https://elusiveenigma.com/ Sun, 07 Jul 2024 16:30:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://elusiveenigma.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-logo1-32x32.jpg https://elusiveenigma.com/ 32 32 tte https://elusiveenigma.com/2024/07/07/tte/ Sun, 07 Jul 2024 16:28:20 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=1185 Test Page Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email My thirteen-month “awakening” was terrifying for a variety of reasons. This is not your traditional breakdown. My ability to endure the first 12 years of my life and somehow find the ability to immediately move forward, I’m learning what a miracle that really was. I now understand the […]

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My thirteen-month “awakening” was terrifying for a variety of reasons. This is not your traditional breakdown. My ability to endure the first 12 years of my life and somehow find the ability to immediately move forward, I’m learning what a miracle that really was. I now understand the odd questions and strange looks I would get when anyone would ask me, “Where are your parents?” I always quickly responded with something sarcastic such as, “No idea. Where are YOUR parents?” In reality, I was over 900 miles away from where I grew up and I was only 12-years-old. Completely unattended and eager to figure things out. But it never dawned on me why people found this to be so odd. Until the last 13-months.

 

The most terrifying realization was that if I gave in to the emotional roller coaster after my sister and mother died, there would be no stopping what would follow. The emotional oppression I spent my entire life sentencing myself to, that would have to end and the emotional fallout would likely be out of my control. I spent 13-months fighting it. It wasn’t just about my sister and my mother. It was about everything I brushed off for 37 years. Every person I had lost and the opportunities, like basic education, that I was never given. Grieving these things never appealed to me. But freedom and advocacy do appeal to me, very much, and I have spent the last 20 years advocating for victims who have no idea just how much I identify with their trauma. I have only been candid with victims about my past when I felt it was absolutely necessary. Those who do know, tend to say that this isn’t “fair.” I never saw it that way. I never saw myself as a victim or even remotely “robbed” of anything. But, that was just another tactic that would have to come to an end. It wasn’t fair, I admit that, and I still do not enjoy the word “fair.” 

 

Making the choice to allow myself to breathe, be free of the wreckage, and acknowledge that, “this happened to me,” would also bring very real safety concerns that I was not ready to address. I needed to slowly acknowledge that I was also in the middle of a standoff that could ignite with gunfire at any moment. And this time it was not a threat from a predator or a murderer that I was investigating, it came from my father, Adrian.

 

A 17-year feud with my father was about to erupt. This feud is simple, yet complex. And I think it’s time to talk about it for the first time in 17 years. I never talk about Adrian, and I think that has worked out to his benefit for many years. Until today. The reality is, I have assisted in finding many victims who have crossed paths with their own “Adrian.” And maybe this will help, to know that someone who has been relentlessly strong, no matter what the personal cost, has not escaped the brutal realities of complex trauma. It’s all still there and always has been. I escaped nothing. The survivors I have found have taught me more than they think I have taught them, that you can be strong while also allowing yourself to heal. No matter how messy that may look to the world around you. 

 

This phase of healing would absolutely be messy and perhaps fatal, I had no doubt. Adrian is a man of his word and he declared almost two decades ago that his daughter was now enemy territory. We managed to stay on separate ends of the map for many years, aside from one mishap where Adrian attempted to kill his best friend, my adopted father, Antonio. Once Adrian found out how Antonio and his wife treated me, it was too much for him to be conscious of and he decided that Antonio and his wife would have to be dealt with. Despite my hesitance, I stopped the deadly clash from a studio green room 1,200 miles away. I got the call that Adrian’s men were outside of Antonio’s house for hours. I knew what that meant, and so did Antonio. Our paths crossed one more time that same year, Adrian was fully armed and prepared to make his move when he had a clear shot of me. He was unaware that I was working on a case of a missing person and that my backup security was standing right beside him. It was enough to spook him and we have not laid eyes on each other since that day, ten years ago. So, as freeing as it will be, confronting and cutting off any and all associates who I have appeased for the sake of safety, such as my dead brother’s baby mama, is terrifying. We’ll get back to her at a less enraging time. 

 

My father, Adrian, was born into an Irish family in the Midwest, his curly dark red-ish brown hair and blatant disregard for the rules was an instant giveaway. He’s the oldest of his siblings, but none of them call him brother. Adrian is not the type of man that most people would willingly associate with. Not now. But back in the 1980’s, Adrian had a lot of friends in the oddest places. He still lives in that reality, the 80’s. Back when he had the ability to control the world around him and feel a sense of power that he never had over himself as a child. His inner torment and genius mind spilled out onto every single aspect of his life, and then our lives, and the lives of innocent people around him. My brother and I both had mixed emotions about Adrian. We both admired him, loved him, hated him, and hid from him all before we were 7-years-old. Our father lost custody of both of us. My brother was adopted by his maternal grandparents and I was adopted by Adrian’s high school best friend and criminal right hand, Antonio. 

 

As a child, Adrian and his mother, Lily, lived with Lily’s mother, Adrian’s grandmother. His father had obligations that kept him from being a father to Adrian, such as his wife and kids. Lily was young and their relationship was not meant to last, or even be known about by anyone. After Adrian turned 5-years-old, Lily met and quickly married a ship Captain and they began a family outside of Adrian’s grandmother’s home. He never felt like he was a part of this new arrangement. His relationship with the Captain became one of pure hatred. And the feeling may have been mutual. In Adrian’s perspective, it absolutely was. He believes he never felt loved by his mother or his step-father. He wasn’t even given the benefit of calling out the obvious. Lily insisted that the Captain was Adrian’s real father. Despite him questioning her for years and insisting that he knew the Captain was not his father. His relationship with the Captain only became more volatile throughout the years. Our family has never admitted to this, but many people outside of our family claim it is true. Friends and neighbors claim that the Captain severely physically abused Adrian.  And I personally believe them. I have performed as much investigative research into my own family as I have into the families of victims that I search for. And I know without a doubt, Adrian is not lying. And Lily? Well, she’s worse than the Captain. One must have a soul in order to utilize it. Lily is and always has been morally bankrupt, to this day. Despite the lifestyle she shows her friends and family, one thing is undeniable, Adrian and I know the truth. I have my own experiences with Lily that we will get back to later.

 

They raised Adrian as if nothing had ever happened. As if he didn’t spend the last five years getting close to his grandmother, or the fact that he was now supposed to call the Captain, “Dad.” With no explanation. This didn’t sit right with Adrian. Neither did the Captain’s physical abuse that he privately reserved only for Adrian.

 

By high school, he got the full story. Finally, Lily stopped pretending that her husband was Adrian’s father. She admitted to Adrian that he was the product of an affair with a married man who wanted nothing to do with her or Adrian after she became pregnant. Confirmation only enraged him. He sprinted past the need for validation a long time ago and had comfortably arrived at revenge. And that is where he has stayed ever since high school. In a perpetual state of revenge.  He became an unstoppable force from that day forward. He started using and selling drugs, guns, and laying out his criminal future while simultaneously acing high school tests that he never studied for. His friends from high school were baffled by his ability to fly through homework or a test without ever putting any effort into it. He would later become highly skilled at building weapons and engineering chaos.

 

In the early 1970’s, Adrian was set to graduate high school. He didn’t work hard for it, or spend long hours studying. He was often accused by his classmates of never cracking a book open or giving any of it much thought. But he did meet a few friends and they did almost everything together. Good and bad. Adrian was unstoppable in all the best and worst ways.

 

As a child, I did not live with Adrian, I lived with his best friend. I was rarely seen, but when I was, the questions were always the same.

 

“Why isn’t she in school?”

Or,

“Isn’t that Adrian’s daughter?”

 

Anyone who knew my adopted parents also knew Adrian. And they always told wild stories that couldn’t be shared in mixed company. Adrian and my adopted father, Antonio, were friends from high school and criminal soulmates. They lived together, worked together, and tormented society, together. Until they didn’t.

 

I heard those questions so often that it was likely my first strewn together sentence. I did not talk until I was five-years-old. By then I seemed to have everyone pretty well figured out. Every person that went in and out of the house I grew up in, always asked, “isn’t that Adrian’s daughter?” And the response varied, depending on who was asking. I quickly learned that my presence wasn’t to be known to just anyone, and my origins were definitely a hot topic. I also quickly learned that no one around me was telling the truth about, well, anything.

 

I was well aware that the house I grew up in was not my home and that the people I lived with were not my family. This was merely a situation I found myself in, not an “adoption,” it resembled more of a botched drug deal and I had a strong feeling that something deeper, something more painful linked me to Adrian. He is a complex man and I was in fact his daughter. He had two children. Me, and my brother who is six years older. My brother has a different mother, the mysterious Lane, she hated puppies and babies. That was her only declaration after my brother was born. Given their mutual disinterest in having a child, after my brother was born they opted to read through classic car magazines to choose a name for my brother at random. “Ford 86 Black” is what they settled on.

 

Adrian might as well have been a shadowy figure from the past. His name being spoken out loud created mixed emotions, no matter who was present. The chaotic adventures of Adrian were always written on everyone’s faces. A range of Nostalgia, regret, paranoia, and fear was always simultaneously present. My own elusiveness seemed hereditary. I had very little regard for the people I lived with. And not knowing when Adrian might show up kept the past very much alive and most people on edge. Adrian was, above all, unpredictable.

 

Despite my disinterest in those around me, when I heard Adrian’s name, I always listened. Elusively, never letting them catch me paying attention. I was gathering data before I could count to 100. All the data would be stored for later use, when I was more financially stable than my four-year-old self. Mentioning his name did not clear a room, it created a stand still. A place in time that many thought they might not ever escape. Adrian was charming, and intelligent. He’s addicted to risk just as much as he’s addicted to drugs. But a highly intelligent man, nonetheless, and a very resourceful criminal.

 

He had opportunities. He didn’t want them. Adrian shifted through stints of professional life by route of the military, where he received a dishonorable discharge for pretending to be insane in order to get out; A fast tracked position on a commercial boat, where he started out as a foreman; and another piece of cake job at a steel mill, where he just didn’t give a damn and left. He is far more proud of his non-tax paying careers. The ones that never see the light of day on an online resume site.

Adrian had a lot of trauma that he didn’t seem to know what to do with. Paired with a chaotic chemical imbalance and a genius mind. His presence as a child was rarely known or validated, and he was on a marathon to make up for lost time as an adult. He would be seen, there was no doubt.

 

This seemed to be our link. Pain.

A shared interest in carving our own path after another storm of events always left the trail covered with rubble. A shared life of physical torture and abandonment. This seemed to be our legacy.

 

During one of Adrian’s unhinged but heroic moments, an associate of his stopped by his house and attempted to leave with my mother’s jewelry box. Not on Adrian’s watch. He calmly reached for his pistol and shot the jewelry box out of the man’s hand. He then sat his gun back down on the coffee table and proceeded to roll himself a joint.

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1. Unconditional Duality: A Mile High Overview https://elusiveenigma.com/2024/05/19/1-unconditional-duality-a-mile-high-overview/ Sun, 19 May 2024 05:13:07 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=1126 1. Unconditional Duality: A Mile High Overview Listen on Spotify or Youtube Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email This series is more than, “I’m still here,

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1. Unconditional Duality: A Mile High Overview

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This series is more than, “I’m still here, figuring it all out.”

Of course, I am. If I weren’t than this would be a submission  from beyond the grave and that would creep people out. Its more like, I’m finally here.

Not at a destination, rather a perspective of presence and acceptance. The ability to stand firmly while the wind blows in any direction it chooses without attempting to predict it’s path but a peace in its presence around me. Dictated not by the elements, but a perception of time, its passing and my presence in it.

I remember my introduction to understanding what a victim is. It began with Antoine Fisher during a time when I was personally at a crossroads of living out my best victimized life or taking a step towards autonomy. A book by Antoine Fisher helped me make that decision. I had never been to school and reading this type of book wasn’t my forte. It was a step in the direction of applying life saving efforts to my mental health and physical safety. Antione Fisher’s book recounted child abuse in a way that related and made me identify as a victim for the first time. It was perhaps the first account of my brain accepting that a victim can exhibit strength, rather than believing that my strength exempted me from being victimized and I was instead a willing participant in a difficult situation.

