I think a lot of my eating disorder has involved me trying to hold on to what is familiar to me, trying to feel ‘safe’.
Despite all that it’s put me through – utter hell in which I lost everything, including nearly my LIFE – I daily find myself daydreaming about losing weight. More than daily – all through the day. And I dream of it at night.
It feels a bit like an old friend and lover. Familiar, and seductive. You know them so well. There aren’t any unknowns (although there are – you can never know anyone’s deepest secrets as you can never know anything’s deepest most hidden facets in this life).
Sometimes, despite this ‘friend and lover’ having being an abusive one, it feels safer than what I face now. It’s a prison that I actually daydream about returning to, of creeping back into the cage and shutting the scary world out.
Every step forward into LIFE is a step I have not travelled before, and a step that I travel without my peers, for they have all gone on ahead of me when I should have come this way. The fear of each step is so great, I have to fight to not just turn around and run away again. 
I fear so many things. I fear failure most of all. That, and ‘not coping’. I’m not good at new things now, and find myself overwhelmed by the colourful, exciting, ever-happening quality of real life. The eating disorder kept me very closeted. It was a dark, isolated life, then. And despite it being my cage, I came to find it familiar and comforting.
There have been studies done showing that when you keep a creature in captivity for long enough, you can open the doors and let it free – and it likely will not flee. I feel that way, myself.
As a child in my abusive and neglectful home, I accepted that this was what was. I did not like it or agree with it, in fact, it was extremely traumatic, especially as I grew older and my brother’s violence and my sister’s twisted cruelty grew worse. And my mother’s ability (or desire) to either protect me, or to supply me with the basics of life at all – seemed to dwindle ever more.
I couldn’t change it. I hurt terribly from it. But I accepted it.
Accepting it, actually caused me less pain than not accepting it. I am sure that had I not been able to accept what was, I would not have survived – it would have utterly broken me. More than I was broken, anyway. I mean, fatally broken.
Picture a wild bird in a cage, just caught, terrified at their predicament and thrashing to free themselves. In the majority of cases, that bird simply will not be able to get free from the cage. If she doesn’t accept her fate, she will batter herself to death, or at least be weak, bruised and battered – and still trapped.
You need to conserve your energy and strength in order to fight what you can fight when you are that trapped (in any way). You need to realise which battles are worth going all out for, and which, even if won, would only be empty victories.
But looking back, I see just how trapped I had become by my own mind – and it wasn’t just because I’d accepted I was trapped for now.
It took me so long to run away from there, not because anyone was stopping me, but because I believed I could not run away.
Our home had so many LAWS. These laws were punishable if broken, and the punishment felt like it would be as bad as death (or as I felt, worse, because of the emotional and physical distress punishments could involve). One of these many laws was ‘thou shalt not step outside this house and yard’s perimeters without due cause and permission.’
Our yard was fenced by a brown, wooden farmstyle fence – planks of wood placed horizontally between each fencepost, with two gates that were always heavily chained and padlocked. Intimidating, especially with loud barking dogs and ‘dangerous dog’ signs, but very easy to climb over. It wasn’t even that high – higher than me growing up, perhaps shoulder height when I left. I climbed over it every morning on the way to school, and every evening on the way back home. But had I wanted to climb over it when I didn’t have permission? I couldn’t have. 
That easily-climbed fence was as effective as an electrified, barbed-wire-topped prison fence for me.
And it took being pushed for me to grasp the courage to break the ‘law’ and leave – realising that I couldn’t stay here and stay alive any longer.
And so, I fled for the ‘greener grass’ out yonder.
This is where I look back and say “I fled the frying pan and jumped into the fire”. Because I did exactly that. I met Wanker.
I wonder, had I come from a family that wasn’t abusive, would I have fought Wanker harder? Would I have refused to accept things as they came to be? Talking to my headshrinking doctor about it, his theory is that Wanker was familiar to me. He treated me the only way I’d ever known – cruelly, and without any respect at all. And, right after my flight from my home, that was familiar to me and therefore in some way, a comfort.
