379 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
379 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
I have the urge to declare my sanity and justify my actions, but I
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assume I'll never be able to convince anyone that this was the right
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decision. Maybe it's true that anyone who does this is insane by
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definition, but I can at least explain my reasoning. I considered not
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writing any of this because of how personal it is, but I like tying up
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loose ends and don't want people to wonder why I did this. Since I've
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never spoken to anyone about what happened to me, people would likely
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draw the wrong conclusions.
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My first memories as a child are of being raped, repeatedly. This has
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affected every aspect of my life. This darkness, which is the only way I
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can describe it, has followed me like a fog, but at times intensified
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and overwhelmed me, usually triggered by a distinct situation. In
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kindergarten I couldn't use the bathroom and would stand petrified
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whenever I needed to, which started a trend of awkward and unexplained
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social behavior. The damage that was done to my body still prevents me
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from using the bathroom normally, but now it's less of a physical
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impediment than a daily reminder of what was done to me.
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This darkness followed me as I grew up. I remember spending hours
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playing with legos, having my world consist of me and a box of cold,
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plastic blocks. Just waiting for everything to end. It's the same thing
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I do now, but instead of legos it's surfing the web or reading or
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listening to a baseball game. Most of my life has been spent feeling
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dead inside, waiting for my body to catch up.
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At times growing up I would feel inconsolable rage, but I never
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connected this to what happened until puberty. I was able to keep the
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darkness at bay for a few hours at a time by doing things that required
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intense concentration, but it would always come back. Programming
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appealed to me for this reason. I was never particularly fond of
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computers or mathematically inclined, but the temporary peace it would
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provide was like a drug. But the darkness always returned and built up
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something like a tolerance, because programming has become less and less
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of a refuge.
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The darkness is with me nearly every time I wake up. I feel like a grime
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is covering me. I feel like I'm trapped in a contimated body that no
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amount of washing will clean. Whenever I think about what happened I
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feel manic and itchy and can't concentrate on anything else. It
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manifests itself in hours of eating or staying up for days at a time or
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sleeping for sixteen hours straight or week long programming binges or
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constantly going to the gym. I'm exhausted from feeling like this every
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hour of every day.
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Three to four nights a week I have nightmares about what happened. It
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makes me avoid sleep and constantly tired, because sleeping with what
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feels like hours of nightmares is not restful. I wake up sweaty and
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furious. I'm reminded every morning of what was done to me and the
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control it has over my life.
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I've never been able to stop thinking about what happened to me and this
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hampered my social interactions. I would be angry and lost in thought
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and then be interrupted by someone saying "Hi" or making small talk,
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unable to understand why I seemed cold and distant. I walked around,
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viewing the outside world from a distant portal behind my eyes, unable
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to perform normal human niceties. I wondered what it would be like to
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take to other people without what happened constantly on my mind, and I
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wondered if other people had similar experiences that they were better
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able to mask.
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Alcohol was also something that let me escape the darkness. It would
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always find me later, though, and it was always angry that I managed to
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escape and it made me pay. Many of the irresponsible things I did were
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the result of the darkness. Obviously I'm responsible for every decision
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and action, including this one, but there are reasons why things happen
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the way they do.
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Alcohol and other drugs provided a way to ignore the realities of my
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situation. It was easy to spend the night drinking and forget that I had
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no future to look forward to. I never liked what alcohol did to me, but
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it was better than facing my existence honestly. I haven't touched
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alcohol or any other drug in over seven months (and no drugs or alcohol
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will be involved when I do this) and this has forced me to evaluate my
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life in an honest and clear way. There's no future here. The darkness
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will always be with me.
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I used to think if I solved some problem or achieved some goal, maybe he
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would leave. It was comforting to identify tangible issues as the source
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of my problems instead of something that I'll never be able to change. I
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thought that if I got into to a good college, or a good grad school, or
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lost weight, or went to the gym nearly every day for a year, or created
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programs that millions of people used, or spent a summer or California
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or New York or published papers that I was proud of, then maybe I would
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feel some peace and not be constantly haunted and unhappy. But nothing I
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did made a dent in how depressed I was on a daily basis and nothing was
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in any way fulfilling. I'm not sure why I ever thought that would change
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anything.
