Authors: Jean Davison
LOOKING BACK 6
â
Y
OUR DAD TRIED TO
strangle me.'
Mum was sitting on the garden wall, crying, in the middle of the night. I found her there after Dad jerked me from sleep by dragging me out of bed. He barricaded himself in my bedroom, with furniture up against the door.
â
Strangle you? Oh, don't be so dramatic.'
â
It's true. And that's your father who you think is so wonderful!'
I stood shivering on the doorstep in my pink, baby-doll pyjamas. âIt's cold and dark out here. Come inside, Mum.'
â
Not yet.'
I hesitated, then stumbled towards her, wincing as I stepped from cool, damp grass on to sharp pieces of grit. I heaved myself up to sit on the wall beside her, my bare feet dangling above the gravel path. Slipping my arm around her shoulders I let her sob against my chest. But I didn't believe what she'd just told me. I couldn't.
Over the next few days my bedroom remained barricaded. I could hear Dad crying inside. My parents were cracking up. Whom could I talk to? There had never been any other significant adults in my life. No family gatherings, no kisses and cuddles from grandparents, aunts, uncles. As a child I'd been taken to visit my grandparents but remembered no affection from them. They were dead now except for my mother's father, an alcoholic.
So whom could I talk to? Certainly not Brian, who tapped on milk bottles and jingled coins. Who could help my parents? I stared at the living room wall where a watery boiled egg Dad had thrown had splattered down the wallpaper and Mum's attempt to wipe it off had made it worse. âIt has to be me,' I whispered. âThere is only me.'
I went upstairs and listened, nervously, outside the barricaded door. I knocked lightly. No reply. âIt's me, Dad,' I called.
â
Go away,' came an anguished voice from inside.
â
OK, but I'll come back later. I want to talk to you.'
My aim was to be gently persistent. This approach worked for I was subsequently admitted several times over the next few days. I sat on the bed next to him and held him in my arms while he broke down and cried. His pain became my pain. At first we didn't say much: we just hugged. I was fourteen and still innocently unaware that such physical and emotional closeness as ours could be unhealthy.
â
I feel worthless and guilty, and â¦' his voice trembled, â⦠and scared, Jean. Really scared.'
â
Scared?'
â
Yes. Of losing control. Hitting your mum or summat.'
â
But you wouldn't really harm her, would you?' I asked anxiously.
He sobbed while I held him tight.
â
I'm no good. Did you know I was a thief? One day in my teens I cycled to a church meeting on a stolen bike with a jar of stolen meat paste in my pocket. Something happened to me in that meeting, Jean. I felt the presence of God; it's hard to explain. I repented in tears and became a Christian.' He paused. The room was silent except for our breathing. âIt was good,' he continued, âfor a long time.' He sighed.
I was waiting for the âbut'. I knew there'd be a âbut'.
â
But then I got in with a bad crowd and started sleeping around and stealing again. I've been in prison for house-breaking. Your mother was too good for me but I dragged her down into the gutter with me. Do you still love me, Jean, now that I've told you these things, now that you know I really am no good?'
I kissed him on his cheek in reply.
â
You understand me much better than your mother,' he said.
We cuddled up close, as we used to do when I was a little girl.
After a while, he rolled over to face the wall and wept. I stood up, feeling sticky-hot, and smoothed my school uniform.
â
Tell me what to do, Jean. I wonder if I should see a doctor.'
â
Oh yes, Dad. Let's try that.'
Dad was admitted to a dermatology ward. His ânerves' were aggravating, if not causing, a crippling skin condition; angry sores covered his feet and he couldn't walk. Away from the suffocating tensions of home, he seemed much better.
It was when I visited Dad in hospital that I first experienced a strange sensation. I knew where I was and what I was doing but my head, arms, legs, my whole body and everything around me in the brightly lit ward seemed unreal, as if I was in a dream. After about half an hour this weird dream feeling lifted, but I was left anxiously wondering what was wrong with me.
I absconded from school at break one afternoon when the dream feeling came on strongly, and I spent the rest of the day sitting on my bench in the cemetery. The empty feeling in my stomach told me when it was teatime and I slowly ate my toffee bar.