I knew it was time to breathe fresh air away from the chaos that held me prisoner inside a sinking ship. At the time, I was 12 years old with a kindergarten education and a fascination in theology. Who knew that these would be my greatest selling points, quite literally. It landed me in my next predicament, a cult. We’ll get into that eventually.

We are going into the trenches. My story isn’t about trauma erotica or naming names to avenge feelings that have no remedy. My journey was not an endeavor to write my abusers names on every bathroom stall. Seamless healing is what I sought and never found. Complex trauma requires an agreement between myself and the past, it’s an incurable illness and my longevity greatly depends on how I manage it. This story is for perspective. We won’t be closing our eyes and drifting off to childhood memories of summer air and recounting the day my best friend moved away. This story is different and so am I.

Childhood means different things to different people. It should never mean rekindling memories from beyond, as if they are trapped inside the mind of a corpse. I’m too far removed from my childhood for that. Thankfully a lot of time has passed.

If I were to close my eyes as memoirs so often begin, there’d be no drifting away to the sounds of drowning. It was chaos. That would be the memory. Unshakable chaos and daily uncertainty. Of which is apparently a breeding ground for a wild sense of humor and performative survival. And in that, one memory does float to the surface; praying for my mother. A face and voice I had no memory of at the time. Prayer was my only religion and an unexplainable pact existed between myself and God even though religion was not a celebrated topic in my adopted home.

I carried a photo of my brother in my pocket and a deep concern for my mother in my mind, I was six-years-old. Already a fugitive, or so it seemed, and long over due for an attitude adjustment. Quiet, calculated, and sarcastic. That’s what I remember.

There are things that make my story unique. Combining the details together can be like a flash mob of misery with good music. Secrets and uncertainty was the atmosphere in my adopted home. My adopted father was, at one time, best friends with my real father. I’m unsure if my adoption was intended to be a drug deal that resulted in bad communication but it’s too late to theorize. Bag and baby can sound similar on a 1980’s phone. My real father, Adrian, isn’t someone I was worried about. I had a far more unhealthy relationship with my real father than the worry I had for my mother. I admired my father. It’s like being the child of Al Capone. He is a bit of a local legend for all the wrong reasons. We’ll get to that eventually. Adrian has a certain style about him that produces wild memories that feel like fictional stories. He’s an enigma of his own that leaves a trail of chaotic lore and fear everywhere he goes. I admired him from afar and feared him from within. Encountering Adrian should have caused fear but I was more concerned about sharing his DNA and what that might mean for me and the possible trail I might leave behind in the future. Again, I was six-years-old and theorizing my probability of being a noticeable detriment to society.

Today I watch children with euphoria and perplexity as they move through the motions of childhood. It’s still foreign to watch them play and ignore the adults in the room. They have no need to hang on every word out of fear for their life. This isn’t a concept that I easily grasp.

Traveling back to the real beginning of this story would land us in Gary, Indiana. An abandoned city of wealth with a lot of history. So much history that I did not know until after I moved away that Michael Jackson’s childhood home is in Gary. We were plagued by other concerns. Adrian met my mom in Gary. After a stint in Texas she later returned when I was a few days old after a botched adoption plan. Living in my fathers stolen car and burglarizing his mothers basement wasn’t the life she hoped to return to. And we aren’t the type to lean on family in times of need, we know better. She tried and was turned away by her mother, a fierce and jaded Native American. The ultimate decision would be to leave me like they left baby Moses, but in a crack house instead of at the river in a basket. Not the most serene or picturesque setting to paint for Lifetime. This is more of a Showtime or Pay Per View tale.

The best friend of my father was also related to the not so lovely owner of the crack house and on the eve of social services firing up the wagons it seems I was “rescued” and later adopted before ending up in the care of the state. And then life seemed to be at a chaotic standstill for twelve years.

Twelve years. The standstill lasted twelve years. I relied on  the German grandmother of my adopted mother. I leaned into her grace, class, wisdom, and peace. Most of all, her story. Her strength is what people see when they ask how I am alive today. She passed away the year I turned twelve. At her funeral I quietly calculated in a sea of over 200 people, planning my next move as I felt the anchor rising out of the sea. Things became rapidly unsteady, she was gone. Not a single tear was shed because the clock was ticking. Opportunity begins to arise around 12-16-years-old. I wasn’t completely sure that I’d make the right choice given the urgency to make any choice.

By the end of fall a plan was hatched from a hijacked dial up connection on a dinosaur computer given to me by a waitress. I shutter to think of the illicit things that went down in ICQ chat rooms. Anyhow, this was prior to 9/11 and the security lockdown at airports globally. The wild west of travel when twelve-year-old fugitives could freely roam the country. I had a state ID and a backpack without explosives, that was all I needed to get over 900 miles away from the current threats I faced in my adopted parents home. This flight began my “after.” Everything human about my existence began on that flight. Well, With one detour, a cult.

The person I chatted with online allowed me to stay with them when I arrived in their state. After developing an interest in theology research, a common bond was found between myself and people on the internet in creepy chat rooms. The person I chatted with and later moved in with was a very active figure in a religious group that I’d soon learn a lot more about while traveling with her to evangelize and pose as the child she helped. That’s a difficult role to fulfill while also being her secret sexual partner. Her husband and children were unaware of the reality they also lived in. I think I was unaware of the complete reality for some time. This is a lot to unpack for a later time. I’m unsure what left me with more scars, criminal life or cult life.

Let’s go back for a moment. I would personally skewer any individual or media outlet who called a child’s abuser their “partner.” However, I just said exactly that. And it relates to my other prior statement of complex trauma being an incurable affliction. I still struggle with identifying as a victim. For many years this was all just a story. When I’d think of the work it’s taken to grow past the traumatic events I’ve witnessed, there weren’t emotions tied to that thought. Now when I think of the work it has taken I feel nauseous. The reality has finally set in. This wasn’t a crazy story, this was a brutal reality. The work put in comes with the loss of average experience. Taking pride in my early independence is now just a nauseating feeling of what if, what if it hadn’t been that way. I don’t theorize these questions very often. It’s better to stay focused on being present in the now, in the what is, not the what if. But when I do consider it, I’m no longer void of its impact. Yet I still struggle to identify as victimized at random times.

An opportunity became an escape when I accepted a job out of the state after turning eighteen. I was also on the cusp of completing the task I started after obtaining the dinosaur computer; finding my mom. Things were starting to even out into a less chaotic field of survival triggered mines. I’d soon find myself at an IHOP in Tennessee sitting across from the woman I was told was dead, my mom.

This began a new silent chaos that would not end until her actual death. There’s a journey in this that I plan to share for those who do not have a typical parent-child relationship. Death is hard, the death of an abusive, neglectful, or otherwise estranged parent is complex. nine months prior to my moms death things were going according to historical record and my mother was trying for a money grab on my recently deceased sister. I was angry in a way that I rarely succumb to and nine months later the anger had not subsided. Years of my adult life was dedicated to creating a family of sorts with my mom and siblings. They were all younger and scattered, it felt urgent to bring us all together before too much time passed. The plan to bring us together eventually faded when our mother refused to move forward with us. There were years of silence between us before the year of her death.

So much of this is distant from my life today. But important to share, not the gore but for the person who faces circumstances that most ignore. That’s not a slight, what do you do? It’s hard to know. But this is why it’s important that stories be shared with an emphasis on where we go from here. The after. Perhaps even a diagnosis of our own questions and why we ask them rather than an urgency on our answers being immediately provided. The impact of complex trauma comes with quite a story. And the best stories leave us changed in a way that benefits us all rather than further traumatizing and exploiting nauseating moments for monetary gain.

When I close my eyes, I drift away to now. The after. In Antione Fisher’s book the last chapter is essentially his childhood dream fulfilled. A peaceful home, pancakes on the weekends, and laughter.

None of us know where our story ends. But I could not be more thankful for where I am. For who I am. There were mountainous regions of territory covered to arrive here. Anyone can. That’s my story. With a storm of obstacles and no education, this is a story of hope and determination that anyone can achieve. I had no special skills aside from a willingness to upend the statistical outcomes in front of me. I did not achieve what I set out to when I left at 12-years-old, almost three decades later I’ve achieved what I was meant to.

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A Grievance Within A Grievance https://elusiveenigma.com/2023/12/05/a-grievance-within-a-grievance/ Tue, 05 Dec 2023 07:45:11 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=1036 A grievance within a grievance.. Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email My first memory of physically crying took place well into my thirties. I wore that

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A grievance within a grievance..

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My first memory of physically crying took place well into my thirties. I wore that fact like a badge of honor, although a falsely perceived sign of strength, I was proud of it and remained stone faced through many dark hours to maintain that front. Even recently when faced with loss and lost battles.

It took my mom dying to finally cry, although not immediately. I threw a solo celebration first. Because that’s what I always said I’d do. Even though I knew in that moment something changed my perception of life itself.

 

Two decades of battles were fought to control a narrative that was affecting six of my siblings. Taking the high road while remaining engaged should come with a warning: There are no gas stations for thousands of miles. What was it all for? She’s dead now and the dead seem to always make it to the hall of fame. Regardless of history. That’s not a shot at her, but at the perceived reality of it all. I wanted a sense of normalcy for them. That’s laughable when your mom has left kids all over the globe and they’ve grown up alone caring for their father with severe brain damage. Sure, let’s have elusions of normalcy.

 

This doesn’t scratch the surface of the illusions I tried to protect.

 

To overcome is to fail.

 

Not in the “try and try again” kind of way. Overcoming events that are out of our control is to also face the failure of our perceived reality. Dissociation is king in a chronically traumatic environment. It’s only natural that the perceived reality carrying us through events that our conscious would rather look away from, eventually they have to be cremated and shot into space.

 

I don’t know about you, but I fought hard for those perceived realities. They got me through some of the most difficult events I’ve ever faced. But they needed to be shot into space. Gone. No remnants left on earth for me to cling to. And that cuts deep. Defense mechanisms and survival mode thrive on the perceived reality we create. Healing slowly changes our perceived reality and our relationship with the wounds that created it. So, in a sense, healing is to overcome. And the overcoming of it all really makes one ask, what is it all for? To overcome is to also face the grievance of the grievance. The battles that protected a false perception or goal. The effort that went into protecting a false narrative, extending the wound even deeper while holding the same knife that the author of the lies once used against you.

 

This is probably not my most stunning piece of kindergarten self help literature. It is what it is.

 

Calmly laying underneath the layers of hope and strength is a disdain for a noticeable, engrained scar. An unwelcome change exerted over me, irreversible and uncontrollable, pivotal and seemingly unremarkable when sitting quietly alone. Time invested in a perceived goal that did not align with natural outcomes, but rather made the wound deeper. This is the reality of “healing”.

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Battle Owl https://elusiveenigma.com/2023/09/05/battle-owl/ Tue, 05 Sep 2023 14:36:10 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=973 Battle Owl Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email An owl in the distance and the battle at my spear, I stop and listen through the clashing,

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Battle Owl

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An owl in the distance and the battle at my spear,

I stop and listen through the clashing,

Yes, that’s the owl I hear.

He appears in times of loosening strength,

A battle owl in the distance,

Resistant to get closer but gawking at my composure.

A sarcastic owl knows no social cues, I hear him as I plot my next move.

Flying above me to encourage the clearing below me,

He hovers over me geographically across the land that inhabits me,

A protection I seek in humanity but I settle for a battle owl who distantly stands by me.

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I Remind Myself To Breathe https://elusiveenigma.com/2023/08/31/i-remind-myself-to-breathe/ Thu, 31 Aug 2023 02:35:19 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=945 I Remind Myself To Breathe Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email Intensity can be crafted into a fatal weapon,to commit a robbery of natural cause and

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I Remind Myself To Breathe

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Intensity can be crafted into a fatal weapon,
to commit a robbery of natural cause and organic methods.

Predatory intentions add pressure to the atmosphere.
Realism chaotically dances across the water with lies I hear.
I remind myself to breathe.

