Something Was Wrong - S5 E8: Everything was Terrifying | Rachel
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I think mainstream Christianity, I think for the past 100 years is the gaslit and created into what it is now.
Growing up, we were taught that if you were even 1% off from the truth, you were going to
hell.
So all Catholics were going to go to hell.
All, you know, Orthodox people were going to go to hell. All, you know, Jewish people were
going to go to hell. And even if you were, even if you were a Christian, but didn't have
one little belief, you were going to go to hell. And it was like everything was, it was
this constant fear that you were going to be deceived. Because
if you're deceived, you don't know that you're being deceived. So you're constantly fighting to not
be deceived. And your only source of hope was listen to your parents or listen, you know, to what
they said God was saying. And it was so dangerous and it was so fraught and it was so easy to end up
going to hell, you know, everything was terrifying. You know me, you know me, you know me, you know me, yeah. 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, 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 was this idea that we're all living in our own little world.
It's basically the matrix, but the reality is that Satan's constantly fighting that Jesus
and whatnot.
And we had to, if you got wrapped up in things like, I don't know, happiness, mental health,
you were getting wrapped up in the physical world and you had to, you know, you were ignoring the fight and
you were going to get distracted. And so it was very much like nothing else mattered.
And of course, when my dad got stressed and went to the movies, that didn't count, you
know, that's just what he wanted to do. So you were constantly eroded with this sense of impending doom. And need to hurry up and fight and hurry up and get better and hurry up and grow up and you have to do something and they would always say this thing of like you have to tell everyone you meet about Jesus because what happens if they walk away and get hit by a bus and they die and go to hell.
by a bus and they die and go to hell. That's your fault because you could have told me about Jesus and you didn't. And so I grew up literally with the weight of the world on my shoulders.
I feel like if I acted a certain way, if you know, if we went to my grandparents' house and I
said one thing out of line, I wasn't being a good Christian witness and they were going to go to
hell because of me. And so they trained you to self-police, like not only were they controlling
your every move, they got you in such a mindset that you were trying to control your own behavior
to such a degree because you were terrified of showing someone that you weren't a true Christian
and making them think that it wasn't real. And so then they wouldn't believe and then they would go to hell and that's another, you know, strike against you.
They were always so good at like appearing normal, like normal enough. And there was a sense of,
and there's, I think the church was like, you just, you don't get involved in someone else's family. You know, you don't try to tell parents how to discipline their kids or whatnot. And so,
I think if people did see something that they're like,
you know, that's a little weird.
They just had the sense of like, it's not my place to do that.
And especially when your dad became the pastor, right?
Your dad was the height of the church.
Yeah.
So was he looked at as like an extension of God?
Because I know you described it as a cult like atmosphere.
Yeah, so it was very much the sense of we have a mission from God and you're going to,
if you join, like you're coming with us. And if you at some point don't have our vision,
you're out. And they were very much obsessed. And I think in some ways, I think they did try to do
good. I mean, a lot of cults do try to do good, you know, even, you know,
Jones town, they, you know, there were some aspects of that before you got too deep into it that
they felt like they were doing good. So my parents were very much proud of the fact that they accepted
the down and outs as they called them. You know, we don't turn our back on the down and outs. So
they were constantly reached out and
befriending the drug addicts, the drug community, the alcoholics, and I think in some part
their brains they were trying to do good and in some part of their brains it was like a way for them
to feel like they were doing good, to feel better about themselves. But that also meant I was growing up around the families of these kids.
And when you have kids who are covered in headlice and suffering from all
nutrition or their dad attacked them and their mom with a stung gun and is now in jail,
it's really hard to look at your life and feel bad about it.
And my parents would use that.
My dad would always say, you know, like, you have a fantastic, like, I'm a great dad,
like, you have a fantastic life. And compared to those around us, we did. So you didn't question it,
and you felt grateful. And you were glad that at the very least your dad wasn't trying to kill you guys.
But that put us around a lot of and savory characters, like I remember.
I walked downstairs one day into our kitchen and there were two guys that were hanging
up with my dad a lot.
One was called Skinny and one was called Shakey.
For obvious reasons, one was Shakey because he was constantly shaking.
If he wasn't drunk, he would shake.
And the other guy was Skinny because he was on so much heroin that he was like a rake. And shaky was standing in our kitchen
and he turned around and his eye was like gouged and bloody.
