The tyranny of the past

It’s a long time since I endured the blood trickle of a period. That event we learn about before we enter womanhood, usually from experience even as we are warned ahead: one day it will happen to you. 

I was late to the party, fifteen years old. It had bothered me for twelve months earlier because my elder sister alerted me to its existence after an aunt with whom we stayed one weekend suggested we go to the beach for a swim. My sister declined, and my aunt asked, ‘Do you have your period?’ 

The word ‘period’ baffled me. It shuddered in my ears. I’d heard of periods from my sister’s attendance at secondary school where she talked of blocks of time in which different subjects were taught, but this was different. So, back home, I asked her its meaning. Her explanation left me little but my imaginary wonderings. 

Soon after I woke one night, went to the toilet and there in the dark I imagined a great dark stain at my pyjama’s crotch. It was a false alarm and when it finally happened, again another night, I went to my sister for support. These were not things I could discuss with my mother. My sister handed me a tampon box and urged me to read the directions. I did not know then I had a vagina, nor where it was located. In my family we did not use such words for genitals. Nor did we hear the word penis bandied about. Certainly not vulva or labia. These parts of our bodies were secrets. 

My vagina, this foreign hole, somewhere between my legs I knew, and somewhere close to my anus. But where? Even as I write these things a chill sets in, a yuk. How can you write about such things? They are unseemly. 

Recently at a seminar on misogyny, Michaela Chamberlain talked about gendered blood and the way women’s bodies get policed. All aspects of misogyny and how to fight a perspective that dominates our lives and seeps into our bones from earliest days. 

I doubt men are much better at talking about their bodies and the changes to them as they enter adolescence and old age: the wet dreams, nocturnal emissions – if that’s the word. In later years, an inability to get an erection, or other aspects as when a young boy’s voice breaks and an Adam’s apple appears at his throat.

But I suspect if they don’t, it’s because adolescent changes and the ravages of age, bespeak a certain vulnerability which men meet with coming-of-age events: the tough training run; a few nights out camping alone. Whatever rituals they can devise, to harden their bodies on the way to manhood, and later onto death. Or else into denial 

Whereas we girls endured no such experience. Still, we also needed to be hardened for life. So many things on the road ahead and no one ever talked about it. The way period cramps can be torture. Not that they ever hurt me, nor my mother or sisters, from what I understand. Looking back, I wonder whether this is also about a disavowal of our bodies. 

In my childhood household, besides the unseemly arrival of our periods, which in later years my sisters and I called Charlie, like the perfume, we did not speak about it. 

The night of that first encounter with a tampon, I misjudged and shoved it up my anus. The discomfort in my spine as I lay in bed later thinking something had to be wrong was overwhelming. I reported back to my sister who was trying to sleep. She sighed. ‘You’ll have to learn one day and I’m not about to show you.’ The thought of my sister fiddling with my bits below put me off. ‘Try these,’ she said handing me a pad and suspender belt. 

The belt was easy and the pad self-evident. But it took many years before I located my vagina and dared to use tampons, well after someone else, a man, found my vagina and penetrated it. After which I entered the realms of womanhood. 

All this a secret to everyone, even to myself. 

How do we escape from the tyranny of the past that says we cannot speak of these things? These bodily excrescences that hint at our vulnerability. 

Even when I was a child in love with television series like The Brady Bunch and The Swiss Family Robinson, I could not understand why no one left to visit a toilet on screen. They might use the bathroom or on their deserted island take a dip in the sea to clean their face and hands, put on makeup, but they never spoke of a need to relieve themselves. 

Michaela Chamberlain talked about Freud’s case of Dora. A young woman whose father brought her to see the great doctor for help with hysterical symptoms. Her loss of voice, choking, migraines, difficulties breathing. 

Freud writes her story as the case of a failed analysis and ascribes the problems to her resistance, and his failure to deal with the transference. Her refusal to use the couch. Her decision to leave abruptly after 18 sessions. 

No wonder she left. She had told Freud her story. When she was fourteen, a family friend, Herr K sexually propositioned her. And then repeatedly at sixteen and again, she believed with her father’s knowledge. Freud ascribed her struggles to jealousy of her father’s lover Frau K and Dora’s desire for her father. Freud twisted the narrative. 