Their energy floating towards me instills a heightened fear.
Trapped under the guise of dependence and unreliable innocence,
I take account for what’s unclear.

Silent whispers under crashing sounds,
they’re going to rip the sky down.

I listen close to every sound and ill intended word,
my lungs feel heavy, so unsteady,
stuck here in this reminiscent sea.
I remind myself to breathe.

Softer souls do not calculate the violence,
they set sail bravely through the dark abyss like passing cargo ships.

Words of what I’m supposed to be. Lies that were told to me..
They feel less violent than the truth of my worth and autonomy.
I remind myself to breathe.

Suppression becomes the rendition of life I choose.
A transition inland amplifies things I’ll lose.
I keep a ship at bay, an illusion ill eventually cut through.
Shelter from the storm is gifted to me in cargo I cannot see,
camouflaged as air I cannot breathe. Resting on soil I cannot reach.

Knowledge casted over my mind, like the evening sun,
shortly blinding my view of the route I’m on.
It feels like the raging sea has finally won.
I’m happy to nap on this empty ship in an attempt to fake my way into a foreign bay.

As the moon brought darkness, I felt the calm sea settle the abyss.
The contrast, the absence of light, I’d forgotten all else, but I remember this.
Immersed in darkness, I abandoned ship.
I swam inland as I stripped my camouflage, exiled in isolation, I was blind to my resolve.
I remind myself to breathe.

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Myla https://elusiveenigma.com/2023/08/11/myla/ Fri, 11 Aug 2023 04:47:14 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=924 Myla Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email After a tragic month of brutally dark criminal cases, I received a call from Jessica. I didn’t know Jessica,

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Myla

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After a tragic month of brutally dark criminal cases, I received a call from Jessica. I didn’t know Jessica, but I rarely know anyone who calls for help, this is a normal occurrence. Jessica’s friend was missing and no one seemed to care, a police report was not filed at the time because Jessica and her friend were underage and very much on their own. On the call she said, “her name is Myla and if I don’t find her no one will.” I responded with the typical information gathering details, any comfort I could offer, and began a 4-month hunt that brought me to multiple cities, shallow graves, traffickers, suspicious gas stations, an amusement park, and then finally to Myla. Sometimes the “find” is not a celebratory event. “Found safe” is an odd phrase to use when we find people. We usually find them alive, but I struggle to utter the word “safe” while standing in front of a person that will carry indefinite scars from a harmful experience they had no control over. Myla was found with a trafficker in a basement of one of his family members. She had no ability to leave unless she could have managed to gain about 50 pounds in muscle mass. In the process of looking for someone I tend to learn a lot about that person, it’s important that I tune that out once we are face to face. I allow every victim and/or survivor to tell me who they are once they are found. After speaking to Myla I gave her my number and told her to call me if she needed anything or ever found herself in trouble. My last words to her that day ended with, “Big or small, just call me.”

 

The next day Myla called. She didn’t need anything, but her mother did. Some of her requests I could provide, but I couldn’t help her out with the illegal requests. She hung up on me and Myla later called to apologize for the phone call. I ended our conversation by telling Myla, “big or small, just call me.”

 

A week after being found, the trafficker who lured Myla was released from jail and abducted Myla from her mother’s apartment in an attempt to get Myla to recant her statement to police. I had no idea until I got a phone call that Myla was in critical condition from injuries she sustained during a car crash while being abducted. I had a planned flight out west the next morning and luckily it was only 30 minutes from the hospital she was in. My first words to her when I arrived were, “why didn’t you call me?” Myla said, “I didn’t want to bother you.” I immediately looked down and said, “I get it. But you have to. You need to get comfortable with someone being there for you or you’ll always feel like a ferel, six toed cat. Call me next time.” Myla replied, “I still feel so shaky and lost from the crash.”

 

This continued on for years. Myla’s scars often landed her in unfortunate company. Myla never called me during a bad event but always called me afterwards. And I always showed up because I understood that until you exit survival mode, life is a cluster of storms. And each one left shockwaves that could be felt for years. Even if it was after the event, I knew Myla still needed support. She likely also feared me seeing her bruised up or emotionally tattered since I knew the circle of people to hunt down in her honor. Myla was a friend who lost a lot of friends, mostly for her inability to love herself. She lost jobs by prioritizing others instead of her own needs. Survival mode was winning the fight against Myla for years. I had about ten more years of experience than Myla and even though I wasn’t mentally where I needed to be yet, constructive assistance and support was still very much present. Just as Myla was supportive to others in ways she was not for herself.

 

Years after my first encounter with Myla it seemed that things were changing. She moved and stayed in one place, had an apartment and a new puppy. She was on her own finally and handling life one day at a time, sober and present. Presence is the key. Presence for ourselves and for others. It teaches us about our own identity and allows us to embrace the identity of others. The one thing that abused children lack is identity and opportunity to be still with ourselves and others. I remained still with Myla through text and calls for years so that she understood I was willing to sit with her in the good and the bad moments. She knew at least one person would hunt down anyone who even tried her, but she also knew she had at least one person who was willing to sit in the dark with her and ease her toward the light rather than force an idea of false positivity. She needed to adjust her eyes to the darkness she found herself in before she could tolerate the light.

 

On a very odd morning I woke up around four in the morning to a bird on my window of the condo I was renting while out of town. I let the bird inside and it sat on the bed while I reviewed some documents. Once again, I was out of town but not far from Myla. By seven o’clock in the morning I got a call, it was Myla. When I answered she was frantic. I had no idea what happened and couldn’t understand her. I asked her, “are you home?” She responded after catching her breath, “yes. Come over.”

 

As I drove there I forgot which way to turn initially and as I started to pull over on the side of the road to double check, I saw the bird in my rear view mirror. It flew ahead of me and then flew to the right, I said, “whatever” and drove to the right. Myla’s apartment complex was on the right after I turned. As I parked my car I noticed Myla was outside. I ran over to her and she was shaking, crying, and completely lost. I said, “let’s go get you checked out and maybe some anxiety meds. I’ll go with you.” There was no way for me to know what had happened so I opted for the safe route in case she needed checked out. About two hours later we were sitting in an emergency room waiting for a doctor. I told Myla, “I’m glad you called me.” After some anxiety medication and 18 hours of sleep at home, Myla woke up a little calmer. I made her something to eat, she asked if I was sure I didn’t want anything from her while laughing. I knew it wasn’t a joke though. I assured her I did not want anything from her other than for her to eat and tell me what I could do to help. She started to talk about what happened and she began shaking again. I said, “just eat. We will talk after.” We left and went for a walk after she ate and as we walked past the parking lot she became extremely nervous until we got down to a local park. Myla stopped walking and turned to look at me, hugged me, and said, “I stood up for myself. I couldn’t stop shaking. It was the scariest thing I’ve ever done.”

 

Myla felt the same way after the car crash when she was abducted. The physical reminders of the crash are still with her today. Trauma causes the same impact on emotional and physical health. Trauma is like a high impact crash on our nervous system and the shockwaves are felt for years after. At times even limiting our abilities unless we become our own physical therapist, mentally, to work through the aftermath of a high impact crash. And when those crashes are repetitive, the damage takes even longer to work through. Myla’s body reacted the same way as someone does when they first begin physical therapy after a high impact crash that left physical damage. Her body felt tired, shaky, unstable, and lost. Prioritizing ourselves can leave us in another reality that we are unfamiliar with. Initially it feels like being blind and stuck in a cage with braille lettering on the bars with the code to get out. Over time it starts to feel like home, over a lot of time. Myla had only intended to financially survive enough to appear to have normalcy. Her unwavering bravery to tackle her own reality gave her so much more out of life and still is. She is a confident, overwhelmingly successful individual and most people who know her now would be shocked to know that this is her story. And deep down, every time Myla stands up for herself she still feels slightly unsteady. This is why healing is rare. It’s hard, it’s ugly, it’s a funeral and celebration. It’s overwhelming. I am learning more from Myla now than I ever have before. I have ten years of experience ahead of her and I still get shaky.

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Getting Out https://elusiveenigma.com/2023/08/04/getting-out/ Fri, 04 Aug 2023 13:34:52 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=897 Getting Out Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email There always comes a time to “get out” of a place or a perception. A right of passage

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Getting Out

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There always comes a time to “get out” of a place or a perception. A right of passage to either accountability or technicality. Blaming the technicalities that gave us the places and perceptions that we adapted to will never lead to true passage into another reality. A better, valid reality. The lies that abused children are told later become truths, from our perception, embedded into our nervous system. Every person who majorly affected me in a negative way as a child had a mentality of blame and avoidance, and still does. The full extent of the truth was always off limits. Distracting from the full truth in any situation creates complacency of the lies and manipulation. It makes a home for more manipulation even into our adult years, sometimes without even realizing it at the time.

 

I conquered getting out of a place before I could get out of the perception it gave me. Actually, two places. A violent home and a violent city. There’s your local “hood,” and then there’s “the hood.” Our hood was top in it’s class nationally for theft, gun violence, trafficking and murder. The city I grew up in was featured on news specials as being the most murder-y city in the nation. When people get famous and say that they never thought they’d get out, they mean it. I was clueless if, or what, my future would be. But “getting out” was a priority, maybe the only priority. The city was gloomy even on a sunny day. Reminders were on every street of the decay and abandonment. Every few habitable houses were matched by a few burned down houses with the frames still standing, scorched and taken over by gangs, thieves, or murderers. It’s hard to imagine anything different when you are surrounded by decay and abandonment. It becomes your world view until you get a better glimpse of what else is out there, but as a child it was hard to imagine things I’d never seen such as neighborhoods of community and accountability. Bodies were just left in vacant homes and no one bothered to investigate crimes that affected what they considered the “class of people” living there. It’s hard to imagine a world where the little things in life matter, especially when the big things like human life is treated as trash. Businesses had mostly left town. Criminals thrived in the collapse of a once saturated economy that had become a point of interest nationally for its job market. My adopted German great-grandmother did not give a damn about the change of scenery that left most people fearful and uncertain, she was no stranger to survival. Moving was not an option. This all seems like a distant yet haunting past in the rear view, luckily there’s also a front windshield.

 

The last two years brought an unfamiliar tide. As if I’d spent my life on the beach and I just witnessed my first tsunami. This tide is ..different. But it’s a lot like “getting out.” And that takes time, preparation, and a bare minimum plan. Getting out physically or getting out mentally is celebrated like a rare party because it is in fact rare. Those who do get out find themselves recommitting to their own goal for the rest of their lives. The mentality of decay and abandonment became my factory settings, without daily customizing the way I function, that is my default. And that never fully goes away. It takes true commitment to no longer reside in the abandoned homes we were raised in, mentally. There is no blueprint to truly and fully “get out” of where we are or why we are. The determination to get out can move mountains that are not even within the parameters of our “plan.” It’s important to stay flexible with a plan while being rigid with determination for the goal. The plan is not the goal. More importantly, the plan will never go as planned. Remain committed, reassess as many times as needed. Just don’t give up.

 

The experience and the memories I have of childhood is a very distant past and something I did not exactly dwell on until the last two years when a sudden tsunami brought in a new tide. Not like this at least. I’ve always known just how rare my situation is, while also being more common than the general public is aware of. When I think of being a child there’s one specific memory that always has been very clear, as if it just happened. All other memories from back then are in the peripheral view of this one exact moment. The worst memories are not attached to physical abuse, instead, the mental and emotional abuse left more vivid reminders. I’ve always viewed this memory as a third party. Not as myself or as my adopted mother, but as someone looking in and observing.

