Saturday, November 24, 2012

Chaos!!

By the time I was in second grade, I had seen my parents divorce and my mother remarry.  I had lived in five different houses and had attended three different schools. My parents were involved in a wild custody fight for me, my three sisters and my brother. My mother's struggle with depression and alcoholism were just two of the many complications in her new, tumultuous marriage.  I use "chaos" often to define my early childhood.

I was the middle child. My older sister and brother were six and seven years older than me.  My younger sisters, eighteen months and four years younger than I. I coped with my chaotic home life by thriving in schools.  I loved the routine and structure offered there and the consistency of teachers and other adults who work in school.  I was a charming, precocious child with an outgoing personality. I coped by creating a village of my own full of teachers and other adults who I knew I could count on. I compensated for the chaotic life that was my home by creating a life outside of it that I could escape to. I always felt connected to my dad, even when I wasn't living with him.

People who have known me my whole life will often tell me that I have always been rigged for optimism and it's true. I think my best attributes are resiliency and optimism.  I think they helped me survive a wild childhood and the death of my mother when I was seven. I will tell you that the journey for me and my siblings has not been easy.  We are connected by trauma and tears.  We work hard as adults to see past our childhood to be the best adults we can be to each other.  Below is a picture of me and my siblings.  I believe it was taken the last Christmas we had with our mom.



I am losing sleep over the preschool children in New Jersey. One of my dear friends teaches in NJ and has asked her teacher friends to help children who have been displaced by Hurricane Sandy.  I collected and sent off backpacks and supplies to five children and one teacher last week.  I felt a great need to DO SOMETHING! I have seen the pictures and watched the news as community after community all along the coast out east deals with the aftermath of Sandy.  I just cant imagine.  How will small children cope with storms, wind, rain and water for the rest of their lives after experiencing so much trauma? What happens to a child ability to trust when they have homes and schools one day and nothing the next?

I have also watched people rally in the face of disaster, in this case the disaster is Sandy. The response has been a great lesson in the role of government when great help is needed. I grew up seeing very small interventions in my family to help the children in my family.  New Jersey is seeing huge interventions for a whole state to support children to have food, clothing, shelter, and school in their lives. There is great help to help deal with the geographical harm done to the shores of New Jersey.  I hope there is enough help to minimize the harm to the emotional lives of children who live there.

3 comments:

  1. Katy,
    Your post this week proves that children, more often than adults are more resilient in adapting to change. You have had to overcome many personal obstacles in your life of divorce, loss of a parent, and trauma. The children in New Jersey who have had to live through Sandy, have to develop that same resilience in order to overcome this ordeal. I saw this when we had to deal with Katrina. It is difficult, but having someone available who understands how to deal with trauma, whether personal or environmental, and is willing to help in any way possible, is the something we can all do. Thank you for sharing your story.

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  2. Katy, I can not even begin to understand what you went through. Although, you went through and came through a different growning; however, I'm sure it has shaped and created you into the woman that you have become now. Even though these events happened years ago, I want to express my sympathy in the passing of your mother, for I know a mother's memories are never forgotten.

    I am also surprised in how well NJ has pulled together as a state but moreso as a community of family, at times like this when your neighbor may neep a helping hand. To even receive assistance from the government and from FEMA is ablessing, so as we begin to rebuild our indivdual lifes, we can only be so thankful and grateful to have made it through.

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  3. Katy,
    I cannot imagine what your childhood was like. I have to agree with Liz's earlier comment on here that children are more than resilient than adults. Thank you for sharing your experience. I always enjoy your posts because of your optimism.

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