That makes me recoil in disgust, to read that – that I found comfort in that rapist bastard’s treatment of me. I was hurting, I fought him tooth and nail at first, and the first day he raped me (in a rape that just went on, and on, and on for an entire afternoon, at least 4 hours) I kept saying “NO!” loudly the entire time as well as fighting – and I may as well have been battering a tree trunk for all that moved him.
I never, ever wanted anything to do with Wanker. Never. Not even before he hurt me. I simply didn’t believe I had any chance of avoiding his abuse of me.
So I’d taken my prison from home with me – wherever I went from there, I still wasn’t free. I still was trapped by abuse and resigned to being abused because that was all I had known and all I felt worthy of.
Later on again, in hospital, the treatment of me there just confirmed to me that this was all I deserved. I was nothing better than a wild beast – and that’s how they treated me. And I stopped hoping for better, because I didn’t feel I deserved better.
So the big question for me here is – how do I take freedom with both hands? Not only sum up the courage to step out of my prison, but to stay out of it?
I think the answer is, one step at a time. And with courage – despite the fear of it all. By reminding myself that there isn’t such thing as failure unless you are talking about the failure to even try. And that I have nothing to lose by pressing ahead – and everything to lose by taking the easy way out.
Because that’s what it is, really. It takes great strength and courage for a child to stay alive in the face of such trauma – but it takes none to stay in your cage after the doors are thrown wide and the monsters are gone – monsters in your reality that is.
This is not from weakness – child abuse actually impacts on our brain.
Healing will be different for everyone. For me, it’s a very slow process, perhaps it will be a ‘forever’ process. I might never be healed, but always healing – if that makes sense.
For me, little things are more important at the moment. Like being accepted by my peers. Adding activities that to most are small and of no consequence into my life. And repeating, and repeating.
Every time I leave my home to go to art, to go to ballet, to do volunteer work, to have coffee with a friend, go to the supermarket, or even to put the rubbish in the bins – I face my fears. And every single time I face my fears this way, I’m making myself stronger and another step closer to some day being able to embrace this big scary world as simply ‘the world I live in’ – because I’ll be able to live in it, enjoy it, and feel safe.
I think this is part of why when it comes to fighting an eating disorder or an addiction or a mental illness that keeps you isolated and trapped – such ‘little’ milestones are just as important to work on achieving as are the more obvious ones, such as weight gain, abstinence, or managing your anxiety. They are all the stepping stones, and you can’t just hope to yank out what you are trying to overcome and not freak out when there is nothing there to replace what it’s been in your life. We also have to practice at life, just like we need to practice our ballet or our piano playing or other skills daily to improve them. It comes by doing. This is a huge challenge to me, I who tend to keep retreating into avoidance!
One last important thing?
Forgiving yourself. You did the best with the situation, knowledge and resources you had at the time – you did your best. It’s not your fault.
Thank you to Motifake for the demotivational poster images.
Featured image source.


OMG, Fi! Once again you manage to transform the horror of your story into a sad song. I love reading your “hell” posts. I’m sorry to call those so, it’s just this lasting feeling of wanting to be somewhere different from where you and I are. Being one place and wanting to be somewhere else . . . . Wanting life to be different from what it is. That’s also called leaving without leaving. Dying before you die. It’s as if there is a part of us that so rails against being shattered by love that we shatter ourselves first… Thank you for sharing this. Learning from you – I’m awakening…
Love.
Hi beautiful friend! I really appreciate that you read this, and that you truly empathise with what happened. And you are spot on- leaving without leaving, dying before you die. That’s what I was, for years. I was like a tree that’s lost all it’s leaves and is just a lifeless trunk – nothing happening. Nothing there. no hope.
And shattering ourselves before we can be shattered by love. You get this, you so get this, Greta. And it makes me so sad that you do, that you too know this way of being.
Thank YOU. I’m learning from YOU – and you ARE awakening – and sharing some amazing and so valuable wisdom.