 

My adopted mother found out that a few people were encouraging me to ask her if I could go to school. This was a problem for reasons they had no ability to fathom, but I went through a short phase of briefly entertaining these ideas. Until she found out. The people who “leaked the information” did not understand the gravity of our life or the insanity of my adopted mother. They were her own friends, but from the outside world she wasn’t seen as the person her immediate family experienced. She backed me into a corner of her living room when she found out, with her face an inch from mine, sporting the “I’m going to dismember you” look. I had a feeling she found out and I remained silent unless cued to agree with a “yes.” Because in deranged households children must respond with a “yes” or “else.” She began listing the reasons why I was not allowed to go to school, in the most chaotic and rage filled voice and expressions. I assumed this was it, this is where my life ends. She started with the “fact” that she was protecting me from myself due to my own incompetence to learn. The embarrassment would be more than I could take, according to her. She listed each reason like she had a checklist bookmarked in her brain, and she did. Each reason was more gutting than the next. This wasn’t the first time I’d heard her say these things, but it was the first time she did it and I truly feared she’d kill me. The violent rage in her voice left me hanging on every word and inflection of that word in case I needed to run for my life. The possible need to run for my life crossed my mind daily. I knew her anger would be uncontrollable. I dwelled on those words for a long time and it is still my most present memory of being a child. She looked like she was going to kill me and in ways she did, those words played out in my life for decades. Parts of me spent years trying to determine if I was unable to learn, all while learning a multitude of technical skills and clearly having a grasp on how to reason with even my own situation. Conditioning before the age of 12-years-old is most definitely an attempt on a child’s life and future.

 

Until two years ago I tuned this out as much as possible. Then my biological mom died and seemingly changed my life in ways a mother typically affects their children in life, but in death she taught me how to live again. Now? I have sat with it. Felt it’s sting. And grieved it’s influence on my life. It’ll never go away, but I’ve come so much farther than just “getting out.” I’ll dwell on that also.

 

Growing up in a hypercritical environment will often make a person hypercritical of themself. This works well for social and professional self improvement but not so much for personal growth and healthy perspectives. Healing takes time and it takes phases. I love and hate this phase. It’s a personal wealth and a disturbing confirmation that it wasn’t all a wild tale. That was reality. And it impacted every step I took thereafter. It’s difficult for an independent person to accept that another human changed their life. Setbacks require renewed commitment to the goal of getting out and staying out. Physically and mentally. Of all the places our past would prefer to take us, we have to continually reassess and renew where we actually want to go in life, even down to the most basic things that the average person does on a daily basis.

 

Realizing the need to loosen my grip on my own existence was pivotal while also being too late. There is a physical price for early childhood trauma. Severe trauma can cause health conditions that are difficult to diagnose, treat, or manage. And if it is left untreated, it can turn into even worse illnesses that again threaten the longevity of life itself. Enduring abuse leaves wounds and scars throughout our body and brain by holding on to dysfunction, perceived as normalcy, we tightly hold on to what is not meant to be. Muscles tire and strain, the body becomes increasingly riddled with physical signs of exhaustion. The sooner we accept that “this happened” in our own life, whatever the events were that affected you, the sooner we can loosen our grip on our self worth, physical health, emotional safety, and willingness to lean in to the things that are meant for us and, overall, the truth of who we are. Being hypercritical of all the wrong things can inherently teach us to be self critical of all the wrong things as well.

 

Pleasantries, rehearsed conversations, and monotony is not something I typically enjoy. But, where is the surface? People say they like to “go beyond the surface,” but that can also be a statement of manipulation for someone who might not have your best interest in mind. I believe a hard lesson taught me that the “surface” is a matter of perception, self reflection, emotional intelligence and personal interest. Generalized statements should never be trusted, instead it’s better to observe a persons behavior to know what they are really interested in. I’ve learned that cliché statements mean nothing and everything, all at the same time. Strength and bravery is a choice, not a birthright or a persona, nor is it a conclusion. Being present with ourselves and others is the only healer for abandonment. Genuine presence that does not just feel like you are filling a time gap. The small things actually matter. I had a future whether I accepted that or not. It’s ok to not know if what I’m doing will get me where we want it to, but it’s vital to keep doing it. And survival is meant to be lived in a moment, not a multi-decade marathon. The fact that these principles are subconsciously engrained in some, and completely lost in others.. it’s maddening. To miss out on being present for such basic life concepts is a disservice in and of itself. So we wait; we learn the hard way; we become rigid from years of coerced flexibility and, at times, we overestimate our own perceived control of life events. Over analyzing and denying ourselves presence, over and over. We wait for a return to unguarded flexibility that should have been experienced in childhood. A looser grip on the little things and a tighter hold on ourselves.

 

A lack of flexibility when handling myself certainly compromised a lot overtime, mostly my health. This is why I do not just move on after a missing person is found. It’s important to continue on to true help, in any way possible. To lessen the years someone spends in survival is equal to lengthening their life. At times, a trip to the doctor feels like a visit to my lawyer. Explaining the details of how I obtained concussions that started at 3 months old; how I encountered certain injuries that appear to have left many scars neurologically; or why I have signs of prior malnutrition is a never ending reminder of where I came from and why I had to “get out.” I’m still “getting out” daily, mentally. I always will be, after spending 28 years “getting out” in layers of years; moments; lessons; and realizations about myself and others. That’s the beauty of flexibility. It allows me to face the person in the mirror that I’d sometimes rather punch. I can look at her and know that while I’m not experiencing life as many do, overall, I have cleared a path in a once dark and untenable forest. There’s life there now, dwelling amongst the simplest of nature’s offerings. There’s reasons to relax, to loosen my grip and just be. That was never the goal and I could have arrived here much sooner had I realized how rigid survival made me handle myself. While giving others compassion and presence, I now give myself that as well. People considered me a “saint” for my ability to abandon myself and be present for others in ways no one else would. I am not a saint, I was conditioned to do exactly that and I will never stop. Being present for those society leaves behind is my favorite part of my life. And with small but continually steps, I also show up for myself in the same ways now. It took time to get here but this mountain is worth climbing, some of the most beautiful views can only be seen from the mountain top.

 

Child Abuse is Attempted Murder

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The Rescue https://elusiveenigma.com/2023/03/16/the-rescue/ Thu, 16 Mar 2023 04:19:24 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=792 The Rescue Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email A passion for change is often ignited by the anger of conformity. A successful change is often driven

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The Rescue

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A passion for change is often ignited by the anger of conformity. A successful change is often driven by consistency and patience.

Many victims and survivors of familial abuse and trafficking fall into a grey area, a loophole, where technical “legal” trafficking cannot be applied for lack of evidence or motive. In these situations, the options and resources are uniquely disadvantaged for both economic and psychological recovery. True recovery. Healthy recovery. Given that a vast percentage of human trafficking is familial and rooted in control of another human, the damage is far reaching within our economy and individual identity. Trafficking and religious abuse pours over on to every aspect of our society, with or without our realizing. Restoration of an individual’s identity is a mountain that every survivor will climb with every breath, a gifted life sentence from their abuser. This is when you need a gaggle moral renegades. A faction of society that loathes human interaction and injustices enough to become the quiet hunters and helpers within this hellscape. People who can think within the law but way outside of the confines of existing resources and common practices. This is no landscape for institutionalized thought processes. In this this particular atmosphere, passion drives justice and  ingenuity becomes life saving.

A moral renegade is typically crafted through experience as a survivor and relentless accountability to the truth. An unspoken pact with the most granular concepts of life and morality. It takes a leap of fate to accomplish this task. When you are taught and conditioned that your very survival depends on your own demise, it is a heroic leap of fate to fight back against that idea and follow the path our moral center pulls our conscious toward. The process of shedding these concepts can result in complete loss of community, friends, family, employment.. Abandoning the concepts that do not serve us include leaving the people who engrained those concepts into our moral identity and isolated us within them. Ultimately, healing can initially dismantle a survivors life. That is why assistance and resources are vital to help survivors rebuild every aspect of their life.

Have you ever noticed how we physically and psychologically respond to a tragic event? Or how time chaotically hits the brakes as a flood of circumstance and emotion form a category five tornado around our nervous system? It’s always easier to reflect after the storm, in an attempt to respond more intelligently to future sudden changes in our atmosphere. It’s hard to even know how much time truly passed in that moment, until we look back. The intensity of one strong storm system can damage everything in its path, but a cluster of tornadoes in the sky can feel like one continuous storm on the ground. A cluster of continuous tragedy leaves us longing for the calm we felt before the storm, if we had the pleasure of being born under sunny skies. But many of us were born in the midst of destructive winds and heavy clouds, sunny skies were replaced with high pressure systems long before our inception. True healing requires survivors of generational abuse to experience calm as we reflect on the storm, and of all the wild tales we could tell, that is truly the wildest one I have lived yet. Calm is not only foreign but debilitating until we truly become acquainted with it. We must experience the warmth of the sun or we are blind to the chaos of the storm and embedded in its destructive winds, carrying us from one cluster to the next until we are rescued and regenerated by the sun.

The difference between PTSD and cPTSD is one tragic event versus multiple tragic events that create long term stress within our memories and nervous system. This stress is embodied in our heart rate, nervous system, memories, and overall decision making. Changing the entire landscape of our mind and body to prioritize stressors over emotionally healthy autonomy and delivering us wholly into the company of those who have no interest in our well being.

Over 27 years ago I began unpacking my own experiences with predators and then immediately reached back in to assist vulnerable individuals who were trapped in abusive behavioral patterns due to their own generational trauma that affirmed this behavior as “normal” from infancy. Predator behavior, human trafficking, child abuse, and many other heinous offenses against humanity are all rooted in one common desire: control of another person. I want to begin telling you about “The Rescue” from the point when I met the person who trafficked me over two decades ago. My story explains the length of time and the overall details of how I made my rounds from runaway to trafficking survivor and why this rescue closed the loop on my own story just as much as it did for the survivor’s who bravely walked away from the only life they knew and invested in the hope of a life outside of the emotional confines and physical limitations of generational trauma.

Religious abuse is not more or less heinous than “secular” abuse. It is simply different. It escalates control by using a person’s faith and their perceived eternal future against them in order to obtain what the predator wants from that individual. Some people call these personalities “abusers,” I call them all predators. It creates complete confusion for an individual to obscure facts with actions that they themselves claim to not condone. Religious leaders are often in direct contact with vulnerable members of the community who have already suffered generational abuse, which creates an ideal landscape for exploitation. I did not grow up around religious individuals, but the abusive tactics commonly found within religious abuse resonated with principles I was used to. Hypervigilance, stolen identity, low self confidence, physical abuse, and  All of society is a target for a predator hiding behind religious talking points. 

From a survivor of this story:
“To call this “story” a “rescue” is not a dramatics. Our reality is what was rescued. And that also resulted in freedom and peace. When reality was less clear, Rona calmly repeated, “Peace of mind, body and soul can only be imagined until the magnitude of it is felt.” I heard this over and over for years. I understood the concept, but now we feel it.

In the mid-nineties I was an awkward 12-year-old on a mission for freedom from an impossible situation. That in itself is a statement that I did not realize at the time. I’ve been told that 12 is a bit young to be traveling around the country unattended. After honing in on the skills I would need to survive outside of “survival,” the time would eventually arrive when I would have to actually leave and I had no clue what that might look like. My existence inside my adopted parents home, I now realize, was rather unimaginable to the average brain with a moral temperature gauge. Due to a sudden change in circumstances, I was allowed to begin working outside of my adopted parents home the year I turned 12-years-old and a neighbor offered me a job at a restaurant two towns away from where my adopted parents lived. I knew at the time I needed more money in order to leave.

Prior to getting the job at a restaurant, I was given one other consistent freedom to go out every Saturday to a local Christian group that I became acquainted with over time. I attended the group alone and quickly became a known, awkward focus within the organization across several states. Many in the group claimed to have gained insight from my observations of spirituality and theology. I assumed they were trying to be nice to the kindergarten graduate. I did not assume they were being genuine. My lack of self confidence at the time was no match for those I would meet later on, who were not genuine and tried to exploit my ideas, thoughts, insights, and identity for their own self gratification. Initially everyone I met locally was very kind and genuine. This atmosphere was completely foreign to me. My quest to define my spirituality started very young and was an independent endeavor. My biological and adopted families are not spiritual or religious people, this chapter began independently while I still lived with my adopted parents.

