The Last Secret You'll Ever Keep by Laurie Stolarz (ebooks online reader .TXT) š
- Author: Laurie Stolarz
Book online Ā«The Last Secret You'll Ever Keep by Laurie Stolarz (ebooks online reader .TXT) šĀ». Author Laurie Stolarz
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NOW
1
Iāve learned some things.
Like that dirt comes in a variety of shades: tan, amber, silver, blue ā¦ Like that when you claw at it long enough, youāll see these colors and wonder how you never noticed how striking dirt can be, with its pearly flecks of granite and residual bits of mica.
Iāve learned that the ruddier shades (the reds and the oranges) can conjure up memories of childhood pottery classesāMommy and me making pinch pots and coil vasesābut that the brain only allows such memories for an instant before zapping them away, reminding you where you are.
When youāre surrounded by dirt, when it forms the walls around you and the floor beneath your feet, youāll feel the individual granules pushing through your skin, making everything itch, and youāll taste mouthfuls of it, not knowing how it got there: on your tongue, at the back of your throat, and between your teeth.
Youāll be so hungry, so depleted of energy, having spent so much time underground. Youāll chew the inside of your cheek and search your mouth for foodāa lingering popcorn kernel casing or a grain of rice stuck in the crevices of your gumsābefore curling up into a ball and noticing for the first time how hard dirt can be, like a marble slab, making every bone ache.
Youāll smell the dirt too. The scent is different from soil, not nearly as sweet or earthy. Dirt is arid, depleted of moisture, and so it smells like deathāa sour, rotten stench.
Youāll think a lot about death, racking your brain, trying to remember facts from bio class. How long can one go without water? What happens to the body upon complete dehydration? Is it one of the worst ways to die?
Youāll replay the details from the night you got hereāover and over againātormented as to how it happened and what you couldāve done differently.
Taken another path home?
Called a cab?
Not returned the spare house key to the planter outside?
Because being here is your fault, after allāyour stupidity, the result of not following everything youād learned about safety and defense.
Screaming is a defense, and youāll do a lot of that. Youāll also punch the walls, as if you could ever break them down.
Exhausted, youāll find yourself in a fetal position, sucking your thumbs, hoping doing so will produce a mouthful of saliva, the way it did when you were little, all over your pillow. But instead the roof of your mouth will bleed from reaching too far and scraping too hard. Surprisingly, the taste will come as a welcome distraction. Youāll tell yourself: Thereās iron in this blood, and fat in the oil in your hair, as if iron and fat could ever save anyone from a lack of food and water.
Water.
Youāll crave it like youāve never craved anything, the way lions crave meat, picturing gallon jugs and fresh trout streams. Meanwhile, your mouth will be dry like a desert, like the dirt inside a barren well. And your tongue will feel foreignātoo big for your mouth, too swollen to get enough air.
Youāll pray for rain to come. And when it finally does, youāll try to catch it in your hands and collect as much as you can before splashing it into your sandpaper mouth, not caring that itās littered with dirt, because you will be tooāso damned dirty.
Iāve felt dirt in my eyesāthe scratch, the burn, the constant blurāso perpetual Iād almost forgotten what it was like to see clearly. And I know how it feels inside the earsāso deep you can practically hear it: the sound of dirt.
The crackle of madness.
Iāve learned about madness too.
Hospital beds.
And doctorsā meds.
And āBe a good girl.ā
āDonāt feel so much.ā
āSheās feeling too little.ā
āIām not really sure how well sheās feeling today.ā
Iāve learned to āfeelā whatever the people with the name badges say Iām supposed to, because thatās whatās āsane.ā
Iām not insane, but Iāve been diagnosed with some of Insanityās cellmatesāDelusional, Depressed, Defiant, and Paranoidāand lost people I thought were my friends.
Thank god for Jane. Saint Jane is what I call her, because sheās the one who created the Jane Anonymous website, a place where victims of crime-related trauma can chat with one another and share their experiences.
I discovered the site about a month ago, at the library where I work. The words VICTIMS UNITED screamed at me from a bathroom wall poster:
VICTIMS UNITED
Looking for a safe space to share your honest truth,
without judgment,
regardless of how unpopular that truth might be?
Come chat with us.
Weāre here for you.
Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
www.JaneAnonymous.com
#JaneAnonymous #VictimToVictor #OnlyTheHonestSurvive
I logged on that very night and have been chatting ever since. The people on the site ālistenā without judgment and offer advice and consolation. The site also provides a journaling feature because āJane Anonymous,ā the siteās creator, firmly believes in writing about oneās trauma as a therapeutic means of processing it. Members can write, save, customize, and tag entries, then choose to leave them open (for others to read) or locked up (for privacy).
In her memoir, āJaneā documents her time in captivity and the months after she got out. Iām going to do the same, starting with this entryānot that I need a website to journal, but itās kind of nice knowing thereās a whole community of survivors journaling along with me. Iāve read so many of their stories. Now itās time I wrote mine.
THEN
2
I knew better.
Because my parents had trained me
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