Last night Dad had woken me up to send me to the âbig bed'. A lot of shouting was going on downstairs and I heard a scream, followed by a silence that was even more worrying than the noise. I'd strained to listen, alert and tense, my head buzzing with questions and fears. The front door slammed. And then a long silence, broken only by the sounds of the night â a tap dripping, a dog's bark, a creak in the floorboards, a distant car, wind against the window. A heavy pain hung darkly at the back of my eyes. It throbbed more violently on each of the several times I got out of bed during the night. But I had to keep getting up and tiptoeing to the landing window to see if Mum was still sitting on the garden wall. In the morning Dad told me how he'd gone for Mum with a stick but ended up crying at the thought of what he'd been about to do.
I screwed up my toffee-bar paper and stuffed it into my blazer pocket. The pain behind my eyes was still there. Rubbing my forehead helped to ease it, but I was so tired. Clutching my satchel to my stomach I stared from my bench at the row upon row of headstones. Nobody was in sight; there was nothing to disturb the peace and quiet. The beauty of the white and pink carnations on the nearest grave lifted my spirits. The world might be splintering but here in the healing calmness of this place, with lovely flowers for company, I was safe. A sudden chill in the air broke the spell and reminded me that I had more to think about than pretty flowers. Dad was not normally a violent man although I remembered that once, at Madras Street, he'd bruised Brian with his belt. Recently he'd told me how he feared losing control. Well, supposing he did lose control? What would he do?
And what was I to do? I didn't want to go home. School was unbearable. I was too damn shy to breathe. And now, on top of it all, Dad had told me to decide who I wanted to live with â âher or me?' How could I even try to choose between them? I hated being fourteen and too young to leave home. Dare I run away? Where to?
The following day I thought my absence at yesterday's last lesson hadn't been noticed when Mr Clark said nothing to me while calling the register. But as the class filed out he stopped me at the door.
â
Why weren't you at your last lesson yesterday?'
â
I felt funny, sir, so I went home.'
â
Why didn't you tell a teacher if you felt unwell?'
â
I ⦠I don't know, sir.'
â
You don't know!' he said, placing his hands on his hips, which made his black robe billow out. His dark, beady eyes blazed and the image of a black barrel which had sprung to mind was replaced by that of a mad monk. âYou don't know!' he said again, this time emphasising each world slowly as his head wobbled from side to side. âWell, you'd better think long and hard about it, hadn't you?'
â
Yes, sir.'
â
When you're at school, you're in our care. You can't just take off when you please. Can you?'
â
No, sir.'
I thought I'd got off lightly but a few days later a letter arrived for my parents asking them to visit the headmaster.
â
Do you know what this is about?' Dad asked.
â
I think so. You know that dream feeling I told you about? I got it at school and I left early without permission.'
â
Well, you shouldn't have,' my mother said, âbut I don't know why he wants us to see him. What can we tell him?'
â
Tell him I want to go down into the A2 class,' I said.
Mum was sympathetic to this. She'd seen my diary. I was annoyed that she'd read it without asking, but pleased that she'd shown some interest in what was going on in my life.
A few days later I was sitting opposite the headmaster in his office staring at the carpet.
â
I won't bite if you look at me,' he said. I raised my eyes high enough to notice some copies of my reports on his desk. âI've just had your parents here. They tell me you're unhappy in your class. Is that right?'
â
Yes, sir.'
â
Why is that?'
â
I ⦠I don't know, sir.' Ironically I was too shy to tell him about my shyness, but I thought he must know about that anyway.
â
Would you like to go back down into the A2 form?'
â
Oh yes please,' I said, hope rising in me. My friend, Mandy, was in that class.
â
I've been looking through your reports,' he said, rustling the papers on his desk, âand your school work is good. We put you in the highest form because we felt you could cope with the work and we were right. You've no need to worry. You're doing fine.'
I shuffled uncomfortably in my seat.
â
Look at it this way. Suppose you were running in a race competing with the best ten runners and you came fifth. You'd have reason to feel more pleased with yourself than if you came first in a race without a good runner. In fact, there'd be no point running in a race without a good runner, would there?'
â
No, sir,' I said, my eyes on the carpet.
â
Well then, that's why you are in the highest form competing with the brightest children in the school. Do you understand?'