And apparently he had been in the bar
and gone to a fight and someone had stabbed in an eye
and he came home to my dad for help.
And so he was like, don't be scared, don't be scared.
And of course me, I'm like, I'm not scared.
I'm brave. But looking back, I'm like, holy crap. That's an incredibly traumatic thing to just walk down to
and breakfast. So instead of seeking medical help, he went to your dad? Oh, I don't. I think my dad
took it to go get medical help. Oh, okay, okay. But it was this thing of like, we have no boundaries. We open up our arms to everyone.
And oh well, if our kids get hurt because of it.
Like there were times where I remember me and my babysitters
cowering under a table while a drunk guy,
who consequently it was one of those men
that was having issues that my parents were trying to set up
one of their lady friends with.
Me and that lady friend were huddled under a table while the
strunk guy was trying to break in to see us.
And I don't know, like he was screaming and banging on doors, like,
I don't know what would have happened if he came in.
Orifying.
So when your mind, when you're processing that,
are you thinking like this person has a demon or in your head,
what did you already see that was bullshit?
I, I always thought that was bullshit because I saw very quickly, like, you
know, my ability to see things logically. I put the pieces together quite quickly
that my mom was mad at someone they had a demon. Or when I was, you know, when she
was mad at me, I was suddenly had a demon of rebellion or blah, blah, blah, blah.
But you learn to kind of keep your mouth shut about stuff.
Usually it was when my
character is being called into question or one of my siblings was being hurt that I wouldn't
shut my mouth. So yeah, no, I knew that was, you know, he was dangerous, but there was also
that side to me that was like very adventurous and was like, oh boy, if he comes in, like, what
am I gonna, you know, fight him with? Like I was one of those stupid kids who was like, you know,
wanting someone to step to me just so I could like,
try out my skills.
It's also a coping mechanism your fight or flight response.
Yeah.
Well, and I think as we got older,
my mom became more and more annoyed
about how violent me and my sisters were.
Like when I talk about my fights,
like I remember having a fight with my two-year-old sister,
I think I was four,
and I picked up a fire guard and hit her over the head with it.
So a fire guard is, if you have an open fireplace,
they usually create these metal guards that are
like a half circle around them so that a kid doesn't crawl up.
So I just picked that up above my head and hit her with it
didn't even think twice.
You were raised in a violent atmosphere
where that was normalized.
Exactly.
Our favorite thing was to wrestle and to play fight,
and I almost felt energized by that.
And I think that was definitely a self-defense mechanism that I had.
So any time I got into a time where I was scared,
my brain would go, no, you can take him, you're big and strong,
even though I was a seven-year-old girl.
And couldn't have really done that much against a big drunk guy.
But in my brain, I think that's what stopped me from being scared in that moment.
It also, I think, trained me to be very aggressive and to see people's threats.
Like that same guy came out to my parents one time, we were walking, we met him in the
street, and I had my hair in plates or braids as you guys call them. And he grabbed one of my plates and yanked on them
in like a, I don't know, he was,
he made this weird comment as well,
but I just turned around and like punched him in the stomach
because he attacked me and my parents were furious
and like made me apologize.
And in my brain, I'm like, he struck first.
Why am I in trouble?
Like I don't understand.
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listen ad-free by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app. It was this thing of like you doesn't matter what the adults do you just have to sit and
take it and they had that kind of attitude with a lot of things with us where it was like
you're going to hang out with the kids of these people and whatnot and we got headlifes
so many times I'm not I'm surprised we didn't like have our head shaved like I remember
just like months of us my mom would make us sit in these chairs and she would put the TV on so we wouldn't move and just cover our heads in male.
And that was the home remedy.
You covered your head in male and then you would comb them out.
And that became such a staple of my childhood.
For years, I remember that being a thing because we were friends with these kids
and like the kids were the kids were nice.
They were they were nice.
And I felt really awful for them
and they were in a bad situation.
So like, you know, in my brain,
I'm like, I want to hang out with them.
I want to make them feel better.
But my parents really were just putting us
in positions where anything could have happened to us.
And that was kind of like their
martyr-esque way of looking at it. Like we are going to open our
arms to everyone. If anything happens to us, it's God's will.
Like I remember my dad at one point being like, I don't care.
