BEHIND CLOSED DOORS

Today I’m feeling the weight of the world, and it’s heavier than I can bear. I’m exhausted in my place of comfort and frustrated with the inhabitants. There’s a sickness hidden within the walls that I’m no longer equipped to deal with. This isn’t a thought of defeat – it’s simply a thought of disgust!

I failed when I accepted the “I’m fine” assertion – yea, that was a complete disservice to myself and the situation. By the time I accepted that I couldn’t correct the behaviors it was too late.

I reached out to others for assistance and they tried, but how do you help a person that doesn’t know they need help nor want it?

The easiest thing to do is to remove myself from the situation, but that action wouldn’t prove to be advantageous – in fact it may do more harm. The more difficult option won’t be well received by any means, but it’s heavily in consideration.

I often state that I’m not an expert at anything but being Lisa, today I question my credentials.

A line from one of my favorite movies is “Sister can’t fly on only one wing” – Sparkle, 1976. Sister, played by Lonette Mckee, applied this reasoning to her need for cocaine to function. Her baby sister Sparkle, played by Irene Cara, became an addiction enabler, which was the easier route. Sister ended up dying from an overdose!

Um, enabler ….. that’s what I’ve become! There isn’t a drug involved in my situation, the dangers aren’t visible behind closed doors, but the potential for disaster exists. I know experts say a person can’t be forced into receiving help before they’re ready but in my case ready really needs to come quick!

E-X-H-A-L-E – if only choices came with a look into the future, I’m sure we’d choose differently – I know I would have swung the closed door open sooner…….

Let’s talk about alcoholism

There’s a family secret invading households that doesn’t show discrimination – financial security doesn’t exempt you – gender preference doesn’t protect you – race nor religion won’t make the battle less difficult!

This secret damages self esteem and morale leaving hurt along its path. If ignored or swept under the rug long enough the battle passes down from generation to generation, terrorizing bloodlines.

For today’s thought I spoke to someone near and dear to my heart about her struggle with alcohol. I’ve celebrated her best and supported her through her worst, never truly understanding what her worst looked like behind closed doors. She’s my cousin but more like a sister, here is a glimpse into her life as an alcoholic.

Q: How did you know you had a problem with alcohol?

A: There were times I would say I wasn’t going to drink today or this week then next thing I knew I was drinking. I graduated from casually wanting a drink to needing a drink to function daily. I lost self control! The first of the twelve steps as it relates to Alcoholics Anonymous is to admit we are powerless over alcohol and that our life has become unmanageable.

Q: How has addiction affected your family?

A: I’m well loved and cared for and I know this for sure! My mom told me I needed to get help probably everyday. She threatened to have my kids taken from me, the whole nine yards, lol! My concern came when I could no longer be in denial about how my children were being affected. I was present physically but mentally and emotionally I was not there for them. At the end of the day everyone has a suggestion and or opinion, especially from the outside looking in, but none of that mattered until I began to dislike the person I had become.

Q: What was your breaking point?

A: My rock bottom was blacking out: not being able to remember long moments of time, phone calls being made, text being sent, ordering take out for the kids dinner, cussing people out for no reason other than me being drunk (although it is said a drunk tongue speaks a sober heart) so maybe they did deserve it – but seriously blacking out did it for me because I could only imagine it getting worse if it continued. Then there were the constant hangovers and uncontrollable shakes, yup all that going on became too much! Drinking was no longer pleasurable, my tolerance was increasing and it became an expensive habit.

Q: What does “one day at a time” look like in your life?

A: Simply put, just as I feel about the first step it means exactly what it says one day at a time – but for me there are moments when its one second, one minute, one hour at a time so each day is monumental for sure when you are an addict. It’s also the inspiration for my next tattoo and a possible name for my business venture.

Q: What advice can you provide someone struggling with alcoholism?

A: Find YOUR reason and believe in a higher power, something / someone higher than yourself – allow that to guide and motivate you. Do not allow yourself to be pressured, forced, manipulated or guilt tripped into seeking help IF you’re not ready. Its your journey and yours alone no matter how big your support system is (which is a beautiful thing, mine is da bomb). No one is in control of your sobriety but you! Keep in mind relapse is a part of sobriety as well so if that happens, tomorrow is a new day!

Cindy Maria is the mother of two and a Glam-ma of two. She’s born and raised in Philadelphia and the oldest of four children. In addition to making her business concept a reality she works full time and rarely misses an opportunity to create memories with family and friends. I thank her for allowing me to share her truth, in hopes of helping someone else.

If you or someone you love is an alcoholic and ready to get help please visit: http://www.aa.org

Protection

I grew up in a two parent household, my father was the primary income earner – my mother the disciplinarian. My sister and I were actively engaged in the community by way of church, dance school, and Girl Scouts. Our family owned a home in Wildwood, NJ; therefore, that’s where summers were spent. Food was always on the table and clothing, not necessarily the most fashionable, was always on our back. A bad day was being told I couldn’t go somewhere or that I better not do something.

