Friday, September 28, 2012

Running away from warped love

I think it was wilderness explorer John Muir who said, “Every walk in nature bears unexpected delights” … or something like that. (Ha — I Googled it and found I had paraphrased very liberally. The real Muir quotation is: “In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks.”)

The same is true with every outdoor run. Today I found a discarded love note and I encountered a pair of love birds — that is: not one, but two Great Blue Herons, which, upon my arrival, began scooping and swooping to elude the intruder of their interlude. What a majestic and memorable sight!

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I’m psyched up for an important race this weekend: The Linda Yalem Safety Run at the University at Buffalo. I spent the most miserable time of my life at UB. That was two decades ago, but the events of that year still follow me. So while I have historically avoided Sunday morning races because they conflict with the traditional Christian worship hour, I felt compelled to register for this race for therapeutic reasons. I’m returning to the site of my misery … in the spirit of redemption.

Darkness — so much night, between the overcast western New York winter and the recurrent bouts of insomnia — swallowed most of my hope in those fear-filled days. Warped love left me dazed and disoriented, unable to object to the oppression or even articulate the predicament to anyone who attempted to ask. I loyally guarded the truth about our relationship as if my life depended on absolute secrecy. Some days, I felt as if it did. Throughout that year I bore and wore the weight of my abuse like a heavy cloak. Forget the “Freshman Fifteen”—I gained 30 pounds first semester!  I felt utterly alone, but I know now I never was. God provided a way out from the clutches of a destructive force so strong that I very nearly lost my sense of self. [There’s much more to be written about this … someday ...]

October is Domestic Violence Awareness month. For me and for others who have experienced this albatross in another form, it is also an opportunity to talk about the other DV: Dating Violence. On the eve of October, I will run because I am free. Because I escaped. Because others can escape, too. (I can help! So can you!) And I’ll run for the sake of the person who temporarily overpowered me — for three years, three months and 27 days. Because I believe even the perpetrators of violence are victims of the tyranny of evil. And because I believe that they, too, can be redeemed.

“With God, all things are possible.” — Matthew 19:26

2 comments:

My name is Heather. said...

You are so inspiring. Love you! Am thankful for who you've been in my life and all you've done for me. Proud that you are running and for what it stands for. You are a blessing and a mighty woman of God.

Nina said...

Amen to Heather!!!