Like I'm not going to ever kill anyone. That was his thing of like
we were watching something about World War II and they were talking
about people that were sent to jail because they didn't want to fight.
My dad's like, I would have been one of those people.
And in my brain, I'm like, what?
Why? You're like, perfectly fine hitting us. I don't understand.
And he was like, no, I don't believe it's right.
And so then I think either me or my sister were like, well, what if someone came into the house and was hurting us?
Sort of like raping us and he was like, well, you know, I'd be upset, but that's up to God.
And if God's going to allow that to happen. And it was just this idea of like we were just
at the will of God. And you know, they weren't going to do much to protect us. They were going to,
you know, do what they thought was right, regardless of if it would put us in danger or not. How scary and terrifying.
And also it's interesting that your dad seemed to operate as a gas lighter from the beginning,
saying, oh, I hate doing this, but I'm going to spank you.
Yes, very much so.
It was always someone else's fault.
I remember even as like a like 23 year old calling him out because he shoved my sister Hannah
because she got in the way of him
punching one of our other siblings
and he shoved her out of the way.
And when I confronted him about it,
he said, well, she was the child
and she was being disrespectful.
And I remember yelling at him being like,
it is not the child's responsibility
to make sure that you don't have an outburst.
Like it's your responsibility to control how you respond to that.
And he was like, it was just this idea of like, I am the parent.
And if you were disrespectful to me, whatever happens,
she was your fault.
And it was very much this, I think, growing up, I, the more I believe that
they saw us as extensions of themselves as opposed to like loving us in their own right.
So they loved us the way that they loved themselves, but the minute that we did something that hurt them or made, you know, made them
uncomfortable, it was like all of a sudden we were the enemy. And they had this like selective
belief slash memory because like whenever they were talking to anyone else, it was like, oh,
they're a guest from God, you know, we're just stewards of them blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And then as soon as those, you know, backs returned, it was like, no, like we control
you.
Like we, you know, you belong to us, especially because they're telling so many people how
to like live their lives and what's right and what's wrong in placing themselves in that
position of authority.
What I've heard from other pastors, kids is that you feel an even higher amount of pressure
because of that, because like you said, it's an extension of them and so I imagine you were describing
that woman that lived in the house and planted the church with them in the beginning and how you felt
like she was hard on you or judging you, but perhaps she was actually just trying to argue with
your mom and harm or judge her.
Yeah.
Because you're looked at as a piece of her, your caught in the crossfire essentially.
Yeah, I think my parents created the narrative that she was against us and out to get us.
Coming to know her now, she's an incredibly kind and loving woman.
And I think my parents believed something about her
and so then I saw all of her actions through that lens.
Well, we were also running to the issue of,
my parents had two kids and this lady and her family
had two kids and people began to like,
those kids more than us,
or that was how my parents felt.
My parents would get mad at us
because people thought that they were the pastures kids.
And my parents were furious about that one because they felt like that family were trying
to take their spot and take their authority.
And then too that we we were seen as like trouble makers and were, you know, mistaken for
other people and other people's kids were thought to be the pastor's kids because
they were so good.
And so there was this constant tension there of like, you have to be better.
Or for me, I definitely reacted to that out of my thing of, well, if you want me to be
a certain way, I'm going to go so far the other way.
So like I remember, I was like like I waged an all out war and anything that the people wanted
for me, I would give them the opposite of like I remember I spent hours before church service
digging up worms out of the ground and then I would walk around to people to go shake their hands
and just stick worms in their hands and run off. Not so much trouble for that but I loved it.
to run off. Not so much trouble for that, but I loved it. And I think because my mother was so antagonistic towards me in that way, I began to view any type of conflict as a
battle for my soul. And if I gave any inshore said something or agreed to something that
I didn't believe in, I felt like I was losing myself. So in a way that kind of helped me because it had been in another way, you know, it made
that any fight I had in my marriage.
My poor husband didn't understand why I was acting as if he was trying to, you know, break
me down when he was just asking about how I like filled dishwasher.
So that was definitely something we have had to unpack because I've gone older, but it's
something that served me very well as a child. Well, yeah, I can so relate when you have to
constantly meeting new people is actually assessing them and their threat to
you. Yes, yes, we're always you're always assessing the threat and if this
person is going to harm you especially considering that your parents would let people that sounds like they barely even knew
Live at the house and be around you now. Were those people you said they were allowed to punish you
So are you saying that people that lived with you were physically abusive to you and your sister as well?
yes
And it ranged if the person was comfortable and not a lot of times people weren't comfortable
and they would just say, I'm just going to tell your parents, but there were other times
where, yeah, we definitely got disciplined by people.
