{"id":28,"date":"2011-04-06T04:30:56","date_gmt":"2011-04-06T08:30:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/personalrelationships\/?p=28"},"modified":"2011-06-29T14:31:26","modified_gmt":"2011-06-29T18:31:26","slug":"the-small-room","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/2011\/04\/06\/the-small-room\/","title":{"rendered":"The Small Room"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>This  essay is intended for adult audiences only! Contains sexual imagery and  adult themes. It describes the sexual abuse of a child.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Commentary on the following essay:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The article which follows describes a particularly disturbing  recollection from the author&#8217;s childhood. It has taken half a century  for these words to be written, they are true and honest words, recalling  the horrible abuse of an eleven year old boy, the author as a child.  They are not offered as an excuse for why a life as been lived as it  has, or why the author failed to accomplish in his life what he had  hoped. Nor is it a condemnation of a religion or its ministers, nor a  request for damages, or even a desire to set things right. The abuse of a  child by a pedophile is a terrible thing. Our society condemns the  crime and the criminal, yet there is little comfort in such actions as\u00a0  may be brought by dedicated and often horrified public servants.<\/p>\n<p>Each life is a mosaic of all the events experienced, but it is not  linear, not sequential by hour, day, month or year. Connections are made  when we are children which persist through out the span of our years,  threads which, seen or unseen, tug us one way or another.\u00a0 Some threads  pull us up, tug us toward understanding and acknowledgement, they  enlighten us. A coach, a teacher, our mother or father, a preacher or  friend; we live better lives because we feel their influence lifting our  spirits or strengthening our resolve.\u00a0 We go forward through time  seeking a better self, believing we are good and worthy of reward.<\/p>\n<p>Other threads are anchors which hold us in a darker place, pull us  toward the shoals, strip us of hope. Some of us are irreparably damaged,  those children have hope dimmed and then extinguished. Others, like the  author, cling to the warmth, the vague feeling of being loved, wanted,  needed, understood by some powerful yet unknown force, repressed by fear  and disgust, unseen yet always present.<\/p>\n<p>Pedophiles seem to be clever people, they know the right bait with  which to catch the child, be it a candy bar, a puppy dog or filling an  emptiness that the child expresses in confidence to a counselor, a  minister, a family friend.<\/p>\n<p>Some act alone, driven by their demons, and snatch and grab and rape  and take the life of the child, they make newspaper headlines, their  victims are the subject of alerts and are the top story of the evening  news. We are fascinated by the horror of the act, terrified by swiftness  of the act, confounded by the meaninglessness, and saddened by the  inevitable outcome.<\/p>\n<p>Others, the vast and silent majority of pedophiles, seek not only  sexual gratification, but most perversely, they seek a union with the  child, the malevolent control of another&#8217;s life, the molding of the  child&#8217;s character to the end&#8217;s, to the needs of their own corrupt  psyche.<\/p>\n<p>These men and women need adulation and respect for the very acts they  commit, they need a sense of normalcy; they need to influence the child  not only to give sexual gratification, but even more, to give their  acquiescence and affection, to give them love.<\/p>\n<p>This desire for acknowledgement, acceptance of perversity is no  different than in those cretins who sexually and physically abuse their  wives and girl friends, and in many ways the emotional needs of the  victims are similar.<\/p>\n<p>Pedophilia apparently is a common human condition, an anachronistic,  vestigial trait that we now see occurring more often, or have finally  begun to notice more often, as media and the internet make available  source material: pictures, videos and stories of little boys and little  girls subjected to this perversion. It can not be long before the  psychologists will determine that some percent of the population is born  with the condition, and that so called non-violent acts of perversion  should be decriminalized.<\/p>\n<p>After all we read of boy love in\u00a0 ancient Sparta, of intercourse with  little girls at Roman bacchanalia, of the marriages of prepubescent  girls to elders in Asian and African cultures. We objectify our own  children in child beauty pageants, our culture encourages immodesty,  sexual precociousness, the near worship of fashion and film portraying  innocence taken or worse, willingly surrendered.<\/p>\n<p>The minds of children are blank tablets, but not of paper that can  easily be erased, but of clay, and what is written into those minds  remains for a lifetime. We must strive to keep our children safe, not  just from the obvious dangers that maim and kill, but from the many  silent assassins that destroy innocence and hope, that deeply mark the  clay tablets that for our recollections and that even if forgotten, even  if deeply repressed, shape our children&#8217;s destiny.