Sunday, July 31, 2011

CDV essay


Quotes of the week

It is good that most people don't understand our banking and financial system. For if they did there would be a revolution by morning. - Henry Ford

“I’m cuckoo for Coco Puffs, cuckoo for Coco Puffs, cuckoo for Coco Puffs.” What I hear in my head every time I eat a certain cereal. Thanks Advertisement demons

Websites of the week

The culmination of millennia of scientific endeavor

Meditation of the week

It does make a difference what you call things.
--Kate Douglas Wiggin

Most of us think of dandelions as weeds. We buy special tools and poisons when they crop up and complain about them as surely as we welcome the spring that brings them.

Yet is there anything more lovely than a sea of yellow dandelions by the side of the road in June? Or as remarkable in transformation as the filaments of the mature dandelion blowing on the wind?

Sometimes we let someone else define for us what are weeds and what are flowers. We don't have to. Much of the beauty of the world is that we ourselves decide what is beautiful according to our own feelings. How lucky we are that, when we choose to, we can open our eyes and see!

Can I see the beauty in those around me right now?
You are reading from the book:

Poem of the Week

Phone Therapy

I was relief, once, for a doctor on vacation
and got a call from a man on a window sill.
This was New York, a dozen stories up.
He was going to kill himself, he said.
I said everything I could think of.
And when nothing worked, when the guy
was still determined to slide out that window
and smash his delicate skull
on the indifferent sidewalk, "Do you think,"
I asked, "you could just postpone it
until Monday, when Dr. Lewis gets back?"

The cord that connected us—strung
under the dirty streets, the pizza parlors, taxis,
women in sneakers carrying their high heels,
drunks lying in piss—that thick coiled wire
waited for the waves of sound.

In the silence I could feel the air slip
in and out of his lungs and the moment
when the motion reversed, like a goldfish
making the turn at the glass end of its tank.
I matched my breath to his, slid
into the water and swam with him.
"Okay," he agreed.

