Reflections #1 - That Time the Guy Who Raped Me Got Engaged & I Lost My Sh*t - podcast episode cover

Reflections #1 - That Time the Guy Who Raped Me Got Engaged & I Lost My Sh*t

Oct 24, 20248 min
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Episode description

Welcome to Reflections, a New View Advice minisode series! Each week I read short stories from my own healing journey. This week I share a story about a time I got really really angry after finding out that one of the guys that raped me got engaged. I share this story as an inside look at what it can look like to heal from trauma and to hopefully help someone out there who may have intense feelings and not be sure if they are normal. I know that I judged myself for this moment in time for a long time, but now see it happened because I had a lot of anger I had been ignoring for a long time, and that it is perfectly normal to have a lot of hard feelings.

Timestamps

  • 0:00 Introduction
  • 2:31 Story - That Time the Guy Who Raped Me Got Engaged & I Lost My Sh*t
  • 6:45 Final Thoughts

Check out my website: www.newviewadvice.com

Mentioned in this episode:

Listen to Reflections: Stories Healing from Rape

Listen to the entire series here - https://feeds.captivate.fm/reflections-newviewadvice/ Or on Youtube here - https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2jlhvzlnUvYEc3tkwYy2bd9P-buRo7la&si=mDX1OWUpHlQCw4wR

Transcript

Welcome to reflections with Amanda Durocher, a new view advice minisode series. Hey, beautiful soul. Welcome to reflections, my new minisode series I'll be offering on Fridays. I'm really excited about this. This is going to be different stories, maybe poems, but different writings about my own healing journey that I've decided I wanted to share through podcast and also through video. So you will be able to see me actually on Spotify and

YouTube. Very exciting. I don't usually do video, but I thought I'd give it a try with this one. So please be kind. This is my first YouTube video with

Introduction

my face in it. So if the angle's not right, I'll figure it out. You know what I mean? Let's just let's just be kind out there. Anyway, this is very much a done is better than perfect series. I've actually wanted to share more stories from my own healing journey for a long time now, but, you know, I just had a lot of resistance to it. I even felt a lot of resistance this week. I know this is something my heart's

been asking me to do, but I just I don't know. It's pretty vulnerable to share my own stories, and, you know, I always fear that I'm the only one who's been through this stuff. But I actually love to share because the feedback I get the most is how much people understand these different experiences I've

had and how I understand the experiences you've had. So today, I am sharing a story about anger, and it is inspired by this week's episode where we talked about anger in episode 109 about creativity and how I believe it's okay to create from an angry place and how anger doesn't have to be preachy. So I wanted to share this story I wrote, and it's about a time I got really, really angry and I had no idea how to handle this amount of anger. And I share it for a few reasons.

1, because we talked about anger this week, but, 2, because I wanna normalize how strong these emotions can be when you're healing from trauma. The stories I'm gonna share here are kind of the stories I wish I heard along the way. You know, I'm always inspired by people who have overcome trauma, and they look amazing, and they're doing

shit, and they look all put together. That's what it is. They look put together where I'm really interested also in hearing about how people haven't always had it together because I know I've made a lot of mistakes in my life. I've had a lot of hard feelings. I didn't always know how to process my feelings in a healthy way, and that is something I had to learn through my healing journey. And those are the kind of stories that I'll be sharing. So with that, I'll be reading this story that I

wrote. And, yeah, we'll see how this goes. Let's just jump on in. This story is called That Time the Guy Who Raped Me Got Engaged and I Lost My Shit. I throw my phone across the room and scream at the top of my lungs. What's wrong? What's wrong? Evan, my long term partner, runs into the room out of breath. I have no words. I curl into a fetal position on the floor, rock back and forth, and try to breathe. I had been sober 2 weeks

and was new to being with my anger. Currently, the score was anger, 1. Amanda, 0. I had just been scrolling through my Instagram feed when I saw that people I knew from high school were with one of the guys who raped me. They were celebrating his new engagement with a party. Everyone was drinking,