The neighbor who offered me a job, Becca, was in her mid-thirties with 4 kids. She worked nights and offered to take me to work with her. Becca’s aunt, Sara, was the manager of the restaurant that Becca worked at. Sara treated me exceptionally well. Or so I thought at the time. We often stopped at Sara’s house on the way home from work. She is indigenous and her house was filled with handmade native art. Sara often looked at me as if I were a unique item at a flea market. Becca regularly told my adopted mom that I got off work later than I actually did. She would take me to Sara’s house after work until I obliged her offers for drinks and weed. I was often black out drunk and high in their living room late at night or at the bar inside the restaurant. I have no recollection of what happened on any of those occasions, but I do remember Becca giving me a computer one night. I went home that night and crafted a desk out of plastic containers after consulting Edwin, my favorite conspiracy theorist, and then immediately tapped into the first dial-up connection I could find and began looking up an encyclopedia of information.

I loaded the browser and began typing in my real mother’s name. That was really the purpose for everything I did. It was all to find her and to know if she was ok, if she had healed and moved forward. Looking for her became exhausting. She had one of the most common names documented in America. So I took breaks in the only way I know how to take a break, by deep diving into something else. I joined multiple forums and chat rooms that discussed search and rescue, forensics, naturopathic medicine, graphic design, photography, academic subjects, and theology. Some of the conversations I am going to share are from a theology chat room. This story spans 27 years, but it began at this moment. Right after connecting my first computer. At the time, I was scared. I didn’t know what I was going to do. But I knew I could not endure the circumstances I was living in. Anything I faced would be equal or better. I had very little ability to fathom my life ever being worse and it really wasn’t. The horrors I lived through after leaving my adopted parents home were not enjoyable but none of them came close to what I lived through in their home. I am completely void of the feeling of being “homesick.” Once I left, I never missed the family I grew up with or any of the associated memories. Even at the worst of times, I’ve maintained confidence that I made the right choice.

I entered a chat room where I joined a conversation about theology and a user began berating my input. I ignored the interaction after realizing they were not looking for communication, only confrontation. Shortly after, I received this private message from a user in the chat room:

Chmpty: He’s a Davidian
EE: What?
Chmpty: The person that was speaking to you is a Davidian, they are aggressive. Be careful.
EE: Thank you.
Chmpty: are you a member?
EE: No. I do not agree with all the beliefs or “prophets.”
Chmpty: you are free to ask me any questions.
EE: I observe more than I ask. 
Chmpty: You have a different insight. I’m anxious to hear more.
EE: Thank you. I will come back when I have time.
Chmpty: Great.

The message above was the first of many conversations between myself and a user by the name “Chmpty.” I soon began receiving messages from a few other accounts as well who claimed to be interested in my theories, notes and opinions. Most of the users were from Christian groups who primarily keep the sabbath, among other slight differences from average Protestant organizations. Keeping the sabbath meant something slightly different to each group. Some groups were very rigid about “what is allowed on the sabbath.” But overall, it is meant to be a day of rest. Chmpty continued to message me and we started to become distant friends.

Chmpty: How are you?
EE: I’m good. How are you?
Chmpty: You were gone for a long time.
Chmpty: Were you able to get out for the Sabbath?
EE: I’ve been working.
Chmpty: You are too young to work. How are you working? Family business?
EE: No. Restaurant.
Chmpty: I sent you a digital copy of ______. I hope you will review it. I know you do not agree with the entirety but there are many good lessons in it.
EE: I did not read it because it’s false.
Chmpty: Why are you online during school hours?
EE: I don’t go to school. I work.
Chmpty: Homeschooled?
EE: No. I don’t go to school. I never have.
Chmpty: There are people here who could help you study. If you’d like to finish your education.
EE: The last time I attended school was in kindergarten. You cannot finish what you never started. I appreciate the offers. I think it would be better if I get my GED first and then leave.
Chmpty: Do you need anything? How can I help you leave? It doesn’t sound like a good place. Do people know you are not in school?
EE: No. People think I am being sent to a private school. She has friends at the school and she sent her kids there.
Chmpty: Would you be willing to go to _____ _______ ?
EE: I can’t do that. I need to work, I don’t have the ability to stay on campus or afford the program. I have no education and likely would not pass the entrance test.
Chmpty: I don’t believe that. You have to believe you would pass. You are smart.
EE: I believe in reality.
Chmpty: You can obviously read and write. Who taught you that?
EE: I learned mostly by myself and my grandmother helped when I had questions about pronunciation or writing.
Chmpty: Can you get out alone?
EE: Sometimes. Never guaranteed. But more since my Gram passed. She can’t hide me at Gram’s now when she wants to leave for longer periods.
Chmpty: Has ____ returned?
EE: Yes. And he’s taking me to Ohio this weekend. By himself. He told her that the he’s also taking the girls but he’s not. It’s just me. He told me on the phone. There is no escaping that. She told him 3 days. I should be back Tuesday.
Chmpty: I will leave something in your name at this address.
Chmpty:
Go there and let me know when you have picked it up. I will have time to talk all day tomorrow if you can get out. I’m free all week. 
EE: What?

Over time, Chmpty became a dangerous presence, in my opinion. Her intent and her growing knowledge of my actual situation could either be detrimental or a miracle. But her being a threat to me personally never crossed my mind. I was more concerned with her knowledge causing further harm if she tried to report my adopted parents. Chmpty is the first person I was ever honest with about my circumstances. Long passed were the days of my obsession with legal and medical textbooks. I knew there was not enough hard evidence of any of their crimes to bring justice, interfering would only bring more chaos.

EE: I went to the address and picked it up. Do you have time to talk?
Chmpty: I’m in Belgium for two weeks. I will get back to you.

Chmpty’s presence was fairly consistent but her whereabouts were always questionable. Spontaneous trips would often arise with the reasoning being that she was traveling to various Christian groups or helping someone in need. She had a known and respected presence within many groups all over the country. Over time she traveled the world and worked for some well known Christian public figures.

Chmpty sent me $400 and eventually explained that it was to help me with the expense it would take to leave my adopted parents house. I combined it with the money I saved over time and put it away. I intended to return the money once I was gone and could freely track the user down.

Chmpty: Are you still awake? I’m worried about you. I saw you were posting your notes earlier today. I would save that for after you leave. What if your family catches that?
EE: They don’t use the internet and likely would not care.
Chmpty: You never know who might see it. I just want you to be safe from any harassment. Do you mind sharing the rest of your notes with me in an email?
EE: I can tomorrow.
Chmpty: Are you doing ok?
EE: Yeah. Just a lot going on.
Chmpty: I’m listening.
EE: I’ll be back in a few days. My head hurts and I cannot look at the screen for very long.
Chmpty: I’m praying for you. You have to leave immediately. I’ll come and pick you up if you agree to it. Or take a bus to _____. You know we would treat you well. We just want what is best for you and being there will kill you eventually. She is not going to stop until it is too late.
EE: I’m ok, just tired. Take care.
Chmpty: Let me know how you are as soon as you can.
Chmpty: Are you ok?
EE: I’m ok. Feeling better. But there was a huge fight over _____ poisoning me and gram. My sister punched osama bin mamma and she’s been missing since. My brother is in county lockup and someone is looking for him. I have to leave soon. If you don’t hear from me I will be back after I’m settled. I found out things that changed my mind. I’m leaving sooner than I thought.
Chmpty: Where are you going?
Chmpty: please keep in touch. You are a blessing to us all. Keep the promises and seals close. You’ll know where to find us. Always in the light. Leaving my computer on.

That same week my adopted sister returned. One of the reasons I’d never fully committed to leaving my adopted parents home was because my adopted mother had cancer and every year that she made it was an alleged miracle. She battled each day, or appeared to. When my sister returned, the truth about my adopted mother’s poorly stitched lies began to unravel. My adopted sister told me that my adopted mother did not have cancer and that her last doctor visit was 15 years prior. The entire story was false. And I was livid. Everyone was well aware of the false story but chose to go along with it. Everyone. Each suspicious idea that came to mind about my situation was verified at that moment and my reality was no longer a theatrical presentation for my adopted mother’s entertainment. The pure agony that she inflicted on others just to feel something could no longer reach my empathetic pathways. At the time, my adopted siblings and I were financially supporting the household after an embezzlement scheme ended my adopted father’s 26 year employment at a large corporation. Immediate razor wire was installed around the borders of my existence once I knew I was lied to. Even though I was well aware that my adopted mother frequently lied. Typically, logic tells us not to trust a known liar. But what if that person embeds you into their lies and conditions you to protect the lies? Well, that creates a very different landscape where logic ceases to exist purely for survival. I affirmed at that moment that I was not “delayed,” and that keeping me locked away from education and society was to protect her own sins, not to protect my self image, as my adopted mother claimed. That moment provided a view that is typically only seen from mountain tops. It was suddenly realized that I most certainly had the upper hand. Control is more effective if no one is battling for it, and I suddenly realized they were not war heroes. Many things in my mind from domestic abuse to rape instantly became clear and I could finally feel the keys to freedom that were always in my hands. These were no longer curiosities or suspicions but rather confirmed facts in my mind. 

It wasn’t long before I was ready, with a backpack and my computer, to exit the premises for good. The money I saved was gone. It vanished. I assume my adopted mother found it. I used the tips I made that week at the restaurant to leave. I had exactly $172.16 and no one could stop me, the only difference was that I now realized that. With or without the proper resources, I was determined at this point to leave immediately. Anyone who has hidden and abused a child is not going to file a missing person report or try to draw too much attention to their child’s absence. Getting that child to recognize that they are abused is a completely different battle. I knew the lack of control would become too much and the games would ensue. I was 12-years-old and facing six years of impending hell to endure if I didn’t play my cards right and stay hidden from their reach until I turned 18-years-old. I used their temporary shock to get as far away as possible.

EE: I’m in _____
Chmpty: I’m so glad to hear from you!!! I’ve been checking daily. 
EE: I have a place to stay. Got a job right away. I’ve been here a few weeks. Just finished setting everything up. No car yet. A little numb.
Chmpty: Will you need protection? Are you staying alone?
EE: I’ll be ok. No one knows where I am for now.
Chmpty: Are you close to us? In the same state at least?

My actual location remained a mystery for quite a while, but eventually my safety was compromised and guess who was standing by waiting to lend a hand? Yes, Chmpty. I met with Chmpty and also met her husband and children. They were young at the time. Her youngest daughter was 4-years-old. Chmpty was 20 years older than me. I met her group several times prior to allowing her to help me leave where I was living at the time.

Once Chmpty had me alone in her home, it immediately felt like she had been waiting for this moment. I knew very quickly that I made the wrong choice. Even though at the time, there didn’t appear to be many choices. She began making sexual advances towards me in a ploy to make it appear to be a mutual relationship. I was still a minor child on the run at the time and she was happy to hide me out. An overwhelming effort went into making me comfortable.  Chmpty often tried to reassure me of my strengths, offer positive words, or give me gifts and money. All while rooting the positive words and encouragement in statements that made my worth embedded in my faith and my attachment to her group, of which she would then use against me to also create fear and dependence. When I lived with Chmpty, she became a completely different person than the individual I spoke to online for over a year. Her messages always became more consistent when other users in the chat were speaking with me more. She regularly appeared jealous of anyone else interacting with me. But these are not behaviors I recognized at the time. She messaged a variety of “love bombing” messages on a regular basis..

By the time Chmpty began making her real intentions clear, I was already highly confused. After 12 years of hell and escaping spur of the moment, and then trying to hide, it had taken a toll and there was very little energy left to sort out this new chapter of confusion I was presented with. Chmpty did not relent in her pursuit to make me her traveling lesbian child bride, while also staunchly opposing homosexuality. She loved to travel to different sabbath keeping groups and use me as a pawn for both her ego and self gratification. To her peers, she was doing the most by rescuing an abused child. No one knew the reality of her predatory nature, at least not within the group she was a member of. Even still, my subconscious thinks about the money and gifts and wants to repay it all. That’s how this works. The situation ends, the lasting psychological effects live on. Child abuse, psychological abuse, sexual abuse.. It’s all lined with a lasting change to your identity that every survivor has to battle daily to regain. I did repay some of it when I was younger, before I decided that my identity and her freedom was payment enough.

