Today is my daughter's 10th birthday. She received a sweet (and comical) message on the answering machine from her two older sisters (21 and 22) singing Happy Birthday to her, adding their entertaining well wishes at the end. (You can see/listen to that here.) She also received a card and check in the mail from her grandparents and a gift certificate to McDonald's from her dad. What seems like the highlight of her gifts today (something she has only seen given to me thus far in her decade of life) is a dozen beautiful pink roses...also a gift from her dad.
When I came home from picking up our son from work, I saw the exquisite bouquet on the counter and knew immediately how special she must feel for receiving a gift like that from the man in her life. She came out beaming, exclaiming how excited she was for all of her gifts, showing off the card, check, gift card and then roses. After sharing her excitement with her, I went to my room where I found this note and a rose laying on my laptop.
What kind of daughter does this? My kind of daughter! Love like this is the stuff dreams are made of. :)
Monday, December 7, 2009
My Abiding Affection for Amtrak – and Why
Some people make an impact on you that lasts a lifetime. For me, a company did that. This post isn’t about marketing, PR, social media, brand loyalty or reputation building. What I’m about to share is deeply personal - something I rarely discuss without breaking down and crying.
When I was 19 years old, I had been married for a year, had a one-year old daughter and was pregnant with my second child. My marriage was a mistake from the beginning, marrying a man I barely knew who just happened to be the only one showing me attention at a time I desperately needed someone. I met him two months after my mother had died and only weeks after I had dropped out of college, moved back home and found my boyfriend at the time had been cheating on me with multiple girls. Rebound is an understatement. I was a lost little girl with no home and no support system.
The marriage was rocky from the beginning. We were young, hardly knew each and very incompatible. Bad went to worse as infidelity and abuse began, escalating at an alarming rate. (The climax of that escalation is the subject of My Season in the Darkness of Domestic Violence.) It was early 1988 when I first left my (then) husband. My baby was not even six months old, and I was pregnant with her younger sister as his increasing physical abuse prompted me to seek refuge. Though I lived 30 minutes from the home I had grown up in, I didn’t run there.
It was complicated. It didn’t feel like home anymore with my mother gone, and I didn’t think I was welcome. My dad didn’t know what to do with his life, much less how to help me. He had done his own grieving and quickly shifted his focus from grieving to moving forward with his life. (This was how he coped.) At this time, my dad was a newlywed, dealing with his own transitions with his wife and their new life together with my two younger brothers in the home. I knew it would be placing too much strain on his young marriage to ask to go there. So I called my Aunt Bobbie – a woman who exudes love, warmth and welcome to all who cross her path. People like this always feel like home. And Aunt Bobbie felt like home when I had no home.
She lived in Virginia; I lived in California. I was a broke, pregnant young mother with baby in tote, trying to flee an abusive husband. My method of transportation? Train. My friend took me to the Amtrak station and purchased my ticket – a seat in coach. After spending all night on the train in a seat with an infant on my lap, I was exhausted. I had a couple more days left to go, and I knew I wouldn’t make it sitting in that seat for two more nights with my daughter on my lap. On a stop the morning after my first night on the train, I inquired about upgrading from a seat to a room. The price was something in the $400’s. Though I knew I had no way to pay for it, I also knew I couldn’t make the rest of the trip without being able to sleep and lay my baby down. So I decided to do something I never in my privileged upbringing thought I would do…I wrote a bad check. I wrote a check knowing full well I didn’t have the money to cover it. But I was desperate. For me, this was one of those “desperate times call for desperate measures” moments.
My father didn’t know I had left California. I called him from Virginia telling him what was going on and that I was at Aunt Bobbie’s. His words to me were, “Oh good. That’s the best place you can be.” Though I agreed, there was a sting in those words – a reminder that I really didn’t have a home with him anymore. When my mom died, so did my home. After he said those words to me, I knew it wasn't just my sense that I might be a disruption to his life --- it was his feeling as well. I knew I was in the best place I could be with Aunt Bobbie, but it didn’t hurt any less to be reminded that I had no home.
After repentant, remorseful begging from my (then) husband, I left my Aunt Bobbie and returned to California. What I went back to was a recurring cycle of a mentally and physically abusive relationship (abuse, apology, abuse, apology, abuse, apology).
Enter Amtrak
Not long after returning from Virginia, I received the notice from Amtrak for the bounced check. Penniless, in a turbulently destructive relationship back in California with my abuser, caring for an infant, pregnant with another baby, utterly alone with no friends or family for a support structure, I sat down and wrote a letter to Amtrak.
I don’t remember the details of all that I wrote - I just know I poured my heart out. You'd have thought I was writing my mom the way I shared my heart in that letter to Amtrak. In retrospect, I think writing that letter was my only outlet to tell someone about my life, to express how lost and alone I was. I was drowning, just trying to survive. That letter to Amtrak was my distress call to the universe, begging for help as I was sinking. Throughout the letter, I apologized repeatedly, promising to pay them back as fast as I could.
Amtrak wrote me back. They told me I could pay them back in monthly installments of whatever amount I could afford. Though I don't remember the details of what else was in that letter, I know that what I received from it was kindness, care and compassion. Amtrak became a human presence in my life by showing me compassion when I needed it most. It’s 20 years later, and I still remember "Amtrak Revenue Accounting" - the first line of the address to which I faithfully sent $25 per month until they were paid in full. With each payment I made, I felt a profound sense of gratitude for Amtrak.