Story Begins

dancing, and laughing. He had 3 things I didn't have, an engagement, friends to celebrate with, and the ability to drink booze. Why was I here on the floor of my parents' house at age 29, frozen in the past, while he gets to be happy? How is this fair? Where is the justice? In this moment, all I wanted was a drink. But for the first time in my life, I knew that wasn't

an option. But I didn't know what to do with all this rage. My therapist always told me that anger is a secondary emotion and it's often used to cover up a primary emotion. But in this moment, the rage was front and center. Evan tries to place a hand on me. I hit his hand away. Do not touch me, I bark. I get up off the floor. I need space. The 5,000 square foot house begins to feel like a tiny closet that keeps getting smaller and smaller. I recognize this

feeling. I'm on the verge of a panic attack. I feel as though I am suffocating. What happened? What do you need? The more Evan worries, the more suffocated I feel. I crawl to the front door and get outside. The temperature is below freezing and there's snow all over the yard. I climb into the snow and stare at the stars, praying that I begin to feel my body again. Images flash through my mind. Rage burns my insides like an inferno. I'm surprised the snow doesn't melt

under me. Evan peeks his head out the window. He's nervous. I can feel it from here. Will he just leave me alone? I can't handle his emotions on top of my own right now. I'm waiting for the tears to come, but I continue to only feel the rage. Flashes of the past fly through my mind. These are the images I used to bury with a glass or sticks of wine. I see myself pinned down, beaten. Too much. I am feeling too much. I grab snow and begin building mini snowmen. I

then smash the tiny snowmen with my hands. I see the boys who violated me, the ones who beat me into submission. In this tiny snow world, I am the queen and I demolish them. Today, this is the only power I have. I begin to feel my body and myself again when Evan opens the door. Amanda, why don't you come in? It's just too cold to be outside. Jesus Christ, I mutter. I get up. The rage is back. I stomp past him. I begin pacing back and forth. I can't control the images

flying through my head. I debate smashing my head against the wall. I don't know how to make this stop. My mind jumps between flashbacks, despair, and reminders that as I am here, the guy who raped me is happy in getting married. Evan stares at me with a look of concern mixed with confusion and terror. The old me would have poured a glass of wine and smiled and said, I'm fine. This new me is unhinged. She can't even fake

a smile. It takes all of me not to scream at him. As the rage continues to boil over, I remember a set of plates I just bought at Walmart. When I first went sober, I bought a set of dinner plates with the intention of smashing them into a garbage can. I'd heard that breaking glass intentionally could be therapeutic. When I heard this, I thought it sounded like a fun activity. How naive I was just 2 weeks earlier, completely unaware of the amount of rage I had pent up inside me.

Leave me alone, I seethe at Evan. I grab the plates and storm down into the basement. The basement is unfinished and feels like the kind of place where a ghost would reside. I feel right at home here. The amount I'm feeling feels too much for the living. It feels like only feelings the dead would understand, those who are angry that they have died too young while others still get to live. I put in my headphones and blast Lincoln Park in the end on repeat. I drag a trash can into the center of

the room and begin smashing the plates as I scream obscenities. As each plate shatters, I feel relief course through my body. Each plate resembles how I feel on the inside, shattered and broken. As the plates smash and my voice becomes coarse, the tears finally come. I fall to the floor and sob. My therapist was right. The rage was covering up the deepest pain I had ever felt, the heartbreak of innocence lost. So that is my first story.

Thank you for joining me for this first episode of Reflections, a newbie advice minisode series. And I hope you enjoyed this story, and I look forward to seeing you next week where I share another story from my healing journey. Thank you so much for tuning in and I'd love to hear what you thought of this episode. So either leave a comment on the episode or feel free to message me on Instagram where I rarely ever am but I will get back to you eventually. I

promise. Or send me an email at contact at newviewadvice.com. Thanks

Final Thoughts

so much. See you next time.

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