And it's interesting, the books that I mentioned earlier, the W and Michael Pore, which I
recommend you look into, because there's been a lot of cases of abuse recently and abuse
allegations coming from people that followed that type of teaching.
They basically said that not only were you to like, you know, punish your kids like that, but you were to have a ton of kids and raise the older ones to do the same. And so for a while,
me and my older sister were basically given authority to punish my younger siblings.
basically given authority to punish my younger siblings.
And so we grew up doing the same thing to them. And it's like it's bred into you.
You were homeschooled at that time
and you mentioned that you weren't really allowed
to go outside.
So am I correct in assuming that all of your socialization
was with people who lived in the house
or people who went to the church?
Yes, now we had kids who had come up and play in our
yard because we lived on three and a half acres of land and some of it was a forest and so the kids would come play in the forest
and if that happened my parents would actually like try to get them to come inside and then basically sit them down and
scare the living Vegeta's out of them until they like set us in his prayer or until one of their parents came looking for them.
Like there were multiple times where like kids just like hung out with us so long that their parents would like come and be like,
where the hell are they like and be looking for them. I'm surprised we didn't get the police called on us, honestly.
Kids would literally wander into play with us and my mom would sit them down and read them horrific stories about hell
until they were so scared that they would say the prayer.
And in my brain, part of me is like,
oh my god, my mom, part of me is like,
oh yay, they're saved.
I don't have to worry about this person.
I like going to hell.
Yeah.
But other than that, it was very much like everyone.
And if someone did like us or want to become friends,
there was always a reason why they weren't good friends with us.
And we'd always cry and be like, Mom, but we want friends. You said your praying friends have friends. I am praying for you, but these aren't the friends God wants for you.
We have to wait for their friends that God wants for you. And they never came along surprisingly.
Did you receive an actual education when you're homeschooled or where you only taught the Bible. We were, my parents used this curriculum called ACE,
Accelerated Christian Education School of Tomorrow.
There was nothing educational or accelerated about it.
I left and went to college with barely any education.
They barely taught you science and it was very much through like making you question evolution or like basically very much training you to be a good Christian person
and very strict on gender roles, very strict on like how you were supposed to live and what you
wanted out of life. And this was also like the type of education where the type of curriculum where
in America they used to sit in actually like Christian schools,
but you were like taught and trained to like,
if the student misbehaved that you had to like,
spank them with a paddle.
And so a lot of times in the curriculum,
they would have pictures of like,
so and so was disobedient and so this person disciplined them
and it would be a kid bending over getting hit
with like a big wooden paddle.
Wow. So talk about normalized in your life.
Oh, 100%. Like I grew up believing that
spanking was good to the point where before I went to college,
I was 17. And this guy I worked with,
he had a question, he felt like, you know,
I'm spanking my kids and I just feel like it's not working.
I feel like I all in doing a spanking them like,
you know, you were spanked a lot as a kid.
Like, are you okay?
Like, I'm worried I'm hurting them.
And I said, oh, yeah, I'm totally fine.
I was spanked multiple times a day
and I'm totally fine.
Like, that's how normalized it was
and how much I didn't realize things were wrong.
Even with all the issues I had with my parents
and all the stuff that I knew was fucked up about our lives,
that was still so normalized
to me as a 17-year-old. And I hope to God he didn't listen to me. I mean, if he did take
the word of a 17-year-old, I mean, that's on him. My parents, I think, were so gung-ho,
and they equated being able to spank their kids to having religious freedom. So if the
government was trying to stop you from spanking their kids, they were coming after,
like, you're right to be able to parent as a Christian.
And so a lot of people, I think,
also got wrapped up in that.
And we're like, well, yeah, yeah, you know,
like, of course, we support you, like, you know,
we also don't want our rights taken away.
And because of that, I think, now, like in America, I think
it's the same way where that ability to, you know, train your kids in a Christian way is
seen as like, if you try to like control or try to like put any type of restrictions on
corporal punishment, they see it as, oh, they're coming for our religious rights or a religious
freedom. And I think that's why my parents got away with it for so long,
and I know one question them,
because that was such a big part of our church,
and the way people believed.