Several other groups attempted to make contact with me in a variety of odd ways after I ran away. Some of them were more persistent than others. All of them lived “off the grid” on rural properties, some with no addresses. They lived off the land, mostly in campers and tents. Many of the groups try to avoid using social security numbers or any forms of official identification. I started to become concerned with being kidnapped by one of the groups but I was hesitant to remove myself for many reasons. The larger threat was being found by my family, and these folks did have a practically untraceable lifestyle.

Chmpty took me to California for a religious conference that was being hosted at a resort in the mountains. People often traveled from all over, even internationally, to attend these conferences. I met a man there that people called “Job.” Everyone claimed he was a kind and compassionate individual who was quiet but highly intelligent. Many people seemed captivated by his presence. We were at a religious conference and people seemed hopeful that Job would chat or host a group discussion with a small group of us, but I was not open to the idea. Halfway through the conference I was having a nightly chat with a conference leader from Yugoslavia when a thin man, with a long beard and glasses approached us. He was introduced as “Job,” he had spotted us and joined our conversation. Job could sense I was not as pliable as he hoped. I was not receptive to his opinions or beliefs. I’m not sure what time our conversation ended that night, but I’ll never forget waking up in Northern California with an entirely different group the next day. I had no idea where I was or what happened. A child was with us the night before and she was very sick. I had no phone or any way to contact anyone. After quietly searching the entire farm where I woke up, I realized the child, Aster, was also gone. This was a huge problem. Within their groups, medical issues were handled independently through natural remedies rather than doctors and modern science. Seasonal allergies to cancer. It was all treated with a strict raw vegan diet, herbs, and hydrotherapy. I knew if Aster was truly sick that she would be at risk. I wasn’t sure what might happen to her or where she was. I was looking after her at the conference and never got a clear explanation about who her parents were, but after spending days with me uninterrupted, I had a feeling Aster was on her own.

On the large Northern California farm there were a few other people I met but couldn’t be sure if they were there willingly, brainwashing can be difficult to immediately sort out. I continued observing until I could figure out what to do. The more I asked, the less I was able to be around other people. I was clearly there for one reason and I quickly had a feeling Chmpty was somehow involved. Job’s group was even more rigid in their practices than what I was used to. Overall, within these groups, a major emphasis is put on specific things. Health (diet,) apparel, behavior, and prophecy. They followed strict, mostly vegan diets. Apparel depended on the specific group, some were far more strict about “what is accepted.” A major emphasis was put on prophecy more so than the rest of the Bible, which builds an element of fear. And behavior is perhaps the biggest topic, given the vast amount of forbidden behaviors. Outside of the specific forbidden behaviors there was an overwhelming need for control of behavior, starting with their children. They found it to be imperative to control a child early on, before the child could be corrupted by their own “sinful will” and society. This often included tactics like refusing to comfort a child if they were upset, denying them education, emotional and physical abuse, conditioning a child to believe they are not deserving of anything, refusing medical treatment, insisting that everyone must ignore their feelings and emotions because “feelings cannot be trusted.” There was a high expectation to ignore “self.” Your feelings and emotions were labeled as an undeserving reflection of your own selfishness, the ultimate sin. This trains people to not reflect on their own emotions and in turn makes them reliant on the feelings and emotions of others, an ideal landscape for those looking to manipulate and take advantage of innocent bystanders for their own pleasure. The people who fell victim to this mentality are not the type of people you may think they are. Generational trauma can exhibit itself in a variety of ways and that does not speak to who we are as people at our core.

Chmpty’s presence in my life did not end in Northern California, or anytime soon after. She eventually appeared in Northern California and I did not question it at the time. I did go back home with Chmpty, several states away from where we were in California at the time. There were multiple attempts to leave without success. I was not a member of her group or interested in staying there after I turned 18-years-old, but her presence became a continuation of the mental conditioning I was used to in my adopted parents home. Human trafficking is ultimately about control and traffickers are not who you think they are. Most people think of dark, scary villains. The reality is that they are charming, manipulative, initially kind, observant, resourceful, but highly pathetic. Fighting against trafficking requires endurance, not a lack of fear. Survivors turned predator hunters have already been through the worst and know they can walk back into the fire with the realization that there is nothing to fear about pathetic individuals.

To someone who grew up without debilitating conditioning, these behaviors might be obvious to see as heinous. To me? At that time? It was just another chapter in a book that was methodically outlining generational cause and effect. And I knew all too well how to keep it moving. After living through a variety of trauma on fairly complex levels, denying myself basic rights was more comfortable than accepting my humanity. It made sense to the parts of me that endured an overwhelming loss of self, but I also knew that this was not my fate, to just accept this line of thinking as fact when it is obviously well marinated in coercive control. I never became a member of these groups, I was more so the random parentless child that just kept showing up. Small, “conservative” groups across the country naively let me into their inner circles, thinking I’d one day become a part of their twisted ideations. There were some amazing people in these groups that I will never regret meeting, most of them left about 10 years ago and went their separate ways. But Job managed to convince a few to stay, and he collected new members every so often.

The night before my mysterious respawn to Northern California was the last time I physically saw Aster. For several years the hunt for Aster felt silent. I mean that. You could feel the silence. I continued keeping in touch with people who left groups that were once in contact with Job’s group. Through that, I continually got closer, albeit far too slowly. Even the people who still were in contact with Job didn’t have any idea what his location was and he had no digital footprint. When social media became more common, a young woman reached out to me claiming to be a survivor of a group who was in contact with Job. “Hello, my name is Kayla. I’m from ______. Can we chat about something?” She agreed to meet with me and share her story as well as Job’s current location. We agreed to meet at a park in her local area. When she arrived, a flood of memories came with her. Everything in that moment made sense. I was anonymous to her until this moment. Kayla was one of the people who I regularly noticed showing up in the same places I was at, all over the country. And I could see the guilt seeping through her soul the moment she focused in on my face, she knew. She knew what she did to me and many others. I did not say a word about it. I had no need to. Kayla looked like she ignited into flames of overwhelming regret and appeared to want nothing more than to stop, drop, and roll out of that park. But she didn’t. She awaited whatever was coming to her in the name of making her wrongs right for other survivors. I let it go. I pretended to not know her, in an effort to let her meet me as she was in that moment, free from the control of others and her own mind.

I began tracking Job’s new residence and over time I found ways to get closer to people around him. Two people voluntarily embedded themselves within his group and we were able to assist several individuals in leaving. To my surprise, Job eventually evolved. He began using the World Wide Web and I found his activity on an online forum and a social media app. I knew the account I found was Job. I sent a short message from a fake account and I waited a whole 6 minutes before he responded,

Job: Hello. Do I know you?
EE:
I don’t think so. But I’m interested in purchasing vitamins.
Job: Great. How can I help you?

Job was selling vitamins online in mass under a newly rebranded image. Through this connection I was able to have someone meet with him for vitamins while another individual waited close by and  followed him home. Over the years, Job moved around and I lost track of him several times, usually after he lost more members the remaining group would move to a new area. Before this interaction I began to realize that either he had two locations, or Aster was no longer with us. The person who met him for vitamins was able to eventually follow him home to a new secondary address. Determination never waive red, I would find Aster even if she was no longer alive. Her ultimate fate would not slow my persistence to find her.

After reviewing the data I found associated with Job’s new address and image, I stared blankly at my computer screen, frozen in time. It’s difficult to process the trajectory of the hunted becoming the hunter. I looked up through my living room window and the sun was coming up over the mountains. I grabbed my keys, got in the car and headed to the kitchen an hour early to prepare for the weekend. Luckily there was work to pour every ounce of my nervous energy into. There was a mountain of tasks ahead of a weekend full of private events I was hired to cater. The buzzing of my phone in my pocket made it unbearable to stay focused. Without looking, I knew it was him. 

Years had passed and I was fully engaged in operation “give it all I got.” After I obtained Job’s new address, I set up multiple paths to the ultimate goal by setting up a vitamin pickup, engaging him from a burner account that appeared to be a runaway teen, recruited dedicated and educated spies to perform ops and plant seeds of deprogramming in their group. Over the years, a small dedicated team formed out of sheer passion to free Aster and many others. People who are now affectionately named Red, Macon, Dyno, Max, Alloy, and Sturgeon. Given the things we have accomplished, it is hard to call our team “small.” Together, we have created ripples in time that will be felt long after we are gone.

Job never directly manipulated me in the same ways he did to so many others. I only suffered being in his presence for a short time. But the fact that he had manipulated so many others was in itself a manipulation of my emotions and overall fear of what he might do. This was a man with no country. No laws. And given my own mysterious disappearance to Northern California and the sexual abuse I endured there, for years I harbored plenty of fear and reasons to not know what he was capable of. Still operating in partial survival mode, it would take time to see my former abusers as the weak individuals they were. I continued chatting with him while simultaneously embedding someone in their group who could quietly plant seeds of deprogramming, one by one, until we finally reached Aster. The day that Job’s secretary left the compound was a monumental moment in the span of this hunt. She is the only person who had access to Aster in recent years and knew of her current condition. We spent eleven hours on the phone recounting her experience and Aster’s reality. I held back a range of feelings as she began to tell me the details of what they endured and what was currently happening to Aster. She began to tell me about psychological conditioning that worsened over time. The tactics were always laced with misplaced biblical quotes or spiritual anecdotes. Their connection to society diminished as control increased. And Aster, well, she became Job’s wife. Hidden at Job’s private property with nothing but a outdoor shed. No bathroom, electricity, water, and many times no food. Job was a terrible gardener and his group suffered the consequences. The immediate remedy to that situation at the time, several years ago, was to infiltrate their group with an incredible spy gardener. To both feed and free the people.

His secretary shared her own statement of this experience:
“Job took me in from a horrifying family life. I was young and became reliant on him. He made sure I was safe, loved, comfortable, and well taken care of, in the beginning. Job began to believe he was not a prophet, but an entirely new important figure to the future. I think he lost sight of his mortality in the last five years of his life. I couldn’t see that at the time and I trusted his words and began helping him look for young teens who might need assistance in leaving a bad home life. I believed Job was dedicated to helping. He claimed that we needed to live at a different residence than the compound, to have a home life as he got older. It seemed to make sense until Aster turned 18. She was treated as a daughter when I was present but after her 18th birthday, Job began treating Aster as a wife without any communication about it. As I began to question it more, he claimed I was needed at the compound and I began living there full time and only spending time with Job when he was at the compound or traveling.

My responsibility to the survivors of his abuse is something I will always carry. I helped build and nurture the horrors. With grace, God help us to right the wrongs of generational abuses. We become slaves to the injustice that fatally wounds our souls. I struggle to explain it, even still.”

It was obvious that the information from Job’s secretary was the last battle, he was done. The compound was abandoned but we had already established a plan with Aster before his secretary left the compound. She still had limited access to Aster and was able to convince her to leave based on medical needs and Aster’s new child. The few involved counted down the days until they became hours. We played chess with facts nightly and observed the possible risks for hours on end, reconstructing the plan over and over.  Local authorities showed no interest in our claims about Job. Making a plan is great, just don’t expect it to actually go that way. And be ready when it doesn’t.

The plan was to have someone meet with Job at a certain day and time to pick up vitamins, luring him away from home long enough to free Aster and her baby. The source completed multiple vitamin pickups on the same day and time for months prior.  

The night of the rescue everyone was officially in place. A team of 6 men and two women silently surrounded the property where Job and Aster lived. Three vehicles were parked nearby and ready to flee immediately, for safety or once they had Aster and her baby. They conducted surveillance through the night as we continued to coordinate details for the following day.

The next morning I woke up to an alarming text that said “reroute.” Shit. Something didn’t go as planned. At 6:00 AM we had a pre-arranged recap before the day started. During that call I was informed that another young girl was on the property and appeared to arrive around 4:45 AM. No one knew who she was and there wasn’t time to find out. None of the survivors from the compound were aware of who she was either. On a complete guess, I shared with my team that I felt the new girl would follow Aster off the property when the time came. The only glitch, with a new person on the property, would Job still make the vitamin pickup? Or would he opt for staying close to home? The ground team reported on the rest of their surveillance throughout the night and we took a vote. Given the facts, what do we do? What is everyone on the ground comfortable doing? Do we press forward and act as if this never happened and hope for the best? Or do we regroup and return on another day? Aster was waiting and knew this was the date we pre-arranged while Job’s secretary was still inside. We unanimously voted yes and quickly ended the call. By 11:00 AM I was notified that Job canceled the vitamin delivery.

