Today the pain is loud.
It reaches beyond my body and touches places that have been waiting a lifetime to be seen. Physical pain has a way of opening doors I didn’t even know were still locked. Behind them lives a little girl who learned far too early that her body was not entirely her own.
As I sit with the pain, memories do not always arrive as photographs. Sometimes they arrive as sensations, as fear, as a story written in my nervous system rather than in my mind.
My rights as a child were violated.
I was not allowed to have a voice. I was not allowed to have needs. Feelings were dangerous. Even tears could invite punishment. Fear became my first language, and silence became the safest place I knew.
I believe something happened to me when I was very young. I cannot point to a memory or prove it with certainty. What I know is what my body has carried for decades—the fear, the shame, the feeling of being disconnected from my own body. Those sensations have spoken long before words ever could.
For years I wondered why I felt ashamed of something I could not name.
Now I understand that children often carry emotions that never belonged to them.
I also spent much of my life believing I had failed my sister.
I carried guilt that was never mine to carry. Yet when I look back with gentler eyes, I can see that my trust was broken. She lied to get me into trouble. She took things that belonged to me. She often positioned herself as the victim, and somehow I accepted the role of the one who had failed.
That burden followed me into adulthood.
It is only now that I am beginning to lay it down.
My brother never left me with that same confusion. I never knew him to intentionally cause harm to me or to anyone else. His presence reminds me that not every relationship was built on fear.
I also remember believing I was selfish because that was the message I absorbed from my mother.
But how can a child be selfish when she never asks for anything?
The contradictions have taken years to untangle.
Slowly, patiently, the scattered pieces of my life are finding one another. The picture is becoming clearer, even when it hurts to see.
The deepest truth is not that I was broken.
The deepest truth is that I adapted in order to survive.
I grew to love my sister.
I grew to love my parents.
In time, I forgave them all.
But love does not rewrite history.
Forgiveness does not ask me to deny what happened.
The truth still lives.
And finally…
So do I.