I did not understand. What was the use of being capable of getting good marks in English and History if I wasn't capable of talking to my fellow human beings?
â
I ⦠I don't know, sir,' I said, as the blue circles on the carpet danced and spun dizzily before my eyes.
â
Listen, I'll explain it again,' he said, and he launched into an explanation of the runner metaphor, linking it only with academic capabilities and competition.
â
Do you understand now?' he asked.
â
Yes, sir.'
â
So don't worry. There's no problem. I'm pleased with your work. Just keep doing your best, won't you?'
â
Yes, sir.'
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
âH
AVE YOU DECIDED ABOUT
us getting married?' Mike whispered as he leant over and kissed me tenderly. âI love you.'
A drunken man in a cowboy hat bumped into our table, spilling some of my lager. âMike, I've told you I don't want to think about marriage,' I said, mopping the spillage with a beer mat. âAnyway, how can you say you love me when you don't even know me?'
âDon't know you? I've been going out with you for a year.'
âThere's lots of things about me you don't know.'
âDon't tell me, I'll guess. You're married with ten kids and you're a nymphomaniac.'
âOh, shucks! My secret is out,' I said, covering my face in mock shame and horror. We grinned.
âDo you love me?' Mike asked, becoming serious again.
âI like you a lot as a friend, but â¦'
âI'm going to start a new life in New Zealand,' he announced.
âNew Zealand?'
âYes. I've been making enquiries. I did hope we'd get married but if that's not to be, there's nothing to keep me in England.'
âI suppose it's best to stop seeing each other now,' I said, my voice probably conveying less emotion than I was feeling. It's hard to say goodbye to a friend.
âI don't see why,' he said. âWe can go out together till I leave, can't we? As just good friends, I mean. No strings attached.'
âYes, I ⦠I suppose so,' I said.
Mike proved firm in his intention to emigrate. Despite the âno strings attached' he kept trying to persuade me to go too, even right up to the time we kissed goodbye, promising to write. I was leading a double life with Mike in that he thought I was still working at Dobson's. He knew nothing about my hospital life. Now he need never know.
Meanwhile, life at the day hospital settled into a routine. After my first week Mr Jordan cancelled my ambulance. He said there seemed no reason why I shouldn't travel on the bus, and I readily agreed. My new doctor was Dr Copeland, though I gathered Dr Shaw was in overall charge of the treatment of day patients.
Mr Jordan showed me into the little office on the first floor and introduced me to Dr Copeland, a stocky dark-haired man sitting at a desk by the window.
âSit down,' Dr Copeland said to me. âI'm just reading your case notes.'
I sat opposite the doctor at his desk, while Mr Jordan sat by the door.
Dr Copeland looked up from reading and asked with a grin, âAm I going to hell because I'm an atheist?'
I took it that he hadn't meant this as a serious question so I didn't bother to answer. He began doodling on a notepad which had some red lettering printed across the top and, in idle curiosity, I strained my eyes to make out what it said. I managed to read: âMogadon â The Mark Of Good Sleep'.
âWell? Am I going to hell?'
âHow do I know where you're going?' I said, feeling irritable.
He glanced across at Mr Jordan, and they laughed.
I wondered if they thought I was a religious fanatic, though I couldn't see how questioning and losing my beliefs could fit me for that category â quite the opposite I would have thought. It didn't take me long to decide that nothing was being meant unkindly and, as I tried to describe my sadness and confusion to them, I discovered that I hadn't lost the ability to laugh at myself.
Therapy at the day hospital was usually led by two student nurses and took the form of group games like the one organised by Sue on my first day, and activities such as handicrafts, dominoes and draughts. Some of the day patients, myself included, were sent to join the in-patients at the OT block in the main hospital for a few hours a day.
In summer I was taken out occasionally with some in-patients from the OT block to the nearby town of Otley. I became immune to the stares of passers-by as we ambled along in twos, a nurse in front of the crocodile and two more keeping watch from behind. As we passed a fruit stall in the market, one of the long-stay patients, Amy, casually picked up a shiny red apple and began eating it. The nurses didn't notice but an irate assistant did.
âHey! You! What d'yer think yer doin'?'