Next steps could only be determined with a clear understanding of what we were up against in the moment. Many plans were made, but we had no idea which path we would ultimately have to take. I felt that less was more in this moment and opted to distract Job. On the far back side of his property is where Job had a garden, dried herbs, bottled tinctures, and crafted weapons. He also had a bunker next to the garden, completely on the other side of the property from where the shed was. Three members of our team were lining the back side of Job’s property as a precaution. I had one of them send up a drone and wave goodbye to it, I wasn’t sure how this would go. The drone entered Job’s property, flying quite low below the tree line. They flew the drone all the way to the doorway of Job’s shed. Once it got his attention, he was quickly on his feet. The drone pilot then backed away and flew towards the bunker. Job followed the drone, distantly and cautiously. A member of our team moved in close enough to signal to Aster that they were present. The rest would now be up to Aster to walk off the property and towards the help that was waiting for her. Everything she needed to do was pre-arranged with vague details we knew we could deliver on that would allow Aster to know it was us and where to go once we arrived. Including the drone, albeit I did not intend on flying a drone into Job’s shed. Was Aster committed to genuinely stepping off that property? There was no way to truly know, but we would be there if she did. Two female team members waited with a white 4-door car in the meetup location adjacent to Job’s property, but well hidden. The team members who were lining the back side of the property moved to the front side of the property. Once Job was out of view, we kept the radios silent for emergencies and waited.. After 10 minutes passed, excitement turned to concern and then disappointment. I could see Job go into his bunker from the surveillance cameras we put in place for this operation. I notified the team that he was in the bunker, alone. Aster and the unknown girl were nowhere in sight from my view. A large hill on the edge of Job’s property largely blocked their  view of the property from the road. And my view was limited to the surveillance we could safely and legally install. Job had the entire property blanketed with weapons and traps.

16 minutes later the silent airwaves became active with relief, concern, and hushed excitement. 

Red: Aster is visible over the hill, walking toward the road.

Red: Baby is present. No unknown girl.

Red: Where is Job?

Max: Exiting the bunker.

EE: Everyone, focus.

Red: How close is Aster?

EE: Aster has not cleared the hill.

Red: Direction for Job?

Max: Next to bunker facing the drone. Looks perplexed. No movement.

EE: Unknown girl?

Max: No sighting yet.

EE: Everyone clear out. Job is headed your way. Red stays.

Max: Heard.

EE: No one steps on to the property. For any reason. Clear?

Max: Heard.

EE: Job is approaching the front of the property. I think he can see Aster.

EE: Coach her. She needs to step off the property.

Max: Job is inside the shed.

Red: Aster appears hesitant. Keeps looking back.

EE: Red, talk to her. Keep her focused on you. Eyes straight ahead.

EE: Red, tell her she is holding the promises and that she is strong enough to keep them on her own.

In the distance, one solo gunshot could be heard and will likely forever echo in my mind. After a long pause, I heard Red yelling, “Aster! We’re here.” Aster responded with her voice shaking as she looked back toward the shed yelling with an intensity I will never forget, “Job.” As Aster stood at the edge of the property, Red responded to her, “Aster. Take just a few steps. I can’t do anything until you walk on to the road. We’re here, we are not leaving you. Aster, you are holding the promises. You are stronger than you know. Strong enough to keep every promise.”

We could not be sure if it was a warning shot, but everyone immediately felt that the gunshot we heard was the end of Job’s existence.

With complete fear and a flood of tears, Aster took four more steps and as she walked out onto the road she began to collapse. Red immediately took the baby as another team member assisted Aster over to a vehicle that was waiting for her and Red.

The audio line we used for communication became silent. All the way to the local medical center where Aster and her baby were treated for immediate health concerns due to poor nutrition and isolation from basic needs. Job did take his life when he walked back into the shed. That singular gunshot ended a moment in time that separated Aster and I just long enough to dismantle a larger mindset that was spread out amongst many groups.

When I looked up to view the surveillance cameras one last time, there was movement in the woods. Local law enforcement was clearing out, and there she was. The unknown girl managed to hide from law enforcement and the unfolding chaos. Exhaustion turned to panic as I fumbled around my desk contacting every person I had on the ground. One of my sources made their way back to the property and through the wooded area behind Job’s property. And much to our surprise, the unknown girl was a woman I’d spent two decades looking for without success. When my source asked her who she is, she responded, “I am Aster’s mother.” It quickly became clear that we were not the only renegades who showed up that day with a mission to save Aster. 

My computer desk doesn’t look or feel the same ever since. My phone feels different. Every interaction with a survivor now comes with a mountain of knowledge that was garnered through this two decade hunt. How I view my existence shifted. Everything changed. As I felt these ripples in time changing everything around me the moment Aster was safe.

From Red:
I met Rona during an investigation into a crime family. She shared this story with me and my heart folded. Watching an entire family or even just one or two individuals leave is euphoric, the feeling is freeing for everyone involved. The goal was to win and we had a great coach. But this is not the type of game that runs a time clock. And every move in the game is not working towards a score, more so a ripple in time. Through subtle actions, Rona helped direct people on the ground for years. We wanted to impatiently storm the compound with logic and it would not have been accepted. Instead, we were instructed to avoid confrontational topics and stick to topics of acceptance and love. Rona said “while the basis of Christianity is Jesus, and the basis of Jesus is love, the experience of religious abuse is triple coated in a cloned love that knows no acceptance. Accept them, as they are. Compliment their strengths. Point out all that they do independently. Let them teach you about their beliefs. Above all, be patient.”

We followed that guidance and at times it seemed like bad advice. A few people did take a different path and it led nowhere. Rona and I did not agree more than we did agree. Her methods are not familiar, but we knew that she was the only one who understood their belief system, fully. She knew what wouldn’t work, and that wasn’t information I could ignore. We remained a safe presence because we were loyal to this advice. I’ve never lived this, not to that extent. Who was I to say how this could be accomplished? No one leaves these groups. They die there. They believe that only one church in the “last days” has the “light” or some might call it the “truth.” They believe they are part of the one true path to heaven. Abuse is not seen for what it is, everything is equated to the goal, eternal life. And they believe that is only possible if you follow the true church. This is where the manipulation begins. By convincing people that they are the only people going to heaven. The rest is easy. 

I hope this story resonates with anyone who is trapped by religious abuse. This is no small problem. Many children are unaccounted for and denied basic rights. Stories like this are hard to process. But the more who get involved, the more we can do to stop these abuses. 

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5. Embrace Difficulty https://elusiveenigma.com/2023/01/01/5-embrace-difficulty/ Sun, 01 Jan 2023 07:00:04 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=771 5. Embrace Difficulty Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email Even manipulators and child abusers love the holidays and that can complicate things. The most dedicated and

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5. Embrace Difficulty

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Even manipulators and child abusers love the holidays and that can complicate things. The most dedicated and covert child abusers absolutely love going the extra mile to make sure that appearances are kept up as much as possible, publicly and privately. Gifts are often a way of appearing to be a doting parent or smoothing over heinous actions that have no recourse.

People often become their traditions. Reliving the things that they did as children. Holidays are always clearly evident of tradition, and our love for repetitive, reliable nostalgia. But it’s not always nostalgic. For some people, the holidays can be like a favorite food that you ate at a restaurant as a child, but that restaurant no longer prepares it the same way or perhaps you have realized over time just how inedible the quality of their food actually was. I admire people who can see past this and create their own traditions and fond holiday memories. It’s easier for me if I avoid the holidays.

At the end of every year, I can’t close my eyes without seeing a scene from decades ago. Unfortunately almost every holiday, even in recent years, is always plagued with grief. So I avoid the reminders; the little things that bring holiday joy to most people, it all tends to remind me of a string of tragedy, loss, and a confusing reality. Child abusers and manipulators have to blur the truth of their actions. It’s difficult to be told how much you are cared for by someone who is also dismantling your identity piece by piece and burying each piece in foreign countries for you to later track down, dust off, and attempt to salvage. This time of year is often a reminder of those experiences.

It’s been years since I have spoken to my adopted siblings, but every Thanksgiving I still see my adopted sister and the lights of the ambulance through our bedroom window. I was not concerned about what happened to bring an ambulance to our house and two EMT’s in my bedroom. I was more concerned with the ambulance being called. Childhood Trauma is not always about the tragic event that took place, rather how we perceived it at the time. In my memory, this was not only a sad experience of someone trying to take their own life, it was highly confusing and filled with fear of the unknown. In traumatic environments we get a feel for the “norm,” even if that norm is chaos. Even chaos has a pattern.

It didn’t make any sense. We weren’t allowed regular access to medical help, what made them call an ambulance and bring them inside our house that no one was ever allowed in? Immediate panic set in. I had no idea what could be so bad that someone finally called the authorities. Emergency services were no different than police to us. We were taught to trust no one with their secrets and none of us would have compromised that, because we fully believed that their secrets were ours to keep. The entire situation soon made sense in my head, someone else must have called. But why? It was around 4:00 a.m. and my sister was not in our bedroom, all her jewelry was laid out across her bed, but she was gone. The EMT’s soon packed up their bags and also left. I sat on my bed and did not say a word. My adopted mother did not accept inquiries, I would have to figure this out on my own. 

A few hours later I pieced together what happened. My adopted sister tried to end her life the morning of Thanksgiving that year. It had been a difficult year and just a few weeks earlier we lost our grandmother, the only consistent and stable human in our lives. We were all individually gutted, individually lost in our perception of how to proceed. My adopted sister simply chose not to and her boyfriend at the time called 911. She was put on a 72-hour hold in a mental health facility and released with a notice of her upcoming court appearance. The state pressed charges against her for attempting to end her life. In court, it was agreed upon that if she attended counseling until released by a licensed therapist, that the charge would be dropped. She complied and did attend a year of counseling, the charge remained due to the fact that family therapy was recommended and turned down by my adopted mother. Sadly, so much of this story ends there. My adopted sister never got the help she needed or the ability to be open with her therapist because, secrets. She took on many of the same characteristics of my adopted mother and refuses to live in a reality where accountability is expected.

This particular memory of my adopted sister is very insightful, at least for me it is. It shows the power of perception. Over the years, the holidays have brought a lengthy series of horrific scenes. But this particular memory stands out because the authorities entered our home. There was no time to cover anything up or handle it themselves because even they had no idea that 911 was notified. The fear of what might happen, what would be next? Would they find out everything? Was this it? If not, would someone be violently punished for the authorities being called? Every second felt like a year until the EMT’s left, 26 years later I can still feel it as if it just happened. The panic that encased my entire nervous system returns every Thanksgiving, subconsciously. Conditioning a child to make them believe they are being protected while also violently abusing them, well, that creates some lasting confusion that can be triggered by the most random instances or even objects. 

Much like the overall lifestyle of someone who is perpetually battling the art of healing, the holidays also evolve over time. The anxiety shifts, the memories bring more answers each year, and difficult triggers become boundaries if we choose to be aware of what our behaviors actually mean in relation to our past. Those who sympathize with these feelings choose to face the holidays in their own ways. There’s no complete and total escape from it. It’s one of those unavoidable instances of trauma that no one escapes. Even the most common experiences of rejection, manipulation, and fear can be triggered during the holidays. Unfortunately, my entire calendar year is a reminder of dark experiences. I choose to not celebrate holidays personally because it causes more grief than joy. This is not everyone’s experience, many people are able to create their own traditions and holiday magic. I use the holidays to create extra space between myself and the world around me. It’s a time I use to quietly reflect on progress and what I can do to maintain the positive steps I’ve made over time before taking additional steps in the coming year.