Love Fi xoxo
there are definitely unhealthy “comfort zones” because like you said, it’s all we know. like the Egyptians wanting to go back to the abuse in Egypt. we also weren’t taught how to live and survive in the world. we found ourselves tossed into it with no skills to survive it. i’m in awe of you on a daily basis not only for surviving all that you have but, for going to ballet, and volunteering. your and amazing and strong woman…you are facing your fears and that takes everything in us!
you also talked about things that might seem normal or easy to others are huge for you…i feel that same way. sometimes going out is huge for me…reading this made me feel less bad about it.
lots of love dear Fiona. xo
I’m really sad that you are another of ‘us’ who are this way, from having been through what we have been through. Yet grateful that you understand. Yes, we had no skills when we were tossed into the world. Even those things that I ‘learnt’ to do growing up – like cooking for the family, doing my washing, cleaning, etc – I was at a loss to really do them outside there – where there weren’t all the family rules to follow and where I actually needed to think for myself instead of simply follow orders.
I’m in awe of YOU – because of all YOU have achieved and I can see the progress you are making day by day.
It is hard for us, I have a feeling we might face it being really hard and scary every single time we do things others just ‘do’ for the rest of our lives. I’m just hoping that over time it gets a bit easier! Never give up. xxxx
Yes I do believe it will be harder for us that have been through this than most but i do know it can get easier because most days now, i can leave the house without panic where i couldn’t before, so there is hope, you keep fighting too and we can spur each other on toward freedom!
Every step is another step towards freedom!! So, so true! <3
it sure is!
Living at home and being in a prison …and accepting it for the time you had to and it being the ‘norm’ and therefore surviving by staying there….can now I believe be switched to ‘freedom’ being the norm for you. Slowly you have been getting out and breaking free with as you say your dancing, volunteering etc. And so the old will be replaced by the new….I said it kind of discombobulated. but hope you get my point. Yes, you are in the process of healing and I truly believe as you get further and further along your ‘old’ thought process will diminish greatly…Diane
I do get your point, Diane! It’s not my everyday lot to be stuck any more. It’s a while since I’ve actually been physically stuck – so hopefully my mind will catch up to what is my ‘norm’ now. Also, my case manager and I talked about it today – it is true that our brains are actually changed by abuse – but our brain can be changed again and I’m changing it every time I put new and better things into my life as my ‘normal’. The good thing is that ‘process’ means that it’s something that isn’t going to stay this way – there will be more change and that things CAN get better still xx
I don’t have time right now to go through your entire post (although I will when I get a second), but I just want you to know that we are SO similar. I grew up in an abusive home, I was raped (for a long time I’ve hesitated to say “raped” because I wasn’t vaginally raped, but at the end of the day, yes, I was raped), and I had an eating disorder. And if I can recover, you CAN too. Please don’t ever hesitate to email me — I am here for you.
Hi Debbie – thank you so much for reaching out and letting me know that I’m not alone. And that you CAN heal from such a broken and hurt place. I think you are amazing, I truly do. Because I know how hard it IS even though I’m still far from healed. Thank you, a million times thank you xxx
It is hard to read.But the way you write about such awful things shows your grace and growth. I can relate to some of it, having had abuses and other deep hurts. And the part about having difficulty doing things that seem normal and easy for most other people. And taking small steps to learn how to live out side of our prisons.
I used to think tiny steps of doing something better (not neccesarily even best or perfectly) was not good enough or not going to make a difference or not be enough to really bring deep healing. But it is the things that I do that are little steps in the right direction, consistently over time that have produced the most growth in my experience.
Thanks for sharing your story and getting it out. Thanks for letting us listen. I think it is healing for everyone in the world when people speak this stuff.
Dear Gel,
Your writing really helps me heal. In many ways. And I totally agree that getting it out is important for not just ourselves but for everyone. Since i started writing about the past, it’s become less of a ‘my dirty secret’ feeling and more of just a burden shared.