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Small Room <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It seems an odd thing, to be haunted by dreams, to be tugged to and  fro by shadows, to question the facts of life as they are known by  yourself. A man in full, entering his seventh decade, should be sure of  himself. His history should be recorded in full view of truth; no  secrets of self should be hidden.\u00a0 This is a story about a rediscovered  memory, or series of now remembered events, that are the riptide beneath  the surface currents of a lost life. Lost? Lost to demons hidden by  waves of repression. &#8220;Life is a Beach&#8221; they say in Florida, a place of  golden years and diluted memories. The waves that hide the sands of  memory can as well, in a perfect storm, erode them.<\/p>\n<p>For decades I have known little peace, which wasn&#8217;t disturbing  because I learned to live atop the shifting sands. From a precocious  boy, to pubescent &#8220;lad,&#8221; to adolescent lover, the shifting sands of  memory masked my fearful need. Need of what? Need ignored, need  forgotten,\u00a0 youthful corruption,\u00a0 repressed horror,\u00a0 expressed  affection; unanswered questions all leading to that illicit image of a  mature mad man.<\/p>\n<p>Am I in an asylum? Am I certifiably crazy? Neither. Am I the man I  might have become? Have I done the things that I was meant to do, that  by mind and temperament I was capable of doing? Have I any knowledge of  inner peace. No, no, no, and no.<\/p>\n<p>I am a southern man, a keeper of tradition; by our culture taught to  be a gentleman.\u00a0 Read of honor, duty, obligation, bred to be like the  paragon, to emulate our pinnacle of true virtue, our beloved R E Lee. I  grew up on the banks of Peachtree Creek, whose swirling waters still  revealed the hidden minnie balls, whose receding banks yielded the brass  of the fallen. I was born into a society within memory of a epochal  conflict, where the children of Confederate veterans still spoke the  living memories of valiant yet defeated men. Our unique culture spoke of  a war lost to exhaustion, not of zeal or spirit, but of materials; and  of a time and way life of life gone with the wind. My mother was  southern by birth, but progressive by marriage to a man of the West, she  was a convert to an ancient roman religion. I was raised on rite and  ritual, which always seemed unnecessary to me. I was born in mind and  heart a protestant: I would read my mother&#8217;s family Bible, it was the  King James Version, it was the Word in prose and poetry.\u00a0 It was written  in the voice of my maternal ancestors and it was elegant. The roman  Bible lacked any pretense of elegance, it was written as a reference  source, a handbook for theologians, translated by French monks into  English. It was seldom used, excerpted only for sermons, treated in  parochial schools as neglected literature; it had not the weight of the  Baltimore Catechism, nor roused any curiosity of the faithful, whose  sins were so easily forgiven by a penance of praying three Hail Mary&#8217;s. I  always imagined those devout Catholic mobsters of the Northeast had to  say at least a decade of the rosary for each life they ended.<\/p>\n<p>I began this story talking of dreams, of shadows, of repression and I  will return to those hidden memories, but first, I must share a  humiliation. I must tell of an often recalled shame, never forgotten,  never repressed.\u00a0 Picture a young boy eleven years old, kneeling on a  black and white subway tiled floor before a white ceramic toilet bowl.  He kneels before it naked. His pale white back faces you, his buttocks  are streaked with narrow red whelps. If you could hear him, you would  hear his sobbing, the catching breath, the heaving moans, the deep and  sharply drawn spasms called hick-ups. Before him, the toilet lid is  lifted, and\u00a0 his arms lay over the bowl lip, his are hands plunged into  the cold water; he is scrubbing a white garment, it is stained. Holding a  bar of ivory soap, he scrubs to clean the stain, to clean the brown  defecation&#8217;s streaks from the under wear&#8217;s crouch. The tile is cold, the  water is cold, the room is cold. The bathroom is doubled-doored, it is\u00a0  shared between two bedrooms, to his back faces his bedroom door, ahead  to the right the second door opens into another bedroom, one which by  happenstance, is occupied by guests, one of whom is his favorite cousin,  dear Cousin. Little boys, pubescent little boys are often aroused by  the cold, and by the actions of their hands. As the boy plunges the  stained briefs into water, lathers them to clean the stain, the cold  water splashes onto his hairless bare belly and trickles down from his  belly button, and a recent distant\u00a0memory seizes his hands and he rubs  the soapy soiled ivory bar on his private flesh, erect from the cold  room and cold water, tugging, stroking along as if he had been taught,  and at the moment when his pupils were rolling up and his slim sinewy  limbs were taunt and convulsing, when his breath was frozen in his  lungs, at that moment, his nude cousin pushed open the guest room door, a  green towel draped like a cape over her shoulders, coming to bathe  before bed.\u00a0 She froze mid-step, her arms flew out extended, flinging up  the towel, her little girl&#8217;s body opened to his inspection, revealing  what he had never seen, the female body in full.