--love for the one who does not love you, but mocks, threatens, and inflicts pain. The tortured's love for the torturer. This is God's love. It conquers the world.
from Frederick Buechner's The Magnificent Defeat
Unfortunately, I just witnessed my youngest sister being punished. Leather belt style.
I'm at my parents' house for the next few days, which is always a nervous situation for me. There's a risk to coming here. But still, I keep coming.
Growing up, I, too, received the belt treatment. I don't think there's anything wrong with that traditional southern discipline. I only know that a tool like that would be dangerous in my hands, that my kids will never receive that kind of discipline from me. For their sake, and for mine, I can never employ that. But in my parents' house, my mother enacted the policy that we would receive the belt for every transgression. There was no set number of lashes; the whipping stopped once you cried. My other younger sister, closer to me in age, learned the lesson early on: the sooner you cry, the quicker your punishment ends. But I was a prideful girl, more stubborn than I am today, and I refused to cry. Needless to say, my punishment only ended when the welts were criss-crossed and my dad's arm grew tired. Dad would even whisper to me "just cry, Nik, fake it, your mom will never know. Don't be bull-headed". I pity my dad in all this. He's a good man. But my mom has always used him as her tool. He hated enforcing the belt. But I remember the sting of the belt, my teeth scraping as I grit them against the pain, and the heat of unshed tears behind my eyes. Yett those punishments were nothing compared to the un-prompted, outright abuse that my mom poured out on me.
So tonight, when my littlest sister was punished, I couldn't help but pity her. She gave my parents horrible lip, had an attitude when she argued, and completely disrespected them. So I can't deny that she needed to be disciplined. But as my dad went to fetch the belt, I could feel my stomach twisting in knots; I didn't want to witness what was about to happen. Yet, as my dad hit my sister, he barely grazed her. My sister never winced, didn't cry out, never shed a tear, and when it was over she merely stormed away. It didn't even hurt her.
And a part of me got angry. It's so unfair that my siblings are treated better. That things are always easier for them when I was twice as well behaved as they are when I was their age. For the smallest second I grew very bitter and my heart hardened. Some people would call this righteous anger. But then, once my mom sent my littlest sister to bed after her punishment, mom turns to me and jokingly says "don't you remember when that was you". And I laughed it off but, yes, I remember all too well. And that comment made me realize, that my siblings are blessed to have gone through only a measure of what I endured. That I have always been glad to know things aren't as rough for them as they were for me. How could I, in one tiny moment, forget that relief I've come to know? I am ashamed of myself.
So, at times, it's weird for me to be here at my parents'. There are memories ingrained in these cement walls that I would rather forget. And I'm always on edge, tip-toeing around tempers. And I come back home to school a nervous, jumpy shadow. Because, occasionally, things still happen here. But I keep coming to my parents' house. Because I love my family. All of them. And no amount of physical pain could ever stop me from loving.
I have always said that my huge capacity to love is my one redeeming quality, Mayhap, it is my curse also.