I’m with you on thinking that the small steps weren’t enough. Especially when you can see your peers so far ahead of you. For me, my peers have careers and are married and have children, have bought their own homes and cars, etc… they are light years ahead of me. I feel old, and yet, I feel like I’ve been left behind and am falling behind even adolescents in my ability to live life responsibly, maturely and independently.
But then again – if those things were available to me, too, would I have wanted them? Would I have been happy? I think I would have always been searching for a ‘why am I here?’ kind of answer. Searching for a way to justify my good fortune. This way, I do feel like every single little thing I’ve achieved has been fought hard for. I am not saying my peers haven’t had to work and even fight hard for what they have – just that this is probably what my fight was meant to be in this life, and I need to stop comparing my own story with that of others – because we will never be alike. They are here for whatever reason they are here for and same for me.
You are right it’s consistent small steps that add up to the most growth overall.
I like an analogy of trying to wear away a rock by throwing a bucket of water over it – you won’t. But if that bucketful of water dripped onto the rock drop by drop over a long period of time, it could wear away the rock.
Thank you for reading xx
I agree. It’s not our fault when a monster hurts us. I also agree that if we have been abused in our childhood home, we are less able to defend ourselves, unless we’ve had some outside help with the issues. We don’t recognize the abuse, as quickly, because it’s what we’re used to. But the alarm bells can be trained to ring loud again… and warn us, hopefully, in time. We don’t have to remain victims.
~ Wendy
You are so right, Wendy. I hope you are hearing your alarm bells ringing loudly whenever an abuser is in your personal space now. I know mine are getting better too. I’m getting better at picking them, but also, I’m getting better at listening and acting instead of just assuming that to be abused is my lot and then being resigned to it.
We don’t have to remain victims, no.
I’m glad you and I are no longer victims. xx
Oh Fi …
…
…
What you say makes so much sense to me! At the beginning of my therapy my therapist told me that I was like a person who had lived in times of war, and although now it was peace, I still believed it was war and behaved according to that. He said I have to come to understand that the war is over – that I’m safe and not in danger anymore. I liked this picture very much.
Kath, I’m so sad that you did live through a war of your own there. Totally understand still believing you were living in a war… I feel that way. Exactly! I still do, even though I know it’s over. It’s been over for years. Maybe I even created my own war with the ED?
Do you feel now that the war is over? Do you ever still feel unsafe and find yourself checking and tense expecting it to happen again?
*hugs* I hope so much you have only peace now. It’s hard to think of such a gentle kind person as you living in a personal war. *hugs* xx
Every breath is a new beginning. Inhale the positive. Exhale all the negative. When you breathe in…imagine taking in kittens and flowers and sunshine. When you breathe out..imagine exhaling out of your body fences and gates and evil people. It helps!
Hi again Linda
I love your comment. Because it made me stop and think. Think about my breathing, and how YES, every breath IS a new beginning. That I CAN move on from here, from what happened, from how I feel, then and now. And I love to think about breathing out the bad and in the good. I choose to live and inhale the good. Other people might have chosen bad, and they might have tried to make my life bad, but I reject that. Thank you for such a helpful comment! x
I can only imagine just how hard you’ve had to struggle.. Just to get out of bed some days.
Thank you for making it through and sharing your brilliance with all of us…
Thank you, Hook, for being a source of much laughter and headshaking, because you are a bright spot in an otherwise sometimes difficult day when I visit your blog. It can be hard to cope, but I keep remembering I’ve survived worse than this, and that fear is usually far more frightening than the actual thing we fear!
I think you have a lot of insight into people – full stop – because of your opportunities to observe them so much! It’s fascinating to read!
I don’t have anything to add, than that has already been said more eloquently than I can put it. You are so amazing Fiona, but I think you know I feel that way about you already.
Hugs x
What a terrible story! I guess, like the other commenters, I’m glad you’ve managed to make something positive of it or at least to understand things.
[...] safe – since I fell out of the family frying pan into the fire of Wanker the rapist and stalker – but for the first few years I did quite well in everything else, especially considering [...]