That was drilled into us from such a young age
that at some point, there were so many other things to be mad about
that that didn't seem like it was one of them.
You know, that seemed like the one thing they were doing right.
When it became such a... Like, they were definitely things like rooted me out. Like,
I remember when we were young, like, my dad thought it was funny to compare me and my
sister's butts to see after we've been spanked to see the ham prints and he thought, like,
he liked to see that. I remember being so embarrassed one more
in breakfast because he was explaining the differences and how we cried when we were spanked.
And so he was mimicking me crying
and then my sister crying
and making fun of us for how we cried when we were spanked.
And there was always this idea of like,
oh, what's just crocodile tears?
Or like, oh, you're just crying for attention or blah, blah, blah.
To the point now, we're like, if I'm talking to someone
and I'm fighting passionately and I start to cry, the amount of shame and frustration I feel at
myself for crying, like, is unheard of. And that was the way my father was with
everything, like even as a teenager when I was start to cry while I was talking
to him, it was just like, you're weak and you can't control yourself.
Everything that you did or everything you did to act out was always
seen as something deliberate as opposed to like this is a reaction you're having because
you're scared or something. It was like, oh, well, you're just your upset and you're not
getting your waist, you're acting out as opposed to like, you know, I remember my dad was
pissed at me because I was suppressed and I wasn't happy. You know, like, there would be
multiple times as a child where like, I think I was having a definite reaction to something
and he would snap and be like,
get that look off your face, like smile, be happy.
And it was just saying, like, no negative emotions
were ever allowed or ever accepted.
And if you were having any type of emotional reaction
that wasn't positive, it was you trying
to manipulate the situation to get something as opposed to you just having a legitimate
experience and reaction to something.
And that fucked me up hardcore.
Hard core.
Understandably.
And do you think it also made you for a time or at times look at other people with those
same motivations because you
had been brainwashed to believe that people are only motivated those ways. Oh
definitely definitely. I growing up, my little sister Rebecca, she came at a
hard time in our lives and unfortunately all I think of my parents
frustrations with where they were. life were put on to her.
I think everything she was reminded my dad of my mom and he hated that.
And my mom saw her as someone that she needed to protect.
And so Rebecca, unfortunately, became their thing that they fought over.
And I was very much like my father in the way I looked and the way I acted.
And so I think in my mom's brain, any aggression she had against my father was put onto me.
And any interaction I had with Rebecca, she saw through the lens of, as my dad attacking
her.
Rebecca is technically the fourth.
So part of what happened just before my parents
uh planned the church and I think probably a lot of
their issues going forward with their kids. My mother
got pregnant and they weren't planning it and they had a son
there were complications and he died
quite soon after he was born. My dad says that you know
he was born my dad went to go get flowers for my mom
and Steven was dead when she came back.
I'm so sorry.
Thank you.
And it was really hard for me
because I think we were heartbroken,
but my parents instantly went on this line of,
look how amazing God is and look how not sad we are
because we believe in God.
Like my mom apparently would talk about how she prayed for Stephen to be resurrected and
like prayed over his body, but then you know, like gave up and knows it will see him in
heaven and God gave her a vision after like five years that they'd have another son
or like whatever.
And I remember even as a small child feeling like
something bad had happened and we weren't acknowledging it.
And it was this very matter of fact thing.
I was like, yep, Stevenson heaven, blah, blah, blah.
And growing up, it felt like we talked about him a lot
but it was very much in this like happy way of like,
oh, we'll see him again and blah, blah, blah.
And there was never any like grief period with my parents.
It was like this thing where they'd be like, we should be so sad that God's comforting us with his amazing, you know, love and compassion and look how amazing it is and it became this like miracle thing and they would talk about.
and look how amazing it is and it became this like a miracle thing and they would talk about, yeah, people look at us and they say we're crazy and they think we should be sad, but we're just not.
And there'd be times where like I would be alone as a small child crying for my brother
and I think in a way it felt like I had to grieve for him because no one else would.
And it felt like there was no acknowledgement of the loss there. And they never dealt with it.
And so I think when Rebecca was born, they were very much triggered.
So it goes you, Hannah.
Stephen, Rebecca, Sarah, Daniel.