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I didn't realize how deep a hold he had on me and my life until my
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first relationship. I stupidly assumed that no matter how the darkness
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affected me personally, my romantic relationships would somehow be
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separated and protected. Growing up I viewed my future relationships as
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a possible escape from this thing that haunts me every day, but I began
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to realize how entangled it was with every aspect of my life and how it
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is never going to release me. Instead of being an escape, relationships
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and romantic contact with other people only intensified everything about
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him that I couldn't stand. I will never be able to have a relationship
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in which he is not the focus, affecting every aspect of my romantic
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interactions.
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Relationships always started out fine and I'd be able to ignore him for
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a few weeks. But as we got closer emotionally the darkness would return
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and every night it'd be me, her and the darkness in a black and gruesome
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threesome. He would surround me and penetrate me and the more we did the
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more intense it became. It made me hate being touched, because as long
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as we were separated I could view her like an outsider viewing something
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good and kind and untainted. Once we touched, the darkness would
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envelope her too and take her over and the evil inside me would surround
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her. I always felt like I was infecting anyone I was with.
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Relationships didn't work. No one I dated was the right match, and I
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thought that maybe if I found the right person it would overwhelm him.
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Part of me knew that finding the right person wouldn't help, so I became
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interested in girls who obviously had no interest in me. For a while I
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thought I was gay. I convinced myself that it wasn't the darkness at
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all, but rather my orientation, because this would give me control over
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why things didn't feel "right". The fact that the darkness affected
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sexual matters most intensely made this idea make some sense and I
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convinced myself of this for a number of years, starting in college
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after my first relationship ended. I told people I was gay (at Trinity,
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not at Princeton), even though I wasn't attracted to men and kept
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finding myself interested in girls. Because if being gay wasn't the
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answer, then what was? People thought I was avoiding my orientation, but
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I was actually avoiding the truth, which is that while I'm straight, I
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will never be content with anyone. I know now that the darkness will
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never leave.
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Last spring I met someone who was unlike anyone else I'd ever met.
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Someone who showed me just how well two people could get along and how
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much I could care about another human being. Someone I know I could be
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with and love for the rest of my life, if I weren't so fucked up.
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Amazingly, she liked me. She liked the shell of the man the darkness had
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left behind. But it didn't matter because I couldn't be alone with her.
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It was never just the two of us, it was always the three of us: her, me
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and the darkness. The closer we got, the more intensely I'd feel the
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darkness, like some evil mirror of my emotions. All the closeness we had
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and I loved was complemented by agony that I couldn't stand, from him. I
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realized that I would never be able to give her, or anyone, all of me or
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only me. She could never have me without the darkness and evil inside
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me. I could never have just her, without the darkness being a part of
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all of our interactions. I will never be able to be at peace or content
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or in a healthy relationship. I realized the futility of the romantic
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part of my life. If I had never met her, I would have realized this as
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soon as I met someone else who I meshed similarly well with. It's likely
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that things wouldn't have worked out with her and we would have broken
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up (with our relationship ending, like the majority of relationships do)
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even if I didn't have this problem, since we only dated for a short
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time. But I will face exactly the same problems with the darkness with
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anyone else. Despite my hopes, love and compatability is not enough.
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Nothing is enough. There's no way I can fix this or even push the
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darkness down far enough to make a relationship or any type of intimacy
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feasible.
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So I watched as things fell apart between us. I had put an explicit time
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limit on our relationship, since I knew it couldn't last because of the
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darkness and didn't want to hold her back, and this caused a variety of
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problems. She was put in an unnatural situation that she never should
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have been a part of. It must have been very hard for her, not knowing
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what was actually going on with me, but this is not something I've ever
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been able to talk about with anyone. Losing her was very hard for me as
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well. Not because of her (I got over our relationship relatively
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quickly), but because of the realization that I would never have another
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relationship and because it signified the last true, exclusive personal
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connection I could ever have. This wasn't apparent to other people,
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because I could never talk about the real reasons for my sadness. I was
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very sad in the summer and fall, but it was not because of her, it was
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because I will never escape the darkness with anyone. She was so loving
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and kind to me and gave me everything I could have asked for under the
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circumstances. I'll never forget how much happiness she brought me in
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those briefs moments when I could ignore the darkness. I had originally
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planned to kill myself last winter but never got around to it. (Parts of
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this letter were written over a year ago, other parts days before doing
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this.) It was wrong of me to involve myself in her life if this were a
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possibility and I should have just left her alone, even though we only
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dated for a few months and things ended a long time ago. She's just one
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more person in a long list of people I've hurt.