The good old Oedipal Conflict, which I imbibed in my early years of psychotherapy training as if drinking mother’s milk. But there’s something in the business of jealousy, I know from experience. My aching jealousy of others whose achievements within the writing world are greater than my own, and when I was young, my jealousy towards a younger sister who was more beautiful than me alongside my brother, seventeen months older, who was so clever. The family genius. 

Sandwiched between both, with neither brains nor beauty, the past assaulted me like a sledgehammer of self-loathing. But when one of my early therapists suggested I wanted my father for myself, as if I was in love with him, I refused to oblige. Like Dora. He had it wrong. 

https://www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/100000007026836/hysterical-girl.ht

I did not want my father any more than Dora wanted hers. These fathers who betrayed us. Who used our bodies and minds for their own comfort, and sexual desire. Who could not find what they wanted in their wives, sexual satisfaction that was built on a misogynistic and patriarchal view of the world that urges women to stay in their places as receptacles for men’s desires, for the penis and whatever else they might want to put inside. 

In another book on misogyny, Kate Manne’s Down Girl, I read about the 2014 Isla Vista killings. A young man, Elliot Rodger, enraged that no women took an interest in him, murdered as many men and women he could locate on a university campus and beyond as a way of assuaging his rage. He aimed his weapons from his BMW. He would show them how wrong they were before he crashed his car and shot himself in the head.  

He is a hero for the craziness of Incels who see themselves as victims of rejection because no woman wants to gratify their desires. The fault of women, of all women. This then is the essence of misogyny, and we learn it early. It’s in our blood. Even women fall victim to its thrall. We pander to our men like they’re small boys in need of love, instead of demanding they pull their weight. Insist they take a greater share in parenting.

I recognise it. My tendency to care, especially for men. When I was in my first significant relationship with a man I adored, I took to ironing his shirts as a way of winning his love. I cleaned his flat every Saturday from floor to ceiling. I scraped out his toilet and vacuumed his floors simply to satisfy my belief this was a way to his love. This was my job. This he’d find irresistible and love me for it. 

The pleasure of his pleasure overruled my own and I did not consider the boredom of housework or the loneliness of those Saturdays at home alone cleaning his flat while he was away at the races. And when he came home, whether he won or lost, we would take to his bed for peremptory sex. It satisfied something in him while for me it was not so different from the housework, only I could doze if there was time later. 

Across the map of time this was what a good relationship looked like to me then. And as much as I see it differently now, I’m still bogged down by the urge to do the lion’s share of housework. My duty to clean and wash; my job to tackle the dust as it piles on every surface. Only these days I let it settle. 

Life has a way of needing more than just submission to another’s wishes. It’s time to make room for all of us as humans. Not bogged down by gender divides that are as false as they are constructed.

Be gentle with me

‘Changing your mind is one of the most difficult feats of living. Easier to change your nose.’ Niall Williams

I was looking forward to watching a documentary featuring the lives of three newborn babies in South Africa until it began. The first sight of those tiny helpless beings situated in the chaos of their lives, with loving parents and in two cases nearby siblings who wanted to be in on the act but the younger they were the more troubled they seemed at the arrival of the newborn. In one family, the child was white, and her black nanny appeared. She, the nanny, perhaps the most loving of all caregivers.

As the film progressed and we watched the babies from ten days then weekly for a period, leaping to three months and then six slowly over the course of the film my nerves settled, and I recognised my apprehension as linked to the struggles of babies and parents during those first critical three months of life when anxieties and vulnerabilities are at their height.

I will never forget one of the doctors who delivered the third of my babies telling me in the days after her birth, the first day of your life is the most difficult. He told me this in the context of my recent concerns.

During my two days stay in the hospital following my daughter’s birth I shared a room with another mother who came in for a caesarean.

When they wheeled this woman away for her caesarian after she first settled into a bed near mine she told me this baby should never exist. She was conceived during an acrimonious struggle with her now ex-husband, the woman said, and now this baby was the one condition she had to that failed marriage. She wanted her baby desperately, but the circumstances were tough.