And both with Sarah and Rebecca, my dad had said they were boys.
And was excited for them to be boys.
And then they were bored. Oh. Oh yeah like he was prophesying. Yeah because yeah
if it was rough. I think my mother saw it as he didn't want anything to do with
Rebecca and Sarah because they were born boys. I I think in reality, neither of them dealt with
their trauma. And I think my dad was so traumatized by what happened with Stephen that he wasn't able
to emotionally connect with the girls because they would tell us that my dad didn't want any more
kids. Like he was happy with me and Hannah. And then after the loss of Stephen, it felt like it was
just this constant thing of like trying to get back what they lost.
And so they didn't stop until they got Daniel.
The older they got the more they talked about
how people were freaked out that they had so many kids,
you know, because they had like five.
And I don't think in America that's such a shock
that in Britain, it definitely was like a lot of kids.
It's a lot of kids to me, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think they were definitely kind of in the camp of if God gives us a child,
he wants us to have it. And they were also in this weird camp of like,
we need to grow the kingdom by having more kids. And it wasn't like a huge thing growing up, but the older we got,
like the more my dad would rant, he would rant on and on about how Muslim families were coming over,
and they had a ton of kids, and because they had a ton of kids, they were gaining ground, and us
Christians didn't want to have kids anymore, and just so bizarre. So, funnily enough, the church that we were kind of affiliated with started getting
weirder and weirder, more into that cult-like setting, like the guy who ran it is called
Colin Erkett, and I don't know if he still runs it, but I think my parents were there
like in the young days, and it got to the point where he had security and you weren't allowed to talk to him and
You had to be on a certain spiritual level
in order to be able to have a conversation with him in order to be able to like make an appointment to speak with him and
I don't know how they calculated those levels that they did
and so that was like, you know as weird as my parents were
I think they were definitely being fed by like an even weirder dynamic but they did. And so that was like, you know, as weird as my parents were,
I think they were definitely being fed by like an even
weirder dynamic, which makes them probably feel less extreme.
Because yes, and I think it makes sense that, you know,
my dad being as narcissistic and needing to control things,
being told that you weren't spiritual enough to, you know,
he didn't like that feeling of having to prove himself.
And so he began to have real issues with the church,
and my mom did not.
My mom was so in love with that church.
And I think that, I think truly that's
where some of her fonder memories with our family
were when we were young, and they were at Bible college.
And I think that became such a safe space for her.
She never wanted to leave it.
She's very much that way.
Where she views her life through
the happy times and is unable to recognize the reality of where we are. So around this time,
one of my dad's friends who went to Bible College with him came to speak at our little
house church and she told him he was explaining his frustration and feeling like
people were concerned with getting people saved and you know that was always his
big thing like people had to get saved people had to get saved which you know I
think in some ways they truly did believe that stuff that they were telling us
about you know you have to get people saved because they're going to hell I
think he did believe that and so I think he was genuinely frustrated and
freaked out and feeling like this was important and no one else cared and she
told me about a church that she had been a part of or had been affiliated with in Hawaii
of all places. And I didn't even know Hawaii was a place. Like I remember my dad saying he was going
to Hawaii and I'm like, what? And she said, I think you'll really like this pastor. You need to go to
this conference. And my dad basically said, like, I don't have the money to go. And even if I did
like, there's better things to spend it on than that. And so he tells us, Roy, all basically said, like, I don't have the money to go. And even if I did like, there's better things to spend it on than that.
And so he tells us all the time, like, she's preaching at their church at their
conference. And then she basically stands up and says, this man needs to go to
this conference, pointing at my dad. And you guys need to pay for it.
And in Britain, that's just not a thing you do. Like my dad was more
to fight. And everyone else was mortified. But she said, by the end of the
conference, his ticket was paid for and the price of the conference was paid for.
So off he went and he had a really great experience and I think he felt very accepted and loved and I think for whatever, whatever my dad is searching for in life, I think that's still a very one of the first times in his life felt like he found a place where he was accepted.
Not necessary for what he believed or won up, but he just felt so happy in that place.
And it was like he came back and after he came back, all he wanted to do was go back
there.
And he felt like God was telling him that we had to go train there and my mother absolutely
did not.
And that's basically what ended the church.
Like our church split up.
I think the ground time I was nine.