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I could spend pages talking about the other relationships I've had that
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were ruined because of my problems and my confusion related to the
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darkness. I've hurt so many great people because of who I am and my
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inability to experience what needs to be experienced. All I can say is
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that I tried to be honest with people about what I thought was true.
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I've spent my life hurting people. Today will be the last time.
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I've told different people a lot of things, but I've never told anyone
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about what happened to me, ever, for obvious reasons. It took me a while
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to realize that no matter how close you are to someone or how much they
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claim to love you, people simply cannot keep secrets. I learned this a
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few years ago when I thought I was gay and told people. The more harmful
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the secret, the juicier the gossip and the more likely you are to be
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betrayed. People don't care about their word or what they've promised,
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they just do whatever the fuck they want and justify it later. It feels
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incredibly lonely to realize you can never share something with someone
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and have it be between just the two of you. I don't blame anyone in
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particular, I guess it's just how people are. Even if I felt like this
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is something I could have shared, I have no interest in being part of a
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friendship or relationship where the other person views me as the
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damaged and contaminated person that I am. So even if I were able to
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trust someone, I probably would not have told them about what happened
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to me. At this point I simply don't care who knows.
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I feel an evil inside me. An evil that makes me want to end life. I need
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to stop this. I need to make sure I don't kill someone, which is not
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something that can be easily undone. I don't know if this is related to
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what happened to me or something different. I recognize the irony of
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killing myself to prevent myself from killing someone else, but this
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decision should indicate what I'm capable of.
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So I've realized I will never escape the darkness or misery associated
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with it and I have a responsibility to stop myself from physically
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harming others.
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I'm just a broken, miserable shell of a human being. Being molested has
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defined me as a person and shaped me as a human being and it has made me
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the monster I am and there's nothing I can do to escape it. I don't know
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any other existence. I don't know what life feels like where I'm apart
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from any of this. I actively despise the person I am. I just feel
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fundamentally broken, almost non-human. I feel like an animal that woke
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up one day in a human body, trying to make sense of a foreign world,
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living among creatures it doesn't understand and can't connect with.
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I have accepted that the darkness will never allow me to be in a
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relationship. I will never go to sleep with someone in my arms, feeling
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the comfort of their hands around me. I will never know what
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uncontimated intimacy is like. I will never have an exclusive bond with
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someone, someone who can be the recipient of all the love I have to
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give. I will never have children, and I wanted to be a father so badly.
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I think I would have made a good dad. And even if I had fought through
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the darkness and married and had children all while being unable to feel
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intimacy, I could have never done that if suicide were a possibility. I
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did try to minimize pain, although I know that this decision will hurt
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many of you. If this hurts you, I hope that you can at least forget
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about me quickly.
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There's no point in identifying who molested me, so I'm just going to
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leave it at that. I doubt the word of a dead guy with no evidence about
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something that happened over twenty years ago would have much sway.
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You may wonder why I didn't just talk to a professional about this. I've
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seen a number of doctors since I was a teenager to talk about other
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issues and I'm positive that another doctor would not have helped. I was
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never given one piece of actionable advice, ever. More than a few spent
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a large part of the session reading their notes to remember who I was.
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And I have no interest in talking about being raped as a child, both
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because I know it wouldn't help and because I have no confidence it
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would remain secret. I know the legal and practical limits of
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doctor/patient confidentiality, growing up in a house where we'd hear
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stories about the various mental illnesses of famous people, stories
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that were passed down through generations. All it takes is one doctor
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who thinks my story is interesting enough to share or a doctor who
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thinks it's her right or responsibility to contact the authorities and
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have me identify the molestor (justifying her decision by telling
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herself that someone else might be in danger). All it takes is a single
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doctor who violates my trust, just like the "friends" who I told I was
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gay did, and everything would be made public and I'd be forced to live
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in a world where people would know how fucked up I am. And yes, I
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realize this indicates that I have severe trust issues, but they're
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based on a large number of experiences with people who have shown a
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profound disrepect for their word and the privacy of others.
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People say suicide is selfish. I think it's selfish to ask people to
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continue living painful and miserable lives, just so you possibly won't
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feel sad for a week or two. Suicide may be a permanent solution to a
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temporary problem, but it's also a permanent solution to a ~23 year-old
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problem that grows more intense and overwhelming every day.
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Some people are just dealt bad hands in this life. I know many people
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have it worse than I do, and maybe I'm just not a strong person, but I
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really did try to deal with this. I've tried to deal with this every day
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for the last 23 years and I just can't fucking take it anymore.
