Warning: This post deals with domestic violence and may be traumatic for some readers.
It was fairly early on that my brother first displayed signs of mental health issues. He had always been a bit different but around the time he turned 12 his (and my) childhood took a dramatic turn and went from being a peacefully happy home, to essentially a war zone of violence and fighting.
By the time I was 16, I’d suffered a broken nose, jaw, countless black eyes, fractured ribs and too many bruises to remember. All at the hands of my older brother. I became an expert at covering up lacerations and cuts and my stomach still has scars from the time I was suspended over shards of glass having been thrown through a door (no safety glass in those days).
He was a young teenage boy with a lot of anger and difficulty in accepting authority. I was just the younger sister that got in the way.
My parents did everything they could think of to fix him. It’s so easy to make judgements on people when you’ve never been in their shoes so I don’t try. As time progressed though, they slowly lost control over him and he basically did what ever the hell he wanted. I don’t blame them for a second for what happened to us, they were dealt a hand they never expected and it ended up costing them dearly. In fact, in a lot of ways, it cost my mother her life.
The police were a regular fixture at our house and AVO’s were common. But in the end, AVO’s don’t really keep you safe, they’re just a reminder of things that are already illegal.