And it was very traumatic.
And there was a lot of screaming matches.
And there was a lot of like, I remember watching my parents fight.
My parents having a fight.
And then one of the ladies in the church who had been a part of it.
It was screaming.
Like they were having a three-way screaming match at each other and it was just
very painful. It was such a broken time and they decided that they were ending the church and
that we were leaving the home that I grew up in the hunting lodge. And that was when we moved to
the other church base they had, which was in the middle of the village. And basically the next four years were us moving from place to place while my dad wittled away at
my mother to let us go to Hawaii. So we ended up moving to a tiny fishing
village north of Inverness actually like tiny place. It was a lot of fun, but it was also,
I think, the more my father fought with my mom,
the more abusive things got in both ends.
And like growing up, I'd seen my dad be abusive
every now and then, but it kind of became more of the norm
living there just before we went to Hawaii.
The biggest thing he ever did to my mom that I'm aware of
was we were living in Art Selma, which was the hunting lodge, and they got into a fight about something
and he threw a mug at her and it hit her in the eye. And she had to wear an eye patch for a month
and she almost went blind. And I remember right after it happened, like we heard it,
and then my dad ran out and locked us in our rooms and told us not to talk to anyone. But there was a lady who was living who was
staying with us. She wasn't living with us full-time. I think she was just there
for a couple weeks and she heard what happened. It confronted my father about it.
And so my dad got up in front of the entire church and like basically admitted what he did and
offered to step down and it became this big thing where I watched it happen and I watched
everyone turn around and say, oh my gosh, we haven't supported you enough.
You know, you've been all alone.
You must be so stressed.
Like, how brave of you to admit what you did.
Like that really shows your character.
And in that moment, I knew like no one was ever gonna help us.
Like it didn't matter.
I was always impressed with my dad.
My dad would always apologize.
He would always come out and say exactly what he did
and apologize for it.
And it was only as I got older,
there realized nothing ever changed. And we'd
always be so impressed with the fact that he apologized that we'd want to move on. And then he
would act exactly the same way again. And I spoke with like a couple of people who were there when
that happened. And they said, yeah, we felt guilty about it. And we felt like, you know, we had
put him under stress. And we weren't supporting him enough and
was nobody concerned about your mom? Was it normalized for men to hit their wives?
Not no, it wasn't, but my mother was such a fucking spitfire and I think half of those people
had been in fights with my mom where they probably assumed she just pushed him to it.
My mom was a type of woman who he would knock her down
and she'd get back up and push him, you know.
Like that was why it was so hard,
I think, to see what was happening was because she would,
she would stand her ground on something
and attack my father to the point where he would snap
and lunge at her and then she would get up
and lunge back at him, you know, like she was very,
like, ready to fight until this, I get my weight. The point where like even if, and then she would get up and lunge back at him. You know, like she was very like ready to fight until this I get my way to the point where like even if and then of course my dad would be like
oh my gosh, like I hit you. Let's you know do damage control and figure it out and so she would most
often get her way. And that was the frustration I think of we had growing up because she would never
leave, you know, she didn't, she would never do anything
because she was like, no, you are going to become this person.
You are going to become this man.
We are going to make it work.
Like they would always, they would always brag about
how divorce was never an option for us.
We're always going to slug it out together.
And all of us kids would be like, please God divorce,
let us out.
You know.
And I think the part of the hard part was is that you know it did seem like
I believe my dad and he said he was so sorry of what he didn't he knew it was wrong. And it took me
a long while to realize that he could be so sorry but yet because he wasn't doing what he needs to
change his behavior, he could be hate what he was doing but still do it. It came to the point where I realized that
I wasn't safe being around him.
It was no longer a matter of, did he care or did he love us
or did he feel sorry?
It was regardless of whether he does or not,
he's not a safe person to be around.
And I think that's where the,
that's where the tables are turning
in our brains of like, we need to get out.
Next time. You thinkin' know me, you don't know me well at all.
You think you know me, you don't know me well.
Something was wrong, is written, recorded, edited, and produced by me, Tiffany Rees.
Music by Gladrags. Thank you so much to each and every
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L-O-O-K-I-E-B-O-O. Thank you so much. I can't believe it comes The thing to know me, I don't know me well
Let all of you, let all of you, let all you don't know me, you don't know me well
You think you know me, you don't know me well
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