To this day, I still feel an abiding affection for Amtrak. The truth is, my letter to Amtrak wasn’t a business letter. It was a human being crying out for help. And when I was suffocating in distress and it seemed no one else in the world was there for me, Amtrak was. Their beneficence towards me in my time of trauma, turmoil and isolation translated into me feeling loved. This is what makes me cry. To think of the lost girl so desperate for love that she found it in the compassion of a corporation makes me well up. At that time in my life I felt more loved by Amtrak than any other entity on earth. It's so sad to say it, but it’s true.
Amtrak – the corporation – showed compassion to a woman hanging by a thread. Now that woman is writing about it 20 years later, with tears in her eyes. That’s a lasting impact.
Photo credits: helppo , HungryHungry
When I was 19 years old, I had been married for a year, had a one-year old daughter and was pregnant with my second child. My marriage was a mistake from the beginning, marrying a man I barely knew who just happened to be the only one showing me attention at a time I desperately needed someone. I met him two months after my mother had died and only weeks after I had dropped out of college, moved back home and found my boyfriend at the time had been cheating on me with multiple girls. Rebound is an understatement. I was a lost little girl with no home and no support system.
The marriage was rocky from the beginning. We were young, hardly knew each and very incompatible. Bad went to worse as infidelity and abuse began, escalating at an alarming rate. (The climax of that escalation is the subject of My Season in the Darkness of Domestic Violence.) It was early 1988 when I first left my (then) husband. My baby was not even six months old, and I was pregnant with her younger sister as his increasing physical abuse prompted me to seek refuge. Though I lived 30 minutes from the home I had grown up in, I didn’t run there.
It was complicated. It didn’t feel like home anymore with my mother gone, and I didn’t think I was welcome. My dad didn’t know what to do with his life, much less how to help me. He had done his own grieving and quickly shifted his focus from grieving to moving forward with his life. (This was how he coped.) At this time, my dad was a newlywed, dealing with his own transitions with his wife and their new life together with my two younger brothers in the home. I knew it would be placing too much strain on his young marriage to ask to go there. So I called my Aunt Bobbie – a woman who exudes love, warmth and welcome to all who cross her path. People like this always feel like home. And Aunt Bobbie felt like home when I had no home.
She lived in Virginia; I lived in California. I was a broke, pregnant young mother with baby in tote, trying to flee an abusive husband. My method of transportation? Train. My friend took me to the Amtrak station and purchased my ticket – a seat in coach. After spending all night on the train in a seat with an infant on my lap, I was exhausted. I had a couple more days left to go, and I knew I wouldn’t make it sitting in that seat for two more nights with my daughter on my lap. On a stop the morning after my first night on the train, I inquired about upgrading from a seat to a room. The price was something in the $400’s. Though I knew I had no way to pay for it, I also knew I couldn’t make the rest of the trip without being able to sleep and lay my baby down. So I decided to do something I never in my privileged upbringing thought I would do…I wrote a bad check. I wrote a check knowing full well I didn’t have the money to cover it. But I was desperate. For me, this was one of those “desperate times call for desperate measures” moments.
My father didn’t know I had left California. I called him from Virginia telling him what was going on and that I was at Aunt Bobbie’s. His words to me were, “Oh good. That’s the best place you can be.” Though I agreed, there was a sting in those words – a reminder that I really didn’t have a home with him anymore. When my mom died, so did my home. After he said those words to me, I knew it wasn't just my sense that I might be a disruption to his life --- it was his feeling as well. I knew I was in the best place I could be with Aunt Bobbie, but it didn’t hurt any less to be reminded that I had no home.
After repentant, remorseful begging from my (then) husband, I left my Aunt Bobbie and returned to California. What I went back to was a recurring cycle of a mentally and physically abusive relationship (abuse, apology, abuse, apology, abuse, apology).
Enter Amtrak
Not long after returning from Virginia, I received the notice from Amtrak for the bounced check. Penniless, in a turbulently destructive relationship back in California with my abuser, caring for an infant, pregnant with another baby, utterly alone with no friends or family for a support structure, I sat down and wrote a letter to Amtrak.
I don’t remember the details of all that I wrote - I just know I poured my heart out. You'd have thought I was writing my mom the way I shared my heart in that letter to Amtrak. In retrospect, I think writing that letter was my only outlet to tell someone about my life, to express how lost and alone I was. I was drowning, just trying to survive. That letter to Amtrak was my distress call to the universe, begging for help as I was sinking. Throughout the letter, I apologized repeatedly, promising to pay them back as fast as I could.
Amtrak wrote me back. They told me I could pay them back in monthly installments of whatever amount I could afford. Though I don't remember the details of what else was in that letter, I know that what I received from it was kindness, care and compassion. Amtrak became a human presence in my life by showing me compassion when I needed it most. It’s 20 years later, and I still remember "Amtrak Revenue Accounting" - the first line of the address to which I faithfully sent $25 per month until they were paid in full. With each payment I made, I felt a profound sense of gratitude for Amtrak.
To this day, I still feel an abiding affection for Amtrak. The truth is, my letter to Amtrak wasn’t a business letter. It was a human being crying out for help. And when I was suffocating in distress and it seemed no one else in the world was there for me, Amtrak was. Their beneficence towards me in my time of trauma, turmoil and isolation translated into me feeling loved. This is what makes me cry. To think of the lost girl so desperate for love that she found it in the compassion of a corporation makes me well up. At that time in my life I felt more loved by Amtrak than any other entity on earth. It's so sad to say it, but it’s true.
Amtrak – the corporation – showed compassion to a woman hanging by a thread. Now that woman is writing about it 20 years later, with tears in her eyes. That’s a lasting impact.
Photo credits: helppo , HungryHungry
Labels:
alone,
desperate,
domestic violence,
fleeing abuser,
grieving,
husband cheating,
lost,
trauma,
young mother
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