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I often wonder what life must be like for other people. People who
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can feel the love from others and give it back unadulterated, people who
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can experience sex as an intimate and joyous experience, people who can
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experience the colors and happenings of this world without constant
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misery. I wonder who I'd be if things had been different or if I were a
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stronger person. It sounds pretty great.
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I'm prepared for death. I'm prepared for the pain and I am ready to no
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longer exist. Thanks to the strictness of New Jersey gun laws this will
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probably be much more painful than it needs to be, but what can you do.
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My only fear at this point is messing something up and surviving.
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---
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I'd also like to address my family, if you can call them that. I despise
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everything they stand for and I truly hate them, in a non-emotional,
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dispassionate and what I believe is a healthy way. The world will be a
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better place when they're dead--one with less hatred and intolerance.
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If you're unfamiliar with the situation, my parents are fundamentalist
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Christians who kicked me out of their house and cut me off financially
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when I was 19 because I refused to attend seven hours of church a week.
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They live in a black and white reality they've constructed for
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themselves. They partition the world into good and evil and survive
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by hating everything they fear or misunderstand and calling it love.
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They don't understand that good and decent people exist all around us,
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"saved" or not, and that evil and cruel people occupy a large percentage
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of their church. They take advantage of people looking for hope by
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teaching them to practice the same hatred they practice.
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A random example:
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"I am personally convinced that if a Muslim truly believes and obeys the
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Koran, he will be a terrorist." - George Zeller, August 24, 2010.
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If you choose to follow a religion where, for example, devout Catholics
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who are trying to be good people are all going to Hell but child
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molestors go to Heaven (as long as they were "saved" at some point),
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that's your choice, but it's fucked up. Maybe a God who operates by
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those rules does exist. If so, fuck Him.
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Their church was always more important than the members of their family
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and they happily sacrificed whatever necessary in order to satisfy
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their contrived beliefs about who they should be.
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I grew up in a house where love was proxied through a God I could never
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believe in. A house where the love of music with any sort of a beat was
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literally beaten out of me. A house full of hatred and intolerance, run
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by two people who were experts at appearing kind and warm when others
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were around. Parents who tell an eight year old that his grandmother is
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going to Hell because she's Catholic. Parents who claim not to be racist
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but then talk about the horrors of miscegenation. I could list hundreds
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of other examples, but it's tiring.
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Since being kicked out, I've interacted with them in relatively normal
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ways. I talk to them on the phone like nothing happened. I'm not sure
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why. Maybe because I like pretending I have a family. Maybe I like
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having people I can talk to about what's been going on in my life.
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Whatever the reason, it's not real and it feels like a sham. I should
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have never allowed this reconnection to happen.
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I wrote the above a while ago, and I do feel like that much of the time.
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At other times, though, I feel less hateful. I know my parents honestly
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believe the crap they believe in. I know that my mom, at least, loved me
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very much and tried her best. One reason I put this off for so long is
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because I know how much pain it will cause her. She has been sad since
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she found out I wasn't "saved", since she believes I'm going to Hell,
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which is not a sadness for which I am responsible. That was never going
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to change, and presumably she believes the state of my physical body is
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much less important than the state of my soul. Still, I cannot
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intellectually justify this decision, knowing how much it will hurt her.
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Maybe my ability to take my own life, knowing how much pain it will
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cause, shows that I am a monster who doesn't deserve to live. All I know
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is that I can't deal with this pain any longer and I'm am truly sorry I
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couldn't wait until my family and everyone I knew died so this could be
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done without hurting anyone. For years I've wished that I'd be hit by a
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bus or die while saving a baby from drowning so my death might be more
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acceptable, but I was never so lucky.
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---
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To those of you who have shown me love, thank you for putting up with
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all my shittiness and moodiness and arbitrariness. I was never the
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person I wanted to be. Maybe without the darkness I would have been a
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better person, maybe not. I did try to be a good person, but I realize I
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never got very far.
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I'm sorry for the pain this causes. I really do wish I had another
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option. I hope this letter explains why I needed to do this. If you
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can't understand this decision, I hope you can at least forgive me.
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Bill Zeller
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---
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Please save this letter and repost it if gets deleted. I don't want
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people to wonder why I did this. I disseminated it more widely than I
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might have otherwise because I'm worried that my family might try to
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restrict access to it. I don't mind if this letter is made public. In
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fact, I'd prefer it be made public to people being unable to read it and
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drawing their own conclusions.
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Feel free to republish this letter, but only if it is reproduced in its
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entirety.
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