Tuesday, April 28, 2015

All Are Welcome......Except Clergy Abuse Survivors and Their Advocates

These are reflections I wrote down after attending Mass about five ago.  I need to add that I have not attended Mass on a regular basis for more than a year.  I was thrown out of my parish in 2004, after handing out newspaper articles about clergy abuse in my parish.  I tried to remain a faithful Catholic, but after 10 years of rejection by many parishioners and many in leadership, I decided to stop trying.  Going to Church was like hitting my head against a wall or beating a dead horse.  It doesn't hurt the horse much.

Well anyway, this last Sunday I was sitting in Mass.  My wanders too much.  I try to pay attention to the Bible readings. Sometimes I hold onto the word of God more easily through the music.

The Psalm that was sung, not spoken in church this week was, “If today you should hear God’s voice, harden not your heart.”

I’ve heard the voice of God saying, “I love you Mommy.”

God was speaking through my child.  That’s an easy one.

But what about the guy in the car who cursed me for riding through a stop sign on my bicycle.  I didn’t come to a full stop.  I was sitting there wobbling on my bicycle at the stop sign as I looked around to make sure it was safe to go.  I guess I was supposed to put my feet on the ground and come to an absolute stop.

If that was the voice of God, then God has a problem with swearing just as my 14 year old son does.

Or maybe it was the voice of God.  

Could God have been telling me to watch out more for cars when I ride my bike so I can be around to hear God tell me, “I love you," through my child?”

Some times God’s voice may not be so easy to hear.  

Sort of like that homeless drunk lying in the gutter on a winter’s night might actually be an angel.  St. Paul said you never know when the stranger you meet is an angel   But how many of us mortals treat homeless people as though they might be angels?

And Jesus said something about when you give food to the hungry, you are feeding Him.  Or when you visit the person in prison you are visiting Him.

So, could it be that God voice unsettles us?  Which leads me to the next song I hear in Church that inspires me, a song that we sing at the beginning of Church .

“All are Welcome, all are welcome in Gods name.”

They played that song in my former parish one Sunday eleven years ago not long after I was thrown out of the parish after I handed out newspaper articles about clergy abuse survivors.  

My friend ML sang the song and thought, “But not all are welcome.  Virginia is not welcome because she advocated for clergy abuse survivors.”

You can read more about that event in my blog about what happened:  Why I Fled the Church

That’s the painful part.  We humans keep writing exceptions into the words of God.

If today you hear God’s voice, harden not your heart unless the person speaking is a clergy abuse survivor or an advocate for survivors, then will you please be quiet and go away and not bother us.

(Honestly, my gay friends and divorced and remarried friends and women priest and married former Catholic priest acquaintances would probably add themselves to the list.)

Maybe the way some of us practice our religion the words of the song would be changed to “All are welcome, All are welcome except clergy abuse survivors.”

We Catholics really need to practice our beleifs the way they are written in the Bible.

So next time a clergy abuse survivor hands out leaflets by your parish, walk up to him or her and take the pamphlet and say, “Thank you.”


I suspect Jesus would say you just greeted Him and showed Him welcome.

P.S.  I am really grateful that Bishop Finn of Kansas City resigned after Marie Collins and Peter Saunders met with Cardinal O'Malley.  Lets hope for more in this vein and that eventually clergy abuse survivors will be greeted with compassion by all or at least most Catholics.

© 2015 Virginia Pickles Jones.  You may contact Virginia at compassion500@gmail.com.

Please check out my Facebook at Compassionate Gathering.




Tuesday, April 21, 2015

How I Harmed Myself With My Anger and 8 Ways Housework Calms Anger

I am a survivor of sex abuse as a child and date rape as a young adult.  My whole life has been occupied with coming to terms with these wounds and learning healthy coping skills to heal them.  One of the symptoms of abuse I struggle with is anger.  One coping skill I am learning to use to calm my anger is housework.  Yes, you read that correctly, housework.  A clean house lifts up my mood and calms my anxiety two ways.  First, as a single mother, I always have work to do.  When I get work done, my stress levels decrease, but physical activity of housework -- sweeping, wiping, and vacuuming -- also lowers my stress.  Lower stress levels decrease my susceptibility to anger.

Anger is one of the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Survivors of child abuse, sexual assault and domestic violence often suffer from PTSD just as combat veterans do.  Anger is a normal part of the healing process, but if we inflict our anger on others, we can ruin our relationships with friends and family and cause problems for ourselves at work and school.  While anger over abuse inspires us to fight for justice, we need to channel and control our anger so we don't harm ourselves or others.

