If I should die And no one knows Well, That’s alright, it’s how it goes, I suppose that is, if no one knows when it’s time for me to go, you know? I suppose, if no one knows and the sun still rises and the grass still grows, that’s just how the world has a tendency to flow if no one knows and it’s time for me to go so I leave these words and I leave these notes as a piece of myself that has no plans to go so that more would know (far from when I go) that I once walked the same ground you do ~ A.L. Stippich
Things Unseen
Finding out someone’s story can be such an enlightening journey. Everybody has one, after all.
I was not aware that unconditional love was a real life concept until I met my husband. Growing up in a warped church and home environment taught me that forgiveness was only a preached myth from the Bible. In my experience, love was issued on invisible strings of terms, conditions, rules, and regulations. People left one by one after the terms were broken, because I was broken, I learned that I had to follow all of the rules set forth to me in order to receive care; constantly on the edge of a cliff.
Being raised in a bubble of fear means you only really know fear. If you are not taught that peace and help could be provided to you, you are not going to know to look for it, especially when your childhood precedes the age of technology. As I was homeschooled full time throughout my schooling years, I had little understanding of how the real world worked on the outside by the time I was ready to enter it, let alone any social skills.
While many children were raised up to appreciate human interaction, affection, social development, and nurturing, some of us are not as blessed. Some of us are left to stray off to the side to be forgotten in a sea of unimportant faces, left for no one to hold. When most kids were being exposed to new and exciting development, I was being conditioned to avoid a leather belt. To accept violent, corporal punishment for misbehavior, some incidents leaving lifelong mental and physical scars. To long days and nights of constant arguments and tension while I hid from the war zone. To learning the best pressure points to torture an animal with and how much enjoyment you can get watching the life leave their eyes when you kill them by the time I was seven. To keeping my feelings to myself.
To never say anything about what happens behind our front door because our business was no one else’s.
I was raised by a sociopath.
Depression, PTSD, personality disorder, anxiety disorder, dissociative disorder, agoraphobia, and a horrible case of morsicatio buccarum since birth. These are some of the effects I have faced after a childhood that was not and for the sake of normalizing the ability for me to talk about my abuse, after thirty-some-odd years of life, I want to talk about it. It is time to talk about it.
The past four years have been a difficult road of pain, processing, acceptance, and healing as I finally decided to turn around and face it all. I am still at the point of understanding and healing and I think I always will be, but I am tired of keeping that to myself. My experiences in life have made up who and why I am today.

Everyone has a story of their journey to becoming who they are today. Welcome to mine.
The Magic Jaw
“I can’t tell you why you shoulda’ known it, sensitive kid start acting like a grown up”
Cold War Kids
*Triggering Content Warning*
“You were such a little brat as a child, I hated having to deal with you. You have grown so much since then!”
Adults of my past went to such great lengths to ensure I was aware of how they felt about my younger self the moment I hit twenty, which I assume is the official age where your child self and your adult self automatically sever ties forever, or at least it was for me based on the generalized assumption. I have laughed, grinned, and waved this off as a silly comment and accepted it as the “compliment” it was meant to be because breaking into tears would suddenly make me an overly dramatic victim. “Be quiet, little girl and take the nice compliment,” I would tell myself, “you made it!”
Since then, I find moments where I dwell in it. I cry. I hurt for that little girl who kept trying to not just be seen as the obnoxious child/adolescent/teen in the adults’ way but a child raising red flag after red flag just to be ignored and labeled. They are moments I carry because I can never try again and will always remain someone’s historical stain and a failure. Why go to such trouble to tell someone that that they were neither loved nor cared about as the unwanted negro child inside their children’s realm? What was the intent? Why could it not be, “You know, you were a tough kid to deal with, what was happening to you at home that made you that way?”
This is my first chapter excerpt posting. This is dedicated to them –
~
I must have been five or six years old when I remember it happening for the first time. A relatively cloudy day, however, the weather was clear enough that a trip to a popular, local park playground became a part of that day’s agenda. I loved the swings. Feeling like air itself, rushing around you, within you, through you – this was the playground high that everyone should experience at least once.
In a moment of immature and childish passion, when it was time to journey home, my lips burst into a fit of raspberries towards my mom in retort to her request for us to prepare, my feet preoccupied, whooshing through the air in front of me. A second request would be met with the same response, and the third request included a threat that, at the time, felt empty.
“One more time, and I am telling your father”.
I challenged this with a fit of giggles and another blow of raspberries, not understanding the true consequence of what was to come. I was too young and at the time, I did not know ‘I am telling your father’ meant fear. I was ignorant of the idea of consequences at that point and what that scenario may look like in real life. In my life.
It is not an uncommon threat, I have learned, while growing up around other families. Moms have the tough job of keeping our asses in check and the stress of carrying out each necessary punishment to ensure we grow up as proper human beings is not the “dream” part of the job. To expect them to do it alone is a call on a feat of champions.