<\/p>\n<p>He saw not only what was not there but in her face what her eyes were  locked on, her almond brown eyes wide as saucers on her face, the white  corneas pie pan size, the dark pupils fixed as in death at the  convulsions she saw. Her face flushed pale, them turned crimson. He  watched her breasts harden, the tiny penny sized dark buttons of flesh  stiffen and pop out of her pink chest like arrow heads shot toward him.  His little boy eyes recorded her image, his brain drew a topo map of her  body,\u00a0 a indelible record, and as his eyes fell he saw the crease  between her thighs where their was nothing, nothing to hold and tug and  stoke. Nothing with which to pee , just\u00a0 a slightly widening crack that  seemed to part as she stared at his erection, at his hand full of his  little hard jutting stem, and at the soapy crinkled sack beneath it. The  white lather and milky discharge coated his peppermint red stem and he  suddenly let go of it; his eyes followed her eyes, and then their eyes  met.\u00a0 Suddenly, \u00a0 just at that moment,\u00a0 she pulled her towel down around  and in front of her shoulders, and she pirouetted around yanking the  door shut! He fell back into the bowl, and began to furiously scrub the  stains until his briefs were spotless. He would latter remember how her  exposed butt had a different shape than a man&#8217;s, how it looked full and  round and so much softer. Neither he nor his cousin ever spoke of what  occurred, but the mind is its own master, and he would relive the  humiliation and arousal of the moment ever more.<\/p>\n<p>To his parents, it seemed the young man would not control his bowels,  that these frequent stains were a regression to his earlier years of  potty training, a means of seeking attention or punishing them for some  unknown perceived inequity or rule. Over the year they lasted, they even  sought medical help for the child, concerned that the rectal fecal  stains, the occasional blood stains were a sign of illness. A doctor of  internal medicine found no disease, a proctologist found a few polyps  that might have bleed but noted nothing now. Resigned to the  embarrassment, the parents sent the child to a psychiatrist. The child  sat in a an overstuffed leather chair, and spoke of Marcus Aurelius and  Camus and Kierkegaard and of sputnik and the stars, and of his hatred of  the roman way, but nothing came of it. The\u00a0psychiatrist\u00a0 said, &#8220;He&#8217;s  just very bright and very sensitive.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Sixth grade was a very bad year. Everywhere he looked, he saw the  budding nipples of the girls beneath their starched uniform blouses. He  smelled their earthy, warm wet sweat and the odor of their first  periods. He was enraged by their diffidence, and their cruelty. Other  boys began to grow muscles, and some even facial hair, but not him.  School became work, and he looked elsewhere for pleasure. He served as  an altar boy, and grew fond of drinking the Christian Brother&#8217;s wine,  and the languor and bleariness it brought him. He was often sent to the  mother principal&#8217;s office, and slapped hard for an outrageous comment he  made about the church or God, or country. He read Mein Kampf, and read  of National Socialism. He thought he had a vocation to be a priest and  thought to ask the priest who had befriended him about it, but the  subject never came up.<\/p>\n<p>He began having strange unusual thoughts. He found a nursing text  book of his mother&#8217;s, a text book of Gynecological Nursing, 1934, and  with interest began to read it. The first half of the book dealt with  obstetrics, and he read with wonder of the act of birth and the care and  attention that pregnant women required. At the beginning of the next  section, a very accurate drawing of the female genitalia drew his eyes  to its very center. Their, exposed, was what was hidden in the crease  between his cousin&#8217;s thighs. Terms like labia, clitoris and vagina leapt  from the page, and he flipped back and forth between the drawing and  the pictures of mothers delivering their babies. Suddenly and quite  unexpectedly, he felt a distending erection, painful and bulging. Having  just read of how babies are conceived, he realized that his penis was  aroused by looking at the drawn shape of the female genitalia, the shape  stimulates the response. This knowledge was more exciting than what he  felt.\u00a0 Sitting at the desk in parent&#8217;s library, he removed his clothing,  and taking large white sheets of paper, he began to draw these shapes,  and as he did he became more aroused, and soon he found is hands on his  penis, and quickly all the tension of his life escaped from him, and he  fell back in the chair, the semen sticky and sweet in his hands. He now  felt a strong connection to earlier unknown acts of relief.\u00a0 Laying his  left leg over the arm of the chair, he wrapped his right arm around and  under him, and his fingers tugged at taunt rim of his anus, and then one  finger slipped in, rubbing the tight knot of muscles around the inside  of the orifice, then another finger, and then another, rhythmically  plunging, twisting in and out, in and out.\u00a0His left hand slid over the  small head of his penis, and rubbed and turned, flesh against flesh.