People who express anger in the forms of raised voices or criticism or blaming others for problems often find themselves in high conflict relationships.  If we inflict our anger on others in order to get them to do what we want or simply because we have strong emotions, we often leave them feeling abused.  Our anger arouses in others feelings of emotional pain, frustration, anxiety, AND anger.  If our anger is brief, the pain and anxiety we inflict on others is also brief and easily forgiven.  But if our anger goes on and on and on, the damage we do to others and to ourselves and to our relationships increases exponentially.

What do you feel when someone shouts at you or criticizes you?  When someone expresses visible anger at me for more than a few minutes, I don’t want to be around him.  I don’t want to do what he wants me to do.  Sometimes I do what he wants because I fear his anger, but that fear kills my love for him.  For example, when fear became the dominant emotion I felt in the context of my marriage, I had to leave my husband because I never felt safe around him.  Love wasn’t possible anymore.

But my best example for both the problems caused by anger and what to do to calm down is not my former husband, but me.

As a survivor of child sex abuse and rape I never suffered from full PTSD, but I did suffer from increased susceptibility to anxiety and depression.  I also learned to meet the needs of others instead of meeting my own needs.  However, I felt angry and frustrated when I was always trying to meet the needs of others while ignoring my own.  I felt especially hurt and angry when others seemed not to know or care what my feelings and needs were.  When I was finally pushed to the brink, I pushed back with anger.  Neither reaction -- giving in to others or expressing anger myself -- solved my problems with other people.

As many survivors do, I married before learning healthy coping mechanisms.  I married a man who gave me lots of flowers, who engaged in intellectual conversations about world affairs and current events, and who shared my love of ethnic cuisines and foreign and art films.  Unfortunately he had some flaws.  He frequently yelled at me, criticized me and blamed me for our problems.  Moreover he did this from the beginning of our relationship, but I had endured so much emotional abuse from other people that he seemed pleasant in comparison.  But over time the lightness of his enormous smile dimmed, and the darkness of his words and tone of voice dominated our interactions.  We attended marriage counseling for a year and a half but never managed to solve our relationship problems.  So I divorced him.  Unfortunately divorce did not end the conflict between us.  It simply metamorphosed into new forms such as the copious e-mails he sent me requesting parenting schedule changes or criticizing me and accusing me of wrongdoing as a mother.  And then my children reached their tweens, the age at which children begin individuating from their parents.  If I allowed myself to be provoked into shouting at my children, I risked finding a nasty e-mail from Dad in my inbox criticizing me for being an abusive mother.

So I really had to learn to calm myself down in the midst of multiple storms, to not react to provocation with anger.

At least when coping with my ex-husband, I could turn off the computer and take a break from his e-mails, but if one of my children was angry at me, I had nowhere to go.  I had to calm myself down here and now in the house while my child was still angry.

If I didn't calm myself down in the present moment, if I allowed myself to get upset and remain upset with one of my children, I did the following things:

1.  I wounded my child I at whom I directed my anger.

2.  I wounded myself with my anger.

3.  I taught my children that tantrumming is a valid relationship skill because I was doing it myself.

4.  I gave my ex-husband more fodder for the already copious e-mails he sent to me accusing me of wrongdoing.

5.  The various therapists working with our family wondered if my ex's accusations were true because they were at least true when I was provoked.

6.   If I allowed myself to get angry and stay angry, I had a harder time stopping my own bad behavior and doing the right thing by my children and by myself. Anger creates a feedback mechanism.  When you get angry, your body releases the hormone adrenaline into your system, which keeps your heart beating at a rapid pace and your blood pressure elevated.  This reaction is called "fight or flight".  The “fight or flight” reaction evolved to keep us strong and alert when we had to fight off lions and bears and wolves or warring tribes of other humans the way our distant ancestors once were forced to do.  It is not an effective way to feel when coping with a badly behaved child or a badly behaved ex-spouse.  You don't want to treat a child the way a distant ancestor might have treated a lion or bear or wolf.  A survival instinct from our distant past when applied to a child in the present day is abuse.  So stifle it.  Or be kind to yourself and find a gentler way of expressing the concept.  Tell yourself to find healthier, more effective ways of coping with your feelings.

One of the ways I learned to cope more effectively with the "fight or flight" reaction was to do housework.

