I don’t know who I am outside of her
Original Story
I was groomed from the minute I was born by my grandmother’s partner. She was in the room for my birth and everyday thereafter she showered me with affection. She took me on trips. She complied with my every wild childish requests. She bought me alcohol when I was a teenager. Gave me weed. Opened a bank account in my name and depositing money every two weeks. She took me to San Francisco for pride and to gawk at the sex shops in the Castro. She never paid attention to my sister like she did me. Anytime someone asked her if I was her granddaughter, she made a point to say that I was her friend. She made sure I heard her say that. She made sure it was known. I remember being on a trip with her when I was 8 or 9 and sitting in the hotel room thinking, why does she have such an interest in me? It’s almost creepy. I can clearly remember looking at her sleeping form and wondering if she “liked” me like that. Fast forward fifteen years. I’m married, and my grandma is away working. Her partner comes to visit for the weekend. She tells me that we shouldn’t tell my grandma; she’d be upset she wasn’t invited. She takes me out to a bar, and my husband comes, too. She buys me drink, after drink, after drink. As she always has. She knows how I drink—she taught me. I don’t remember much of anything after that except my husband didn’t want to dance, and I was upset that he wouldn’t have fun with me. Then I remember her kissing me, and thinking that it wasn’t as gross as I thought it would be. It’s black after that. My husband never forgave me. He stopped her that night from doing anything else, but he blamed me. Our relationship never recovered. I spent years trying to forget it happened. We didn’t speak of it. I stopped drinking so I could always be in control of my body. I distanced myself from my family—from her specifically. But it didn’t really stop. She kept sending me money. She made me the sole beneficiary of her estate. She listed me as a recipient of her life insurance. I try to ignore her and to just not acknowledge it. I try to pretend it didn’t happen, that we just grew apart. That I’m busy now that I’m married and have a child. I almost left my husband two years ago; he wasn’t treating me well. He had grown mean since that night, and when we talked in the car from hundreds of miles apart, him wishing I would come home but resenting my presence when I was around, he brought it up. He told me how it had broken him. How he had never thought I’d hurt him like that. That he knew it wasn’t my fault—it was hers, but he still couldn’t forgive me. Since that night, I’ve never recovered. I’ve internalized even more blame, more shame, more ill-place guilt. Talking about it unleashed the reality of it, and my sexual health and my self-identity have suffered more than anything. Turns out I’m asexual without alcohol. I’ll engage in sex when I know it’ll please a partner and because I know it’s what you do with someone you love, but I don’t look for it or desire my partner sexually. Simultaneously in discovering this about myself, I’m also discovering the depth of the effects of the trauma. Over the past six months or so, I cry when I have sex. If I’m not fully in the mindset, 100% (which is hard to get to given I’m not really all that motivated by sex), my mind wanders back to that night. To what I remember. It wanders back to the knowledge of what she did, what she would have done if my husband hadn’t stopped her, back to her reported nonchalance about it, her sobriety. My mind wanders to the fact that no part of life is untouched by her. My entire personality (something I already struggle to identify with) is largely a construct of her making. I’ve never had an interest she hasn’t inserted herself into. I’ve never explored the world without the lens she’s cast upon it. Who am I but a person of her making? I am trapped, and I am small. I don’t want to be her person. I don’t want anything to do with her. My grandma is dying of cancer. I love her so much, but she is naive to what happened. To why her partner always paid me special attention. I almost left my husband again two months ago. He convinced me to try one more time, but he’s given me an ultimatum. He’s told me that I have to tell her what happened. He wants me to allow my grandmother to finally understand why he doesn’t like coming to her house. He says he deserves this. He says she deserves this. He told me that this is so she can die knowing that he didn’t hate her. He told me he doesn’t want me going to her house anymore. He told me that if my grandmother doesn’t take the situation seriously—that if she doesn’t kick her partner out—that he doesn’t want me to see her again. That he doesn’t want my son to see her. I hate this situation. I hate it all. Last fall my grandma’s partner nearly died. She had sepsis from MRSA. I live with the self-hatred of knowing that I was disappointed that she didn’t die. It would have been over. I’d never have to see her face again. I’d never have to be confronted with the trauma by her voice, the sound of her car pulling up at my grandma’s house, the anxiety of whether or not she’ll show up at a family event. When I hear a wheeze that sounds like hers, smell a body odor that reminds me of her, see a Justice product, a vulture circling overhead, or smell the rotten, earthy aroma of decaying food, coffee grinds, and egg shells, the place it takes me back to will be but a distant memory. I craved that in those days of unknown, and I self-flagellate at the acknowledgement of my disappointment. I want to be free of her. I don’t want to tell my family. I just want to be free. I want my son to know my grandmother. I want him to have a father. I want to be free. I am trapped.