Video of the week


Song of the Week

78-Tales from Therapy-CDV

        CDV stands for criminal domestic violence. Those of us who work in this field shorten it to CDV because it takes too much time to say criminal domestic violence over and over in everyday conversation, one can’t be bothered. So we say CDV.
        In the course of conducting a group for perpetrators of criminal domestic violence, I have begun to understand the whole criminal domestic violence experience. From childhood exposure to it, to adult relationships, both the passive and aggressive sides, to the attitude and thinking change that is necessary for victims and perpetrators to lead fuller happier lives. 
        So when I saw the look on John’s face the other night in group when I described common experiences of people caught in this trap, it seemed to be a good idea to describe what I have learned about criminal domestic violence in the form of a life story.
        I received John’s permission to tell “his” story with the caveat that he would be willing to stop me if I got the slightest detail wrong, and he agreed. And so we began:
        “ Remember when you were three or four and you lay in your bed with the covers over you and you could see your feet sticking up about two feet down the bed and there was another ten or fifteen feet to the end and you wondered how long it would take you to cover that distance? “
        “And what snapped you out of this childhood musing was the sound of crashing and of objects breaking in the next room. There were angry shouts and cursing threats and then the unmistakable sound of flesh slamming into flesh and then there was silence. And the silence was almost scarier than the violence because at least you could tell where the violence was coming from and what it might mean”
        “And you crept up to the door and peaked around to see your father taking another pull from the bottle and your mother sobbing on her hands and knees picking up shards of glass as blood dripped from the end of her nose into the puddle forming on the floor where you played everyday. “
        “Get-the-hell-back-in-that-bed-you-little _________ unless you want some of what She got!” and you scurry back to bed, your heart and head pounding, and quick, pull the covers up and wonder what you could have done to cause this madness. You can’t get the image of the color of your mother’s blood out of your mind and slowly the reality of the scene expresses itself in the form of your silent, bitter, precious tears”
        “And the next day when you try to ask your mommy about it, she makes excuses for him and then makes excuses for herself and then gets angry at you and you are more confused than before you asked. And when you go to your daddy for the approval and validation that only fathers have to give, all that ever comes back is “ can’t you do anything right—here give me that, I’ll do it myself you little---HEY!! Can’t you keep him away from me, I’m trying to relax and watch the game in here!”
        “As the years go by and you feel more and more inferior and wounded and incomplete, your rage grows and grows and grows. You want to kill him and sometimes you want to kill her for not leaving him, and all the while loving them both, achingly. You wonder what you did to deserve this family and what you might do to change it. Sometimes, especially if you have discovered alcohol or other drugs, you don’t feel anything at all. You just want out.”
        “So one beautiful spring day you meet the love of your life and she fills a void in you that you didn’t know was so deep. And you can tell that you fill a void in her too, you two are a matched set; it was like you found each other with radar across a smoky and tattered landscape. At first it is all that Love is. But as she draws closer and closer, you become more and more afraid and insecure, because if she gets too close she might see you for what you really are and let you down like everybody else.”
        “You find yourself doing the angry things that make you feel less scared; “Won’t you wear that blue dress tonight, honey, I like you so much in that one.” ”They are not friends to you; I don’t like them; I forbid you to see them anymore.” “Don’t you worry about how much my check is this week, I’ll take care of the money, haven’t I always taken care of you, baby?”“ I saw the way you looked at that guy in the store, is he the one you’re messing with!?!”
        “Familiarity gives you license to express the Rage you’ve held inside and Blame is a ready ally in your fight to ward off your fear and insecurity. And she falls right in step; she’s done this dance before in her family of origin. Sometimes in quiet moments you ask her why she puts up with you. But her plaintive and softly offered “Because I love you” only makes you feel worse somehow.”
        “Imagine the mixture of feelings, then, when one night you find yourself standing over her, your fist (and your heart) all balled up, screaming your father’s hate filled words into the frightened, saddened face of (Mother?) the love of your life and you realize you have become the man you hated and feared all these years. Imagine the feelings you feel when you look yourself in the eye in the shaving mirror (if you can). And the dread you feel when you understand that your son is learning from you what you learned from Him; the language and actions and feelings of the evil you despised all your life…”
“But the Blame and Rage push those feeling aside pretty well… until you find yourself in a group for criminal domestic violence perpetrators. You can lie to those kindred souls, but it makes it really hard to lie to yourself. Not when they tell your story back to you every week. And when you begin to get the idea that they are talking about your behavior being wrong and not about your soul being evil, you sit up in your seat and listen because if it is something you can change then you might be able to stand to think about it.”
“You find yourself coming to group early and sometimes, after it is over, you stand talking to the group that forms in the parking lot. The words that are said in-group fade fast, but the ideas remain and you find yourself acting differently to your wife, your employer, and your friends. And she reciprocates sometimes, though sometimes she still provokes you to see if you will get violent again, like a bee stung hiker searching for the ground bee nest that got her before.”
“Change is hard and feels unnatural but you stay with it and things get better, by and by. Life hardly ever feels like a Jerry Springer show anymore.  And one night, you see a little pair of eyes peering around the corner of the living room to see what you and mommy are doing. You call to him and padded feet come running toward you and he jumps and lands in your strong arms. And you can imagine the changes you two have made as they echo and spread through future generations of your family. The pebble of change you have thrown into the pond of your family will resonate in ever-growing circles to reap benefits reaching far beyond your lifetimes.”
When I finished this story, therapeutic silence filled the room and all eyes were turned inward. John was in tears and hiding it well (“big boys don’t cry” his father screamed into his head again for the thousandth time). Finally a new man spoke, one who had been so characteristically defensive at the beginning of tonight’s group. And he said “Well… I guess if I have to be here and I’m paying for it anyway, I might as well try to get something out of it…”

Dave Seward
August 31, 2002

Disclaimer: I am a therapist in a small town in America. Over the years I find myself guiding people with the same problems down the same path to wellness, over and over and over (I guess that’s why they call it a practice). The characters here are fictional compilations and if you imagine that you recognize the people I talk about in these tales, you would be mistaken. ~Dave