When I clean my house I accomplish the following:

1.  I calm myself with the physical movement of sweeping or vacuuming or swatting at the spiders in the corners of the ceilings -- effective uses of the physical anxiety reaction caused by adrenaline release.

2.  By responding calmly to the child who displays anger at me,  I demonstrate for him an effective and healthy way to cope with stress.

3.  I stay in the house so I can monitor the feelings and behaviors of my upset child.  I am present if my child needs me for any reason or if there is an emergency.

4.  I complete some badly needed work.  As a single mother, I am always behind on virtually everything.  I am still training my children to clean -- probably the reasons for their tantrums in the first place.  Cleaning is definitely a two or three for one accomplishment.

5.  I feel better psychologically in a clean environment.

6.  I feel better physically in a clean environment.  A clean house is less likely to have mold and dust and things that make you sick or have allergic reactions.

7.  My children like the cleanliness of Mom's house.

8.  Oh, and when I am able to respond to anger with calmness and compassion, I demonstrate to therapists working with our family that I am not the problem in my high conflict relationship with my ex-husband.

So next time you find yourself coping with emotional upset whether from a badly behaved child or former spouse or friend or sibling or parent or whatever the cause of your stress may be, try cleaning your house to help yourself feel better in the moment.

Some other ways of calming yourself down in the moment of anger or conflict include: Gardening, journaling, singing or singing and dancing to the music, drawing or painting or sculpting, talking to a trusted friend or family member or two or three, taking long, hot baths with scented epsom salts by candle light, and that great standby -- eating chocolate.

Can you think of positive and healthy things you can do to help yourself calm down when you are angry?

@ 2015 Virginia Pickles Jones.  You may contact Virginia at compassion500@gmail.com.

Check out my You Tube Channel at Healing is a Sacred Journey/StopAbuseHealWounds

Check out my Facebook at Compassionate Gathering.

Walking With the Homeless in the Springwater Corridor

The very first clergy abuse survivor that I worked with became homeless about 2  and ½ years after we met.  I knew about the connection between homelessness and abuse, but it became more real for me because when I wanted to support this man.  I had to walk the streets of the part of Portland, Oregon, where he lived in order to find him.

I later connected with some local Portland groups advocating for houseless people.  I encountered among them more abuse survivors, including many who had truly messed up lives.

When you are abused you need lots of support for healing.  Unfortunately there is a trend in our society so say, "Too bad; you are responsible for yourself."

The problem is that abuse, like combat, causes damage to the portions of the brain that process emotions and memory often leading to severe enough dysfunction to be given a psychiatric disorder -- Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.  In the days of Sigmund Freud it was labeled "hysteria" in women who had survived child sex abuse.  After World War I, veterans were said to be "shell shocked".  After World War II, it was called "Battle Fatigue".

Tell an abuse survivor (or a veteran) to just get over it is like telling someone with Down's Syndrome to just get over it.

I am under no illusions that what I do changes anyone's life.  Handing out a sleeping bag or a water and a nutritional bar does not change someone's life.  What I know is that when someone is hungry, I can make that hunger go away for a few to several hours.  I can help them feel cared for and cared about at least for a short time.  

Abuse survivors sometimes feel like trash because that is how they were treated...like so much garbage to be used and thrown away.

The houseless feel the same way.  Too many people judge them for being dirty or without a job or house.  

Well, anyway, that's the why I started walking with the homeless.  The I started on Walking Across Oregon to raise Awareness About Abuse.  We encountered homeless along the way.  I started walking just once a year beginning in 2010 and 2011.  Then I hooked up with some local homeless advocates and went on several walks in 2012.  2013 was a year for my family and myself to work on our issues.  2014 we went on three walks.  2015 seems like a year that will see us walking some more.

My son often accompanied me on my walks with the homeless. He discovered the homeless camps along the Springwater Corridor while biking the trail.  There are fewer services there so we decided to go where there was more need.

This walk in the pictures below is actually our second Walk With the Homeless for the year.  The first time we went to the Springwater Corridor was in March.  It was cold and rainy and the police had just swept away the homeless camps that had formed in the area.  So we met no one that day.  As you can see our walk with the homeless in April lasted about 30 minutes as we met so many people so quickly we ran out of our two carts of supplies very quickly.


We are going again on April 25th.  Meet us at Cartlandia for dinner at 5PM.  We will wear blue shirts or blue fleeces or blue sweatshirts or blue jackets.



