Voices

Embracing the complications

‘I felt pressure to delete this photo from the family archive, thinking that was the right thing to do’

WILLIAMSVILLE — I have more to say about my grandfather since last fall, when I wrote both about him sexually abusing me and about Vermont Public Radio not allowing me to say so in a radio commentary.

First of all, admitting this abuse took place has helped me see the long half-life of childhood, familial, sexual abuse on my personality and the damaging effects of my subsequent half-century of silence.

Secondly, I learned how that abuse groomed me to be taken advantage of. So I'm perversely grateful to the radio station for protecting my grandfather at my expense, because I finally recognized this as the sort of abuse by people in power that I've allowed throughout my life - until now.

* * *

Recently, my brothers, husband, and children went through my parents' thousands of slides, deciding which to digitize. We came across photos of this grandfather.

Each time his likeness appeared on the screen, my oldest brother asked, “Your call,” leaving it to me to decide if we should keep this image.

There was an image of him holding me as a baby - long before the abuse began. And images of him later in life, after it stopped.

I felt pressure to delete this photo from the family archive, thinking that was the right thing to do.

“Scrap it,” I said.

* * *

It turned out that it was easier to digitize the entire carousel of slides rather than cherry pick the ones we'd selected to keep. And I was relieved that the images of this man survived. Because as much as I hate what he did, I loved him. And this is what can make such intimate abuse so confusing and hard.

I was his only granddaughter until the very end of his life, and he was kind to me. He taught me how to draw by copying the cartoons out of The New Yorker. Even though he controlled his diabetes with a strict diet, he helped me bake, gladly washing the dishes, and without even tasting whatever I'd made would say, “It tastes delicious - I can tell by just looking!”

In no way do I condone his abuse, but neither do I want to erase the time before. It feels as important to say, “I loved him,” as it is to say, “He abused me.”

This is part of what makes familial abuse so confusing and confession feel like betrayal.

But when is ordinary human behavior only good or evil? And if we erase the good with the bad, what else do we lose?

The short answer: our humanity.

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