one choice, to a woman who survived
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Each episode is an exploration of the human spirit and personal discovery.
These haunting accounts sound like Hollywood movies, but I assure you this is actually happening.
Follow this is actually happening wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to ad free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. I do remember the protests around Prop 8 and I participated in them as well.
When I think that was when I was in either 8th or 9th grade, my participation was, I mean, obviously I had a choice, but it was not an informed choice.
And I remember having the yes-on-aid sign in my yard.
I remember many more things about going on pro-life marches and participating in a day of silence for the unborn.
I was not...
Okay, being a child, you can't be held responsible fully for the choices that you make that you've been taught from birth. But I do feel
proud of myself for when I was in high school I was confronted about my
pro-life stance by somebody at my school. And I had the option of being
defensive, but I chose to listen to them instead and that was the first
Experience that I remember in which I questioned church leadership
And looking back on it now. I'm so proud of my young self for having the ability to see perspectives that differed from mine
because that is the catalyst for where I am today in being accepting of my friends.
And much more liberal than my parents would like.
Aren't we all?
Yeah, I lost every deep relationship with that I had known for my entire life when I left.
And some of it was on purpose, my choice to say you are not good for me and I walked away,
and others were just, I don't really know, their choice, nobody's choice. When I left the church, the leadership had been very specific about, we do not talk about
Kelly and this person's relationship. It's not any of our business.
And by saying that, they quenched any dissent, any questions about my reasons for leaving? Nobody was telling my side
of the story. It was all kind of hidden. In fact, it was five months of me having
been gone before my chiropractor who attended the church even knew that I was
separated. And I had I see week, I saw him every week,
leading up to this where I finally got the courage
to tell him, you know, I haven't been to church
in five months, I'm divorced.
He had no idea because that's how little anybody
was allowed to talk about it.
What is the journey back, been like for you so far, back to yourself and connecting with yourself outside of this abusive relationship?
Absolutely wonderful. I had forgotten how to be happy.
I had forgotten that I was worthy of love. I had forgotten that I was an
individual and since separating I've gained all of that back tenfold. I don't
think that I've ever felt more connected with my family. I don't think that I've
ever had such strong friendships with co-workers and
classmates and even childhood friends that I've reconnected with.
In my marriage, I wasn't allowed to
be friends with the people I knew in high school
because one of my friends is non-binary, and another one is a trans man. And I wasn't allowed to be friends with them because they were too
lowly for somebody of my stature, according to my spouse,
who is absolutely obsessed with his reputation.
And by associating with...
I don't know what to call them, associating with
regular people, how I would see them now, was not setting a godly example for the people
in our lives. And it was lowering myself. And since separating, I've reconnected with those friends and oh my god, how much have I missed
them? They're some of my closest friends again. And I can't believe that I was ever convinced to
straight up abandon them. I think that's so beautiful that you've been able to reconnect and
make amends and be able to benefit from those relationships again.
How else has leaving the church and your abuser changed your life for the better?
I don't accept abuse from people these days.
I feel like I'm much better equipped to handle all of the emotions that come at me in the day because I'm not attacked
for them. My emotions are just emotions and I have the ability to state them, work through them,
and any conflict that arises I can handle it like a mature adult. Whereas before,
handle it like a mature adult. Whereas before, there's always this idea in church that emotions are lesser than what your brain tells you, but at the same
time, all of the appeals to God's presence are based off of emotion. I feel God,
therefore I know that he is here. And in leaving that abusive
culture behind, I can just accept my emotions for what they are, things that guide my choices,
and give me clues as to what's going on in the world around me, and I can examine them,
and decide what to do with them if that makes sense.
My perspective is that if I am to be fully healed, I have to look for the good and bad people
if that makes sense. And that's my personal journey that I have decided
is something that I need to do.
And I recognize that many survivors of abuse are not
at that place and won't be at that place.
And that's valid too.
100%.
And I think it's also important to highlight
that forgiveness doesn't mean readmission to our lives,
either.
We can forgive people and be at peace with their capabilities
and their abilities to love or not love other people and move on and
not accept it and
It doesn't make us bad or them in capable of growth and change
Right, I agree with that like I want to I want to continue to hope that bringing these stories to light
We'll help other people as well who see these things in themselves
because we're all human and we can all be abusive. It doesn't mean we're all abusers, but abusive
behavior can, you know, we're human. I do appreciate the sentiment about sort of separating the person
from their behavior and hoping that hoping the best for them even if that doesn't mean
readmittance to our lives. Yes, you put that so well because I think that people
do have the capacity for change. It's always going to be a matter of whether
they want to, which abusers tend to not want to. I think if somebody reveals themselves over and over, believe them.
Believe them.
But I, something that I realized over the last year is that it's okay for people to grow
and change their minds and do better.
And those people that are actually willing to say, you know what, at that time,
I thought that was an okay to
thing to say or do, but I now take responsibility for the fact that it wasn't. But I think without
that sort of approach and without the acceptance of responsibility and promise to do better,
it's a lot harder to forgive people, but ultimately, the forgiveness is really for ourselves.
It doesn't change the things that you suffered and it doesn't change the things that Julia
suffered.
I hope that they do better and I hope they learn from this experience and I hope they
hurt here this and that they think about their behavior and their approach and that there
is possibility for change.
I want to believe in change still.
Me too.
This has been really nice being able to share everything. I really appreciate you taking the time.
And I'm so glad that we got to connect.
And it's kind of amazing.
You said you're 24 years old.
Wow, that's kind of amazing to me. You seem very mature.
For your age.
Well, thank you.
I'm the oldest of five that helps at all.
That makes a lot of sense.
It just feels so good to be believed.
So good to be believed.
I have an incredible family around me that has rallied in
support from the oldest person to the youngest person, although I don't share all
of these details with my youngest siblings. They all without question, without
interrogations, and yes we believe you, yes we want healing for you. Yes you're right. Yes, that was traumatizing
makes me incredibly
devastated for
the countless individuals who don't have that support and who
Go to somebody and the first thing that they hear is
You're lying or that's not true or he's a really nice guy
I'm sure that you're mistaken so callous to take somebody who's putting
everything out on the table all of their trauma in an experience that can be re-traumatizing just talking about it and you invalidate that experience.
Thank you so much for sharing that with me and I just want to say thank you for agreeing to
speak with me. It's taken a lot of bravery for you to speak with me about these things.
And I really admire your commitment to yourself
and your commitment to continue to feel your feelings
and validate your own feelings for yourself because I think that's amazing and you deserve it.
Thank you so much for having me.
This has been a pleasure.
Absolutely. bit. Thank you so much for having me. This has been a pleasure.
Absolutely.
On the next episode of Something was Wrong, you'll meet Heather, whom grew up in multiple
evangelical cults in Europe and the US. Cult's so abusive that some of its past leaders
now find themselves in court rather than church.
Next time.
You think you know me, you don't know me well at all.
You think you know me, you don't know me.
Something was wrong, is written, recorded, edited, and produced by me, Tiffany Reese.
Music by Gladrags.
Thank you so much to each and every survivor for sharing our story.
If you'd like to support the growth of the podcast, you can leave us a five star review on iTunes,
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Follow me on Instagram at lookivo.
L-O-O-K-I-E-D-O-O.
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