Eight months after what I’m calling a complete emotional breakdown (the kind where you sob in your husband's arms while he cradles you like a baby; yes, I longed to feel like a child again), I reached out.
I messaged my parents in a last-ditch attempt to find the first stepping stone forward in our relationship.
I did this after months of phone calls where I wanted, tried, attempted to open up a dialogue where there was none before. Only silence, devoid of real talk. On the first call, I shared some of my deepest feelings and fears around my teenage years. I asked questions about our messy and (literally) bloody family history.
When I say that first call (and the subsequent handful of calls afterwards) didn't go well for me, it’s the most profound understatement.
I was broken open. I had to come to terms with a childhood that on the surface, was very happy; but when you scratch the surface a little, you see the many cracks and fissures. I was questioning so many different parts of my past around the many years of mental health trauma and addictions around my older sister, asking; why did we never speak of it? Why did we keep it a secret from our extended family? Why did you never talk to me about any of the traumatic things I saw? Why didn't you get me counselling? Why did we simply try to pray away the slit wrists, psych wards, cutting and rehabs? Did my parents really sweep it all under the rug, never to be talked about again?
I was confident in the thought that I could handle the pain from them in broaching forbidden subjects with my new baby feelings of confidence.
Although I was sure it would be painful for them to have a conversation like this for the first time, I was confident they could handle these questions from me.