I have memories of elementary school and a lawsuit. My parents weren’t happy with a decision that was made on my behalf and exercised their legal right to sue. I was truly excited to get dressed up and go meet the judge, the lawyer had prepared me for the day so I wouldn’t be nervous. I got to city hall and was taken into one of the most beautiful rooms I’d ever seen. I sat in the big leather chair, my feet not touching the floor, and looked with amazement as the details of the trial were explained to me in advance of anyone else arriving. Before I got a chance to meet the judge I was told an agreement had been reached so I didn’t have to speak. My feelings were so hurt that I wouldn’t have the opportunity to meet the judge, I was so looking forward to it!

High school had some tense times but not intolerable. Most issues were typical teen related drama with an occasional issue arising as a result of something I said to an adult that my mother deemed disrespectful. I earned good grades until tenth grade, a chemistry lab fiasco resulted in me having to make up a grade in summer school. Senior year was supposed to be a breeze, I had enough credits for graduation, I was on the badminton team and pep squad and I was a member of the prom committee. Graduation rehearsals were in full swing when I got called to the office of the counselor. My Spanish teacher made recommendation that I not graduate because I wasn’t passing her class, an elective course which was only on my roster to fill a space. I hysterically summoned my mother to the school and after a few meetings I was back at rehearsal.

My parents decided that I’d go to community college, it was their belief that I wasn’t mature enough to go out of state. To this day I refer to that experience as thirteenth / fourteenth grade. While I consider it to have been an extension of high school I can’t deny that it was within those halls that life became real.

Until this point, I had never sat beside students of other nationalities and faiths. I had been in the home of a few Caucasian people that my father considered friends, I’d been to social gatherings and events, but never experienced sharing a learning space. It was in a sociology class that a young woman introduced me to ugliness. In having a discussion about acceptance she raised her hand and asked “would one of the black students be willing to show us their tail?” The professor turned that question into a teaching moment that left her embarrassed and questioning everything her family raised her to believe – but it also left me questioning everything my family taught me.

I couldn’t wait to get home and tell my parents about the situation, surely their anger would match mine. It did not!

My father explained to me that her way of thinking has always surrounded me: back in elementary school when there was a problem with class size the board made a decision to randomly label students in urban neighborhoods as special education so they could justify bringing in more teachers by having the need for smaller class sizes – thus the lawsuit. The Spanish teacher from high school had no valid reason for standing in the way of graduation – the meetings that were held between her, the parents, and school officials revealed that she didn’t like us.

In this teaching moment my father told me there will always be people that’ll think less of me because of my skin color, some because they don’t know better others because they believe their truth. In life I’m never supposed to accept less than I deserve, especially if it’s being denied because I am a Black woman. In that moment he cautioned me not to look for ugliness in people because it’ll reveal itself in due time and lastly not to place myself in positions that can be used as justification for harassment and discrimination.

I wish my father was still here, there’s so many things I want to talk to him about. That little girl excited to sit in a courtroom anxiously awaiting the opportunity to meet a judge now sits as a juror, listening to a trial and passing judgement on a man with her complexion caught up in a system of unbalanced justice. That teenager temporarily held from graduation simply because she wasn’t liked cries out everytime she hears stories of someone being killed over “beef”. That college student angered by someone thinking she had a tail can’t comprehend how it’s still believed that people of color are barbaric and worthy of being disproportionately slaughtered, especially after so many great people have shown differently.

As an adult there is no one protecting me from the ugliness of racism and hatred; therefore, I must protect myself. I withhold spending where my skintone isn’t respected! I avoid those that outwardly show a dislike of me! I ask God to control my temper in uncomfortable situations so that it’s never viewed as raging! I use my small platform to speak out against wrongdoing and injustice!

It’s self reflection time: how are you protecting yourself from the ugliness of today? Are you properly prepared to converse with your children about the realities of hatred and racism when it arrives at the front door? My parents were right, at 17 I wasn’t mature enough for the world – I question sometimes if I’m mature enough for it now!

Access Denied

I caught myself speaking of an individual recently and the comment I made was “I hate him”. Instantly I felt convicted and corrected myself by way of apology and asking the Lord to remove the spirit of hate from within me.

I’m a firm believer that words have power; therefore, speaking hate into the atmosphere gives it strength.

When thinking of why my initial reaction in regards to this individual was less than loving I realized the essence of who he is isn’t loveable. There may be a back story that explains his reason for spreading droplets of misery everywhere he travels, but I’m totally not interested in those details nor his excuses – they should be reserved for his therapist!

My mother tells me regularly that I have to accept people for who they are and deal with them accordingly. I respectfully disagree – I don’t have to deal with levels of ignorance that incite rage within me! There’s not a scripture that says I have to stand as a whipping post for anyone! I will never compromise my peace for the purposes of accepting someone else as being a jerk – and, It is highly unlikely that I’ll intentionally put myself in harm’s way without reason!

My thought for today, I have to do better! The expression of hate is human but doesn’t help in my quest to do better / be better. I know better; therefore, I must have better control of my emotional response and reaction. Failure to achieve such means that I’ll allow someone else governance, and that’s unacceptable!

Revoking access to your life so that peace can be preserved doesn’t make you a bad person, it simply makes way for the emergence of a better version of who you are.