Amy wandered on, obliviously, munching her apple.
âShe's a thief!' the fat woman in a white apron screeched.
If the passers-by hadn't been staring at us before, they were now.
The nurse from the back of the line rushed up to Amy. âWhat
are
you playing at? Give it back and apologise.'
She frogmarched Amy to the assistant on the stall. Amy took another bite of the apple before placing it among the others on display.
âDo yer think I can sell that now? Do yer?' This was addressed to the nurse, since Amy didn't seem to know or care what the fuss was about.
âI'm really sorry,' the nurse said, unzipping her purse.
After that, we shuffled along a bit further, while the nurse gave Amy a long-winded sermon about not taking things that didn't belong to her.
âBuy your Beatles pictures here,' a man with a Beatles haircut who looked at least in his forties announced. âGet your big colour photos of the Fab Four.'
âThe Beatles split up last year,' a young man in a âThe Who' T-shirt informed him as he sauntered past.
âSo what?' the man on the stall called after him.
âLet go. Move on.'
I stopped to watch a group of mini-skirted teenage girls who were dancing by the side of this stall and singing âAll You Need Is Love'. I guessed some of us who grew up in the Beatles era would never be able to let go and move on. A part of me longed to join in the fun and be just another ordinary teenager again.
âC'mon, you. Stop dawdling,' the nurse admonished me.
No going back.
On another trip to Otley, a nurse praised me profusely, in earshot of a shop assistant and people in the queue, for counting out the correct amount of money to pay for a bar of chocolate. I wanted to protest that I wasn't mentally retarded, but perhaps this would have been a tactless remark to make in front of the group of patients I was with that day. This random mixing of two sets of patients with quite different needs, the âmentally ill' and the âmentally handicapped' (as they were then called) for want of better terminology, seemed to me to be not good for either set of patients, or the staff.
I remembered from my stay as an in-patient the many instances I'd seen or experienced where staff talked down to patients. I wondered if, in my case, my shy, passive behaviour contributed to this. On the other hand, it did seem a no-win situation because our reactions to humiliating circumstances, whether of anger, rebellion or withdrawal, could be interpreted by staff as evidence of âmental illness' no matter how justifiable our responses might be. Rebellious patients could be broken into submission through stronger drugs, more ECT and psychological cruelty, but there was an equally high price to be paid by those of us who accepted the psychiatric view of ourselves as âsick' and co-operated with treatment. Brainwashing techniques, aided by both physical and psychological means, at a time when a person is already weak, unhappy and vulnerable, can be extremely effective. Although a part of my drugged, assaulted mind was sometimes critical about what was going on, I still, for the most part, quietly complied.
I often passed a door at OT that bore the label âGroup Therapy'. What went on in this room? Were interesting discussions organised? Were patients encouraged to form a kind of self-help group, perhaps? I felt curiously optimistic when told to join the group of patients in that room one afternoon.
The patients inside, however, seemed severely disturbed or drugged out of their senses. The woman sitting next to me kept tugging at her hair while moaning softly to herself. There were about seven of us, including the therapist, a slim, blonde girl of about nineteen who wore beetle-shaped earrings. I wondered what we were going to do. The man sitting opposite me didn't seem interested in doing anything except masturbating.
âLet's first get to know each other's names,' said the therapist, who was sitting on a chair in the middle of the group with a pile of newspapers in her lap. âI'm Christine.' She went round the group getting our names and wrote them down on a notepad. Then she gave each of us a newspaper. And not just the tabloids; mine was a âquality' newspaper. The mystery deepened. Whatever were we going to do? I would have liked to join a group where we could discuss issues arising from newspaper articles; something to help my bruised mind to think again. Being encouraged to participate in group discussion might also have helped me overcome shyness. But, no, this group had definitely not been put together for a discussion of current affairs.
âJack! Stop eating your paper!' Christine said to an elderly, dazed-looking man who was busily engaged in chewing the corner of a page.