\u00a0  His state of consciousness altered, his eyes dreamily rolled around the  reddening sockets.<\/p>\n<p>He felt warmth, he smelled cigarette smoke and tasted wine. With him,  in the room, dream shapes emerged, and he felt kisses on his neck and  cheek and lips, he felt a tongue where his left hand was, then the  alternating warmth and coolness of lips moving up and down his penis.  His right hand pressed all his fingers into the willing opening anus  and\u00a0 buried itself, turning left and right, rotating around the  stretching muscle wall. He felt the warmth of a body next to his, the  tickle of hair on his face, his jaws and teeth being racked apart by hot  hard bony meat.\u00a0 Gagging, gagging, the inflamed inserted object rolled  his head over and to the side, and he shook with surges of tidal waves  that filled his throat with hot salty sea water. Then it was over. His  left hand was filling his throat with his own fingers oozing with semen,  his tongue was licking his own palm. His right hand, streaked with  brown and blood, pulled sharply from his anus, and the twelve old lay  exhausted on the brown leather armchair.<\/p>\n<p>He hesitated, as if waiting for another kiss, for a sign of love and  warmth. His head spun around looking for&#8230;for what, for whom? He saw,  he knew he was alone.<\/p>\n<p>Swaggering up, he smelled his hands, saw the drawings, felt warm and  slimy between his butt cheeks. He grabbed the drawings, he gathered up  his clothes, and crept to the library\u00a0 door. He listened, heard nothing,  cracked the door, saw no one, and bolted across the hall to his room.  Locking himself in the bathroom, he washed his body even as it still  shook with quaking rhythms. Were there such things, he queried himself,  such things as demons?<\/p>\n<p>That Sunday, as he pulled his red cassock over his head in  preparation for mass, he noticed a door to the right of the sacristy,  next to the chancel door. The oak door seemed familiar, but was locked.\u00a0  Why hadn&#8217;t he noticed it before? After Sunday High Mass, he normally  loaded his Raleigh 10 speed bicycle into the the trunk of his father&#8217;s  sedan and rode home with his family. This Sunday he asked his dad if he  could stay, help the janitors, enjoy the exercise. When all the Missals  were put in place, and the track cards all straightened, after the  janitors had said goodbye, he walked past the flickering light of the  ceborium, and went through the Epistle door into the sacristy.<\/p>\n<p>In a vestment drawer he found a chain of keys, tried several in the  oak door, unlocked it, and followed the steps down with sure certainty.  The cathedral basement had been a girl&#8217;s high school, it was divided  into class rooms,\u00a0 many of which were accessed from the narthex stairs  but none of which were here under the sacristy. Here were storage rooms,  and the physical plant, the boiler and and its piping, a maze of rooms  and nooks. There was even a door to the tunnel built between the church  basement and the rectory.\u00a0 It was said that it, and a companion  tunnel\u00a0to the convent, were built to allow the Catholic clergy to escape  the Klan.<\/p>\n<p>Though frightened, he was not hesitant to follow his feet; they  seemed to know a familiar way. Toward the back, around a bend, on the  left was a small room, tight against the street side below grade  concrete foundation wall. It was locked, but his fingers found the key  to it on the chain, and he unlocked it and opened the door.<\/p>\n<p>The small room smelled of cigarettes, but otherwise was spotless. A  porcelain wash basin hung from a wall, two armchairs faced a couch,  candles lined a shelf, a black shiny silk caftan\u00a0 was draped over the  couch&#8217;s end.\u00a0 In a cupboard were several cases of sacramental wine, and  several silver cups. He began to shake, to feel hot, to feel confused,  to feel aroused, to feel&#8230;. He slammed the door shut, locked it, turned  and felt nothing at all.<\/p>\n<p>That afternoon, at home, he told his parents that he no longer wished  to be an altar boy. Being one, he said, took up too much time.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This essay is intended for adult audiences only! Contains sexual imagery and adult themes. It describes the sexual abuse of a child. Commentary on the following essay: The article which follows describes a particularly disturbing recollection from the author&#8217;s childhood. &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/2011\/04\/06\/the-small-room\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[15],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-28","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-adult-themes"],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/p1sHlh-s","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/28","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=28"}],"version-history":[{"count":7,"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/28\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":79,"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/28\/revisions\/79"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=28"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=28"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.bullsullivan.com\/LifeasFiction\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=28"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}