avatarFrank Ontario | empathy, logic, love.

Summary

The author recounts a childhood experience of feeling protected by Jesus Christ, which led to carving His name on a bureau, and later connects this event to unspoken knowledge of abuse within the family.

Abstract

In a personal narrative, the author describes a profound encounter with Jesus Christ at the age of four, which prompted them to carve the name "Jesus" into a bureau drawer. Despite the visible damage, the author's parents never acknowledged the incident, contrasting with their usual disciplinary approach. Years later, during a visit to his parents' home, the author makes a light-hearted comment about the "Jesus drawer," receiving an unusual reaction from his father. This triggers a series of realizations and memories about past abuse, which are further explored in therapy. The author ultimately chooses not to confront his parents about the abuse, especially after his father's diagnosis with a terminal illness and subsequent passing. Nine months after his father's death, the author feels a sense of reconciliation when he believes his father's spirit asks for forgiveness.

Opinions

  • The author initially believes the visitation from Jesus Christ to be a dream but realizes it was significant when they see the carving on the bureau.
  • There is an implication that the author's parents were aware of the abuse (the "Jesus drawer" incident being a metaphor for the unspoken knowledge) but chose to ignore it.
  • The author's decision not to confront his parents about the past abuse suggests a complex mix of emotions and the prioritization of his father's health and remaining time over the need for resolution.
  • The author seems to find some closure after sensing his father's spirit seeking forgiveness, indicating a belief in spiritual communication and healing beyond the physical realm.

Knowing They Know that You Know

Keeping the Secret Anyway Under Mitigating Circumstances

Photo by David Clode on Unsplash

In 1955

When I was four years old, Jesus Christ visited me in the dead of night. In my mind, I asked for his protection. I saw and felt him put his palm in my body. I’ve felt protected since. So excited, I rose, found a bit of glass on the floor and with it scratched:

Recreation of a 4-year-old having defaced a bureau in 1955 | by the author

I carved it in the top drawer of my bureau. The “J” was backwards and the rest of the letters were wonky, (hardly surprising considering my age, the hard wood of the bureau and a small bit of sharp glass as my carving/writing tool.)

“Wow, what a dream.”

But when I looked at the bureau and saw what I had done, I knew it was not a dream. I knew I would be in trouble for scratching up the furniture.

My parents never said a word about it. They pretended it wasn’t there. They never looked at it. When I drew on the television screen with crayon, my mom yelled and screamed at me, so it wasn’t like they weren’t into the punishment thing.

36 years later

I was visiting M & D (Mom and Dad) at their new house in a coastal town on Long Island Sound in Connecticut. My father was using my old bureau to story his income taxes. The top drawer was open, I saw folders of old tax files.

“Oh look, you’re using the ‘Jesus drawer’ to protect your taxes,” I said venturing a joke. Normally I’d get one of two responses: a sarcastic “very funny” or a grunt. Neither of them occurred. Instead I received a rigid tightening of all his muscles and then an exhalation as I moved on.

I didn’t think anything of it at the time.

The “Jesus Drawer”

It wasn’t until I flew back to California and had a flashback that my uncle raped me when I was four years old and subsequent events, that sense came from the “Jesus Drawer”. A few years later, in therapy, the “other events” surrounding the “Jesus Drawer” emerged out of my first EMDR session. My father got drunk and he…

In 2000 visiting M & D at their home in North Carolina. My plan was to confront them about “the Jesus drawer” aka the abuse. When I arrived, it wasn’t there. I asked my father about it.

“I got rid of it,” he said. But he kept other furniture that was as funky as or more funky than the bureau. His doctor had told him that the Pulmonary Fibrosis was getting worse. His breathing was not yet labored. Given his disease and five or six years he had left, I decided not to mention Elephants in the Room.

I visited him in ’05 when he had accepted the need for oxygen and then with my sister in early ’06. In September of ’06 he passed on my birthday.

Nine Months Later

His spirit asked for my forgiveness while I was making my dinner. I was relieved that he had acknowledged the abuse and everything else:

Thanks to Diana C. for the inadvertent prompt from: When Your Family Asks Why You’re in Therapy.

Incest
Dysfunctional Family
Life Lessons
Spirituality
Therapy
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