Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 There is a book about bpd, one of the earliest published on the subject (I think) called: " I Hate You, Don't Leave Me. " The last line in Jaie's most recent poem could be the mirror image of that sentiment: " I Love You, But Go Away. " Yes, I believe there is a great need for more books from the KO's perspective, because the parent-child bond is the first and most influential relationship in a person's life. You only get one shot at being a one-year-old, an eight-year-old, etc., and the home environment/the parental relationship can have such an enormous impact on development. " A Child Called 'It' " is about a young boy singled out from his brothers for shocking physical and emotional abuse and deprivation by his undiagnosed but probably paranoid-schizophrenic or psychopathic pd mother. His father was mostly away from home and at first tried to protect this son, but then he pretty much abandoned his family. " It " was designated the family servant; he had to do all the housework except anything involving food, and not doing the chores " right " got him beaten, burned, slammed around hard enough to break bones, and even stabbed with a kitchen knife in the liver. His mother denied him any food and forced him to live in the basement. " It " managed to survive for years scavenging garbage, the pet's food, and filching bits of his classmates' food at school. Oddly enough, the mother insisted that " It " attend school obviously neglected, ragged, battered and malnourished as he was! Finally his teacher and the principal were made aware of the food-stealing, then noticed the boy's condition (the malnourishment, the old and new wounds, the ragged, ill-fitting clothes and shoes), notified the proper authorities and the boy was rescued. The point of all this is that this hideous physical and emotional abuse didn't break this particular boy's mind and spirit. He managed to survive without turning into an abuser or a criminal himself, his intelligence and his humanity intact. And now as a husband and father himself, he advocates for awareness of mental illness and child protection. I can only speculate that different individuals must have innately different levels of resilience. Do some children have a unique inner core of strength that allows them to endure the most unspeakable abuse and yet survive it with their humanity intact, while other children wind up emotionally broken and crippled by their mistreatment, or become savage abusers themselves? Its an interesting conundrum: why some people survive abuse with less damage, and some don't. I can't help but be fascinated and wonder why some abused children like Aileen Wuornos become abusers or worse as adults and others like Dave Pelzer, the child called " It " , transcend it. -Annie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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