This year brought new grief and loss around the holidays, like clockwork. And leading up to the New Year, I’m reminded of how this year started out. Minutes before this year started, I got the call that my biological mother would likely die soon. I spent the entire day before New Year’s Eve deciding if I was going to talk to her before it was too late. When my sister asked if I wanted to talk to her, I immediately said, “no.” And then I began to reconsider throughout the entire day until finally determining that my initial and quite firm, “no,” was the right choice. And that would be the last time I would ever make the choice to not speak to or set a firm boundary with the person that I spent half my life looking for. Our relationship wasn’t complicated, it was excruciatingly painful in every way. Her death forced a complex wave of both painful awareness and healing that I never expected to experience. It felt like two ripple effects simultaneously intersecting with each other. The separate instances of her leaving me in a crack house and then her dying, it had all began to intersect and create a new wave of calmer seas, breaking up the movement in the dark waters that seemed to have no ending for so many years. A year later, I’m grateful. I had avoided re-visiting certain past experiences as an adult. I could not go back to certain places willingly, I had to be forced to go back there. Her death air dropped me in a dark forest of past medieval battles. There are times in life when experiences feel as though they are changing everything. Embrace it. Coddling behaviors learned in chaotic survival and rejection will not produce a life that creates the peace that is required to be exactly who you desire to be. Too many people seem to think I am strong, I’m not. I am willing. There is a difference. Willingness is where we truly find our strength. The willingness to embrace the difficult. Learn from it. Change with it. Confront anything that prevents overall peace and self awareness with a pen and paper. Take notes and learn from it. Get comfortable observing yourself just as much as you observe the world around you. That is where you find your strength. Purely in the willingness to look for it. Improvement only comes from inspecting weakness, failures, and vulnerabilities. A survivor’s long-term obstacle is the perpetual nature of these actions. Unlike a viral illness, it doesn’t just go away and the need to continually embrace the willingness to remain self aware can be daunting. It’s a lifestyle choice, not a cure. 

Embrace it all. Pain can lead to truly amazing experiences if we are willing to artfully transform our lives rather than preserve the painful inhibitions of past rejection and fear.

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4. Child Abuse is Attempted Murder https://elusiveenigma.com/2022/11/06/nc/ https://elusiveenigma.com/2022/11/06/nc/#comments Sun, 06 Nov 2022 10:41:26 +0000 https://elusiveenigma.com/?p=612 Child Abuse is Attempted Murder Facebook Twitter Telegram Reddit Email Something within us tells us to fight, until fighting becomes life threatening, then we are

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Child Abuse is Attempted Murder

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Something within us tells us to fight, until fighting becomes life threatening, then we are told to retreat. It’s survival.

As I write this decades later, the intimidation is still present. And it always will be present in its own evolving way. The conditioned reflex to write these actions off and stay silent is also still present. What if I got it wrong? What if it wasn’t as bad as I perceived it? It can be very easy to dismiss the most heinous actions when your conditioned to see past yourself and prioritize your own abuse. Small reminders throughout the last three decades reinforce the weight of the actions that were taken against me.

My childhood imprisonment was labeled an adoption and my warden expected me to call her my “mother.” I never obliged. It just didn’t fit.

Her eyes pierced through my existence, skewering my nervous system and setting fire to the shreds of identity that I had left. Her gaze felt unstable, violent, and wildly out of control. I could always feel it start to boil over, the pending nuclear explosion of violence and rage was the ultimate choreographer of every action I did or did not take. Then she’d vanish, and I’d ask myself, was any of that even real? She always eventually returned to confirm that, no, none of it was real. I still see her confusion and chaos, her detachment from reality when things didn’t go as planned, and the deep void in her eyes that always made me question her next move and my subsequent life expectancy.

In the mornings, I would listen for her footsteps walking down the hallway. I could gauge the day by her initial movements. Predicting the actions of explosive individuals was my entire existence. Life was chaotic before this adoption ever took place. Prior to my adoption, all the children were removed from the home I lived in due to physical assaults. I was four months old at the time with head injuries from glass bottles and “other heavy objects,” according to documents. I was never transferred into the custody of the state, instead I was adopted by the family of the person who perpetrated the physical assaults against me. He never served any prison time and he was never charged with a crime. In fact, the man who assaulted me and other children with “heavy objects,” also regained custody of his own children. All of these individuals were associates of my biological father and formerly worked at a chop shop or gun store that he ran, including my adopted parents. My biological mother was petitioned by the court for one year to appear in court regarding who would be awarded custody of me, she did not appear and my biological father would not contest one of his most loyal associates from adopting me.

Every morning was a temperature gauge for just how brutal the day might become. As I listened for her footsteps down the hallway and attempted to anticipate how the day would unfold or just how vigilant I needed to be, I never imagined how much I would later be affected by the things that happened in that hallway. Recently, I drove past the house where it all took place and as I looked at the front yard, I could hear and feel my head slamming against the walls of that hallway and the sound of her son’s fist crashing into my skull. I could hear the buzzing of her taser and the feeling of being repeatedly electrocuted. And the familiar sensation of air leaving my body with the possibility of never returning. Choking a child is often used as a lesson in dominance and just “how far” someone is willing to go in order to keep their victim compliant. Her biological children were equally as explosive, and she encouraged the violence. 

If this version of herself would have been presented to the rest of society, this story would be completely different. Everyone who knew my “adopted mother” would describe a kind, generous, and self sacrificing individual. She helped run an animal shelter, donated her time to various organizations, and she is an amazing artist. No one had any knowledge of reality, including me. The person who inflicted chaotic violence and rage towards me and denied me a basic education was simultaneously adored by her community. The words of a 6-year-old would likely hold no weight. I was deadlocked into an impossible situation while also questioning the reality of it all.

When all rationality leaves a person’s eyes, you know it. Whether you are 5 years old or 25 years old, you see it. I saw it.

Children are extensions of their caregivers, they are the closest source of knowledge about their caregivers. This makes children who are witnessing illegal activity or experiencing abuse, a direct target. Manipulation and control is typically established to protect secrets. Once intimidation and manipulation is in place, it becomes a convenient resource in everyday life. This is why I insist that child abuse must be prosecuted with the same weight as attempted murder. Witness tampering and obstruction of Justice should be applied to child abuse charges more frequently. The amount of manipulation that is dedicated to silencing a child is exhaustive. Daily conditioning with small and large gestures, actions, and gaslighting makes it almost unnoticeable over time, combined with isolation and violent attacks on a nervous system that is still developing. This is not only child abuse, this is attempted murder. Children are often described as resilient, as if they have weathered the “storms” they were left in with grace, our society is absolute proof that this is a harmful myth. Complex trauma can be compared to experiencing a tragic event. What if you spent over a decade living a tragic event on a daily basis? Would you be resilient, or just surviving? Resilience and survival can appear identical while being vastly different. Trauma changes the brain and nervous system in order to survive the constant abuse and conditioning, this is not the same skill set as surviving everyday life. Living in your own echo chamber of conditioned lies teaches a child nothing about real life or true societal expectations. State employees across the country are not properly trained to see past an individual who is lying to them, nor are they properly trained to identify abuse in children who are being subjected to complex abuse and manipulation.

This idea of comparing childhood complex trauma to a prison sentence seems like a dramatic approach to a large majority. But this is not as far from reality as many might think, and probably even more heinous than most realize. Would we allow parents and caregivers to personally perform brain surgery on children in their own homes? That is the reality of child abuse, and some children die from the emotional and physical wounds inflicted by their caregivers. Complex trauma inflicted on a developing brain and nervous system is an attack on a child’s life. It completely changes how a child thrives and interacts with others. The process of repeated attacks conditions the nervous system to go against natural instincts as a human. It also conditions an abused child to become an abused adult. But where is a child supposed to escape to when speaking out will likely go unnoticed? Most children are not initially believed, or completely ignored when making claims about their caregivers. And if that information were to get back to the abusive caregiver, well, that is a risk that most abused children are not willing to take. This absolutely feels like a prison sentence, sometimes it is even a death sentence. Being forced to remain somewhere against your will feels like prison, because that’s what it is. The abused child is forced to stay somewhere that they are both victimized and sentenced for the crimes of others. This deadlock is a holding pattern and the child will not be eligible for parole until they are 18-years-old, ready to escape, or die in “prison.” 

I’m not here because the statistics say I should be. The injuries I sustained at the hands of violent individuals will always affect my daily life, personal relationships, and overall health. I’m not resilient, I’m just still here. Still fighting.

When I escaped this environment and traveled over 600 miles away, one of the first people I met was Kyra, a resource officer at the state technology center. Kyra assisted in the GED department, and she handled my paperwork when I applied to take the GED test. She was the first person to learn that I’d never attended school or received a formal education of any kind. My records were nonexistent. She appeared to be a mixture of emotions. After arguing with her for a full 30 minutes that I in fact did not pass the GED pre-test, she proved I did pass by showing me all my answers. Those were my answers, but I didn’t go there to pass a test, I went there to get classes to pass a test and this completely ruined the flow of the day. I was not prepared for fast tracking my self-esteem. I was prepared for a two-decade uphill climb toward obtaining my GED, as if I were training for the Appalachian trail with half a lung and 14 broken bones.

When Kyra returned with my pre-test results and after our argument about her “obviously” pulling the wrong test results, I could see Kyra’s emotional battle and I wasn’t ready to address it. She wasn’t her annoyingly bubbly self, she wasn’t sporting the huge smile that she normally did. She said, “I don’t want to, but I’m going to be honest and I’m going to give you a choice. Take this voucher and go take the full GED test this week or come back when you are 18-years-old. If you go take it now, charges will follow against your adopted mother. You have no records. This is illegal.” I thought to myself, “if you only knew..” But I refrained. I immediately took all the paperwork and left.

Kyra continued to appear at places where I worked in various parts of the state. She was a commanding presence that was not easily forgotten, you always knew when she entered a room. Her laughter could be heard for several city blocks. Deep down I adored her and feared her knowledge. Mostly the domino effect it could create. She knew just enough to be dangerous but not enough to understand my choice not to prosecute my adopted mother at that time.

When I turned 19-years-old, I went back and told Kyra I was ready to take the pre-test again. She wouldn’t let me. She gave me a voucher to go take the full test and told me not to come back until I took the GED test. I took the test that week and when I got the results, I didn’t open them. I was certain I didn’t pass. Two weeks later I saw Kyra and she asked if I took the test, I told her I did but didn’t look at the results yet. I went home that night and opened the envelope of doom to find out I passed. I wasn’t sure how, I felt like I did something illegal. I walked around for the following 6 months like I’d stolen international nuclear codes and booked a flight out of the country.

Passing the test and taking a few years to process the fact that someone had the legal ability to charge my adopted mother with a crime, in direct relation to me, was a grounding moment. Reality was no longer a chaotic façade, it became a sobering nightmare.

Working closely on criminal investigations has taught me more about trauma than any textbook or self-help doctrine ever could. I’ve seen a variety of trauma responses play out in the most horrific ways possible. I experienced another side of trauma while traveling as a chef. The kitchen can be a brutal atmosphere. You can guarantee to be built up and torn back down multiple times a day. And the kitchen is filled with trauma survivors who are still stuck in a mode that often leaves them paralyzed in time, addicted to both comfort and torture. Everyone could see it in their eyes, if you are observant, the sadness and emotional perplexity was deafening. Criminal cases have been a great teacher and a sobering reminder of just how dark it can get when the lights go out in someone’s eyes. The best lesson by far was my own family. Both my biological and adopted family have deeply rooted complex trauma that they allowed to permeate their existence.

Not all, but a vast majority of criminal behavior is rooted in trauma. For some, that deep well of sadness turns into an ocean of void. Complex trauma creates an evolving internal matrix of chaotic emotions. But there’s a choice, and if you follow those emotions too far, you will likely move from survivor to aggressor and reenact your own trauma ten-fold if you go too far. Breaking the cycle of generational trauma is just as vital as demanding real justice for victims and survivors. 

There is a renewed focus for those who have been given a life sentence for crimes they did not commit and the people who support us. We are not trauma survivors. We are now soldiers in a cold war against our own country. I believe it is time to fight for the only thing that makes any sense in the aftermath of criminal chaos. Do not lay awake with the demons of your oppressor. Sleep tonight. We need our soldiers fully rested. 

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