She went off for her caesar and came back triumphant, her baby a beautiful girl. I cannot remember her name, but I shall call her Amy. Amy’s mother that first day seemed manic. Over abundant visitors in the evening such I pulled the curtains round my bed and tried to block out the noise. 

This during the mid 1980s when mothers typically stayed overnight and for several days in hospital. Babies stayed beside their mothers in separate cribs by day but at night after a final feed the nurses wheeled the babies into the nursery to let mothers have a good night’s sleep before returning home. 

This night I had fed my baby and handed her over to the night nurse who ushered out the last of my fellow roommate’s visitors then handed over her baby for a final feed.

When she returned sometime later to take Amy to the nursery Amy’s mother wanted to hold her longer. The nurse complied and left. I fell into a light sleep and what seemed like hours later heard magazines dropping onto the floor from the hospital tall bed. There followed a thud and clunk and the wail of a baby.

In an instant I heard Amy’s mother grab up her baby and rush from the ward.

I lay in bed shell shocked. My imaginings. I waited for another hour until I saw light creep in under the blind and realised it was morning or near enough. I padded into the corridor in search of a nurse.

‘Is the baby okay?’ I asked the sister at her desk.

‘They’re running tests now,’ the nurse said. ‘She should be okay.’

I never saw Amy or her mother again. And decided to end my hospital stay early. Something about the experience had punctured holes in my confidence. Something complex in my head about whether I was safe. Was my baby safe?

On our first visit to the doctor after delivery he weighed my baby, checked out her small for and pronounced her fit. He checked me out too and when I told him Amy’s story he was non-committal. ‘Things like this happen,’ he said. 

‘Hopefully the baby will be okay.’ I wrote a letter to the hospital asking if Amy was okay and they wrote back several weeks later as the memory of this fall smoothed out in my mind. 

As my own baby grew beyond those first several dangerous days into a bubbly bouncing little one. The hospital admin reported the baby was fine. No brain damage. They were sorry for my experience.

To this day I wonder about little Amy. What her life beyond this fall has consisted of.

My own daughter only three weeks ago gave birth to her third child and is going through those harrowing weeks of life with a newborn.

I say harrowing because riddled as they are in anxiety about vulnerability. The apprehension when your baby cries. The worries in the middle of the night if the baby sleeps too long between feeds: Are they still breathing. Then the exhaustion when they cluster feed and wake almost on the hour. The sheer struggle of it all. Softened by whatever hormones course through the body of each mother of a newborn to help her ride the waves of fear and love. 

The resentments that can creep in when baby cannot give space enough. Worse still when this baby is not your first. The struggle of managing the emotional roller coaster of the other little ones who must now adjust to the reconfiguration of their family. The one ahead no longer the baby must adjust to a feeling of being supplanted, as did the one ahead of her. And so it goes up the line.

My mother and a baby who might well be me or my sibling. We shall never know for sure.

In the South African documentary my heart thudded almost to a halt when the small boy, maybe two or three years older than his tiny baby sister of some five six months, rolls around and over her, pulls her into position and blows endless brutal raspberries onto her feet.

Like imitations of the father who blew raspberries onto his child to her delight. But this brother is almost spitting at his baby sister and as the footage goes on, she shifts from pleasure to distress before a parent finally calls her brother away for a bath. Then thanks him for looking after his sister. 

Moments like this in the film sent my mind into that state I often feel when watching documentaries of newborns. It calls up some type of punitive force in my head that insists the baby is cared for well. Maybe I’m identifying with the infant. Look after me well, my mind says. Do not leave me at the mercy of my tormented older siblings who hate me for my existence.

Please hold me and be gentle with me. I cannot get into life unscathed if you do not offer me all the gentleness of a mother bear from children’s nursery rhymes. I need gentle care holding and food. 

And please above all, do not expect too much of me at this moment. I am only now in the cold air of this world. My digestive system is immature. It cannot cope well with those first onslaughts of milk into my belly, much as it needs them. Please help me through my anxieties by containing your own. And I will reward you with smiles when I can first manage them and love you to bits in return.