It was a relatively cloudy day.
Later that afternoon, my father would return home from another ‘hard day’s work’ and the news of my disobedience would be delivered with prioritized haste. To this day, I am not aware of how that conversation went, but swiftly, it would be received, and before I knew it, I was being summoned to the dining room table for questioning.
There he sat, arms crossed over his chest, expressionless he stared directly into my eyes, my mom standing to the side, eagerly waiting for his verdict.
“Come here”, he said as low as a whisper as I inched towards him with the slowest precision, the feet between us drawing less and less.
“Did you spit at your mother today?”
The words still echo inside of my mind to this day, calm and cool, as if discussing the weather, but the expressionless face is what left me hollow. I have seen that face in my nightmares many times.
I finally reached him and looked down at the tile floor. “Look at me when I talk to you. Did you spit at your mother?” he said again.
I blinked rapidly back and forth between the two of them standing before me and finally managed a choked up, guilty “Yes” and felt hot tears welling behind my eyes. I sensed I had done wrong and lying always made my stomach hurt.
Before I felt my tears release, however, a loud CRACK! would fill up my eyes, my ears, my skull; my entire head was ringing. I remember seeing darkness and then seeing stars before I understood what the term “seeing stars” meant. Suddenly, the ringing in my ears was slowly and eerily replaced by dad’s bellowing voice, his volume now raised to a violent, angry yell. The room came into focus and pain had filled up the area around my jaw. I could not move it open to speak. My father had just back handed me in the face with the full weight of his fist, sending my jaw out of place, and I could feel it.
Once the yelling ceased and I was finally, mercifully sent to my room until dinner, the real pain began to set in and the next few days would be spent trying to convince two non-perplexed adults that something was not right, and my jaw was “wrong” or “crooked”.
“Drama queen.”
“Over-exaggerator.”
“Over-reactor.”
“You are fine.”
All of these phrases would be used throughout my youth to describe any matter of ailments or injuries I would sustain from my father and this incident was just the beginning of many.
He always barked that it was ‘for our own good’ and, my personal favorite, that he ‘didn’t like having to do it’. No one told him to, no one forced him at gunpoint that I can recall, so whichever higher calling outside of his own miserable childhood experience enticed him to continue passing the tradition along was a choice entirely of his own.
From the jaw incident forward branched lines to many more, worse occurrences that blueprinted the dynamic between misbehavior and consequences in our household. I can still remember the pain his beatings caused. Sometimes, my dreams render so real that I can feel them happening again. In some warped reality of his own, I think he thought he had control over his strength because there was never ‘any way he was hitting us hard enough to be worthy of the tears it caused’.
I am grown now and my jaw still clicks in pain and uncomfortably falls out of place in the direction I was hit. My teens would later be spent telling myself that I had a ‘magic jaw’ since now, I was able to crack every joint in my body, including my jaw.
~ For No One, by A. L. Stippich
Everyone has a story, even small children. They remember, they scar, and they carry, sometimes for the rest of their lives, just like you.
Whether you choose to ignore it or choose to listen is up to you.
Introductions are Overdue
“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.”
~ Maya Angelou
Four years. It has been four long years since I had my first breakdown and I have had one additional one since. I have not been the same since then, spending most of my days inside my own home, hiding from socialization and spending the past few years doing as little social media as possible in order to focus on processing, unfolding, accepting, and healing from the events that have made up my life.
While 2020 was not the winning year for anyone, being home every day hiding from the world has been this agoraphobic’s dream scenario and I had moments of unexpected triumph throughout. I spent more precious, extra time with my best friend and our ridiculously entertaining fur babies than I thought I ever would in a single year. I started a book as well as completed a number of other writings. I started and finished a number of yarn projects that had been sitting for too long. I fell in love with (and spent an inappropriate amount of money on) plants. I almost completely replaced my wardrobe from top to bottom. I gained confidence and left an insanely worsening job situation for an infinitely greater one after way too many years of being afraid.
2020 also brought a great deal of emotional and physical pain and growth. Having spent the better part of three years prior hiding from the world, letting down close friends and family, not sharing my life with others; I had every intention of getting myself back out into the world once more until the triggering effects of the year piled on one by one. I fell back into familiar, circular patterns and slipped into dark places that were difficult to see through but for the first time in my life, I was able to push back and win.
For the first time in my thirty-some years of life, I feel ready. This past year, I became more confident in sharing my story more openly for the first time ever by putting my thoughts into chapters. The real story. Now that I have found my voice, I want to use it for the purpose I feel it was created for – to write what I know.
I am grateful beyond words for the encouragement, love, and immensely appreciated space provided to me by so many of you who allowed me to have this time. I will spend the rest of this life trying to repay you. I can only hope to rekindle the relationships I have neglected as I continue to work on me and am wrapping giant, virtual arms around you all.
I look forward to whatever this writing adventure might become. In the meantime…

…get ready, ’cause this shit is about to get loud. Stay tuned.