Colin and Janelle and our carts of 2 blankets, 1 quilt, one light woman's jacket, 2 women's shirts, 2 men's shirts, 2 bars of soap, hand sanitizer, scarf and two rosaries.



At our first stop we encountered two men sharing a tent.

Homeless people often pair up because one person can go out for whatever reason (bathroom, groceries,     .....) while the other watches belongings and keeps a campsite safe.


One of these two men told us that the local soup kitchen was closed on Sundays and that the nutritional bars we gave him was the only food he had eaten that day.  We plan to go back next time with bottled water, packaged nutritional bars, and other food too.


The Springwater Corridor runs for miles from the Willamette River to Boring, Oregon.


We obey traffic lights and wait for our turn.


Across SE 82nd we head east.


We meet one group and then another came up.  We handed out one quilt, 2 bars of soap, toilet paper (pretty important), hand sanitizer, a woman's jacket, a man's shirt, an old shower curtain that would make a good tarp.


One of the homeless gave us a $10 donation to buy groceries and water for next time.


Love exists in the most unexpected places.


We ran out of supplies in less than 20 minutes but the walk was lovely so we continued another 10 minutes anyway.


We passed a Big Leaf Maple tree.


Even weeds are beautiful when they flower.


A kitty greeted us, curious if we had treats for her too.  We didn't, but she allowed us to pet her anyway.


Then we headed home.


This is what donations buy:

$5 - 12 nutritional bars
$10 fried rice for $10 people
$5 - 28 bottles of water
$20 - 20 pounds of clothing at the Goodwill outlet.

To join us contact Virginia Jones at compassion500@gmail.com.













Friday, April 10, 2015

How I Harmed Myself With My Anger and 9 Ways Gardening Calms Anger

I am a survivor of sex abuse as a child and date rape as a young adult.  My whole life has been occupied with coming to terms with these wounds and learning healthy coping skills to heal them.  One of the symptoms of abuse that I struggle with is outbursts of anger.  One coping skill I am learning to rely on to heal myself is gardening.  Gardening lifts me up from seas of sadness and calms me through storms of anger.

Anger is one of the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Survivors of child abuse, sexual assault, and domestic violence often suffer from PTSD just as combat veterans do.  Anger is a normal part of the healing process, but if we inflict our anger on others, we can also ruin our relationships with friends and family and cause problems for ourselves at work and school.  While anger over abuse inspires us to fight for justice, we need to channel and control our anger so we don't harm ourselves or others.

People who express anger by raising their voices or criticizing or blaming others for problems often find themselves in high conflict relationships.  If we inflict our anger on others in order to get them to do what we want or simply because we have strong emotions, we often leave them feeling abused.  Our anger arouses in others feelings of emotional pain, frustration, anxiety, AND anger.  If our anger is brief, the pain and anxiety we inflict on others is also brief and easily forgiven. But if our anger goes on and on and on, the damage we do to others and to ourselves and to our relationships increases exponentially. 

What do you feel when someone shouts at you or criticizes you?  When someone shouts at me for more than a few minutes, I don’t want to be around him.  I don’t want to do what he wants me to do.  Sometimes I do what he wants because I fear his anger, but that fear kills my love for him.  For example, when fear became the dominant emotion I felt in the context of my marriage, I had to leave my husband because I never felt safe around him.  Love wasn’t possible anymore.

But my best example for both the problems caused by anger and what to do to calm down is not my former husband, but me.

As a survivor of child sex abuse and rape I never suffered from full PTSD, but I did suffer from an increased susceptibility to anxiety and depression.  I also learned to meet the needs of others instead of meeting my own needs.  However, I felt angry and frustrated when I was always trying to meet the needs of others while ignoring my own.  I especially felt hurt and angry when others seemed not to know or care what my feelings and needs were.  When I was finally pushed to the brink, I pushed back with anger.  Neither reaction -- giving in to others or expressing anger myself -- solved my problems with other people.  

As many survivors do, I married before learning healthy relationship skills.  I married a man who gave me lots of flowers, who engaged in intellectual conversations about world affairs and current events, and who shared my love of ethnic cuisines and foreign and art films.  Unfortunately he had some flaws.  He frequently yelled at me, criticized me, or blamed me for our problems.  Moreover he did this from the beginning of our relationship, but I had endured so much emotional abuse from other people that he seemed pleasant in comparison.  But over time the lightness of his enormous smile dimmed, and the darkness of his words and tone of voice dominated our interactions.  We attended marriage counseling for a year and a half but never managed to solve our relationship problems.  So I divorced him.  Unfortunately divorce did not end the conflict between us.  It simply metamorphosed into new forms, especially the copious e-mails he sent to me demanding parenting schedule changes or criticizing me and accusing me of wrongdoing as a mother.  And then my children reached their tweens, the age at which children begin individuating from their parents.  If I allowed myself to be provoked into shouting at my children, I risked finding a nasty e-mail from Dad in my inbox criticizing me for being an abusive mother.