Christine glanced round at us and clapped her hands for attention. âCan you see where the pages are numbered?' she asked. âEveryone have a look at the numbers at the bottom of the pages. Can you all see them? Right, now listen carefully. These pages have been mixed up, so what does that mean? It means that the numbers don't follow on in the correct order. Let's see who will be the quickest at putting their newspaper into the correct order. Find page number one first, and then page numbers two, three, four, five and so on. Put the pages so that the numbers run on. Spread them out on the floor if you like. Do you all understand what you've to do? OK? Ready. Steady. GO!'
Everyone began sorting out their papers except the masturbator, the paper-eater and myself. I didn't move because I was preoccupied with something else, something more important.
Ignoring the other two dissenters, Christine addressed me: âCome on, Jean. You understand, don't you?'
Caught off guard, I almost blurted out, âNo. I don't understand.'
What I didn't understand was how, merely by confiding in a psychiatrist in my teens that I was confused about religion and disillusioned with life, I had got myself into all this.
My therapy routine included three mornings a week at the Office Skills class but, as when I was an in-patient, I was too drugged and unmotivated to benefit. I plodded through shorthand exercises taking in more of my depressing surroundings than of the symbols I was supposed to be learning. As far as learning shorthand goes, I was wasting my time. But about human misery, for what good it would do me, I was learning a lot.
There was Nina, a shy-looking teenager with long black hair and large brown eyes, who sought the help of Mrs Taylor, the typing teacher, to explain what her Ward Sister meant by describing her as âinadequate'. Nina was wanting to leave home and get a flat after her discharge from hospital.
âSister says I'll never be able to cope in a flat because I'm inadequate. What does “inadequate” mean?' Nina asked the kindly Mrs Taylor, who floundered while trying to answer her.
Earlier that morning a nurse had told a group of us at the day hospital that the reason we were patients and âdifferent' from people like herself was because we had a âweaker personality', which made us unable to cope with the everyday anxieties of life.
The worst thing about being constantly taught that you're âsick', âinadequate' or have a âweaker personality' is that you might eventually come to believe it. And the worst thing about coming to believe it is that this will help it become true.
I made friends with Wendy at OT, a pretty sixteen-year-old, who was having problems coming to terms with her abortion. She was a patient in Thornville Ward. One day we were talking at tea break in the cloakroom, where it was a little more private than the corridors and hall.
âMy psychiatrist says I've to forget about the abortion,' she told me. âMy baby was taken from my womb and murdered but I'm supposed to forget that happened. How can I?' She finished her cigarette and lit another. âGod, I'm chain-smoking again but that's the least of my problems.'
A man wandered up to us trying to cadge a cigarette. We recoiled as we smelt his breath. He was puffing nervously at an over-smoked tab end.
âGo away! We're having a private conversation,' Wendy told him.
Head down, looking as if he'd no pride left, he turned and moved dejectedly away.
âOh what the hell, take it, have them all,' Wendy said, running after him with the packet.
He pushed the cigarette she lit for him into his mouth and we watched him shuffling away, his shirt hanging out of his trousers.
âSilly old bugger,' Wendy said, âbut oh, Jean, isn't life sad for people like him?'
I nodded in agreement.
âNow what was I saying? Oh yes,' she said, âmy psychiatrist says I've to forget I was pregnant and he says I'm the same girl as I was before ⦠before it happened. But I'm not the same, am I, Jean? How can I ever be the same? I'm not innocent any more.'
Tears sprang to her big blue eyes, smudging her mascara and running down her pink, dimpled cheeks, as she wept for lost innocence.
And there was Cathy, a pale, thin young woman who had been a teacher. She stood at the front of the typing class holding a cactus plant from the windowsill and proceeded to give us a lecture on it. Our botany lesson ended abruptly when Mrs Taylor came in and asked her what on earth she was doing.
Cathy stopped lecturing mid-sentence, cactus plant still in hand, and looked thoughtful. âWhat am I doing? Well, I'm obviously mad as a hatter, aren't I? I suppose I'm pretending I'm still a teacher because that time of my life was better than now.' She broke down and sobbed. Mrs Taylor put a comforting arm around her shoulder and gently led her to a seat at a typewriter. âI'd do Miss Compton proud now,' Cathy said, half laughing, half crying.
âMiss Compton?'
âYeah. I'm talking about Lena Compton's drama group. That's the drama group I used to be in and the drama group I'd still be in if I wasn't round the twist here in High Royds instead.'