So I really had to learn to calm myself down in the midst of multiple storms, to not react to provocation with anger.

At least when coping with my ex-husband, I could turn off the computer and take a break from his e-mails, but if one of my children was angry at me, I had nowhere to go.  I had to calm myself down here and now at home while my child was still angry.

If I didn't calm myself down in the present moment, if I allowed myself to get upset and remain upset with one of my children, I did the following things:

1.  I wounded my child I at whom I directed my anger.

2.  I wounded myself with my anger.

3.  I taught my children that tantrumming is a valid relationship skill because I was doing it myself.

4.  I gave my ex-husband more fodder for the already copious e-mails he sent to me accusing me of wrongdoing.

5.  The various therapists working with our family wondered if my ex's accusations were true because they were at least true when I was provoked.

6.   If I allowed myself to get angry and stay angry, I had a harder time stopping my own bad behavior and doing the right thing by my children and by myself. Anger creates a feedback mechanism.  When you get angry, your body releases the hormone adrenaline into your system, which keeps your heart beating at a rapid pace and your blood pressure elevated.  This reaction is called "fight or flight".  The “fight or flight” reaction evolved to keep us strong and alert when our distant ancestors had to fight off lions and bears and wolves or warring tribes of other humans.  It is not an effective way to feel when coping with a badly behaved child or a badly behaved ex-spouse.  You don't want to treat a child the way a distant ancestor might have treated a lion or bear or wolf.  A survival instinct from our distant past when applied to a child in the present day is abuse. So stifle it.  Or be kind to yourself and find a gentler way of expressing the concept.  Tell yourself to find healthier, more effective ways of coping with your feelings.

One of the ways I learned to cope with the "fight or flight" instinct more effectively was to garden when I felt anxious or angry.

When I garden, I accomplish the following:

1.  I calm myself with the physical movement of raking leaves or shoveling dirt.

2.  When I respond calmly to the child who displays anger at me, I demonstrate for her an effective and healthy way of coping with stress.

3.  I stay close to the house so I can monitor the feelings and behaviors of my upset child.  I am able to be present if my child needs me for any reason or if there is an emergency.

4.  I complete badly needed work.  As a single mother, I am always behind on virtually everything.  The grass, even though we don't have much grass anymore, still needs mowing.  The weeds still need pulling.  Our tiny lawn still needs edging.  Oh, and when the blueberries and strawberries are bearing fruit, they always need picking.

5.  The freshly picked berries taste good with whipped cream or in pies or smoothies and provide another resource for calming stress -- comfort food.

6.  I feel better psychologically because my yard is clean and neat.

7.  My children love the fruits and flowers in Mom's yard.

8.  My yard, filled with colorful flowers, abundant fruits and edible herbs, and a small but tidy lawn, becomes a place to come and sit and heal because it is a beautiful place to just be.

9.  Oh, and when I am able to respond to anger with calmness and compassion, I demonstrate to the therapists and the judge working with our family that I am not the problem in the high conflict relationship I have with my ex-husband.

So next time you find yourself coping with emotional upset whether from a badly behaved child or former spouse or friend or sibling or parent or boss or co-worker or whatever the cause of your stress may be, try gardening to help yourself feel better in the moment.

Here are some photos of my garden to inspire you:


Native yellow violet and Labrador Violet


Labrador Violets and Hyacinth


Ornamental Buttercup


Starflower and Grape Hyacinth


Violets and Stonecrop on a boulder wall.


A bowl of berries from my garden.  Just a little washing and whipped cream, and 
I have some comfort food.

Some other ways of calming yourself down in the moment of anger or conflict include: House cleaning, journaling, singing, dancing to music, drawing or painting or sculpting, talking to a trusted friend or family member or two or three, taking long, hot baths with scented epsom salts and candles, and that great standby -- eating chocolate or other comfort foods such as whipped cream and berries.

Can you think of some fun, healthy, and productive ways of calming yourself down?

@ 2015 Virginia Pickles Jones.  Contact me at compassion500@gmail.com.