No More Silence
This article first appeared on 20th
March 2016 on Catherine Deveny’s website. It was written as part of her Gunnas Writing Masterclass, which I attended thanks to a birthday
gift voucher from my Mum and Brother for which I am very grateful. You can read
other student’s contribution here.
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| A small box of love. Image: NMJoyce2016 |
In recent weeks the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses
to Child Sexual Abuse has been getting more than the typical amount
of attention from the world’s media. The stories of the group of men and women
known collectively as either as the ‘Ballarat Survivors’ or ‘Team Roma’ have been highlighted as they made their unlikely journey from relative obscurity in
Ballarat, into the cold glare of camera lights in Rome. Up to this point I have
successfully ignored the majority of reporting about the Commission because it
didn’t apply to me. In fact I have been quietly surprised that, given the
prevalence of child sexual abuse within my personal circles, that someone close
to me hadn’t become personally involved. For that I am grateful. Then Mum asked
me about a guy I’m friends with on Facebook.
Now, just to explain – Mum reads my Facebook
page. She won’t have her own page but she quite likes seeing what is happening
on mine. Yeah. It’s weird. Whatever. It’s not the issue up for discussion here.
Anyway, she asked me about A Guy whose name pops up in my feed occasionally. I
explained that I had never actually met him in real life but that we had a Mutual
Friend who is quite wonderful, and that if we did ever meet we would probably
be totes BFF. “Hmmmm – is he related to that XYZ bloke?” she asked innocently.
I had no idea who she meant. “That priest from Ballarat.” Nope. No idea. Hadn’t been following
it. “You should look it up.”
I looked it up. And what I found was horrifying
in the Gothic sense of horror in that I couldn’t look away and I kept digging and
reading and picking at it until it bled. I had managed to avoid all of the shit
about this damned Commission and now here it was landed in my lap, and This Guy
I barely knew was smack bang in the centre of it.
I wrote a short message to The Guy. It was simple
and one of recognition. It merely said “Hey mate, it’s only just come to my
attention that you’re That Guy doing That Thing and I just wanted to say I
think maybe we have more in common than our Mutual Friend originally intended*
and hey what you’re doing is ace and if you ever need anything just yell,
yeah?” I am not sure exactly how he responded but it was probably a thumbs up.
The quiet nod and shrug that survivors have established as a means of saying
everything whilst remaining silent. I left it at that and for a while things
were mostly quiet.
Then everything went batshit crazy. Pell said he
was ‘too ill’, boo hoo. No one
believed him for a minute or at least, very few thought he was genuine. More
and more survivors from Ballarat spoke angrily about wanting to look Pell in
the eye. The Guy hinted privately that something amazing was being cooked up
and then BOOM! like a smoke bomb, a crowdfunding campaign was ignited
and went off in a chain reaction of tears and feels more than two hundred
thousand dollars strong. Big Name Comedians backed it. Big Name Columnists were outraged. I felt something I thought had healed over decade’s
earlier start to tear and I did what I always did… pushed it to the side. Stuff
needed doing.
Suddenly I was at the airport to wave goodbye
and because I was meeting The Guy in real physical life for the first time, I
wanted to give as optimistic a farewell as possible – so I focused on keeping it together. With our Mutual Friend, I had made some little care packages
for the Travellers, which is to say she packed a dozen little boxes with bits
and bobs and I wrote a nice note for each one (pictured above). I don’t remember what the notes
said but I’m told it was lovely. We were interviewed by national media about
why we were there. I said some very articulate words about the Commission being
for institutional abuse but that the recognition it was creating was a boon for
survivors of familial abuse. As I did so I could feel a few tears sliding
dramatically down my already blotchy red face and somewhere in my
hyper-vigilant state a voice told me that Sinead O’Connor would be proud.
It was definitely at this point that I clocked
something wasn’t right.
Later on at the airport I had the opportunity to
meet some of the men travelling to Rome and the chats we had were brief but
significant. As we handed out our little care packages one older bloke bluntly
asked “why did you make these – why are you being so nice?” Now, it was obvious
to me that this was a man who had had a hard life. I figured he wasn’t
accustomed to random acts of generosity. I wasn’t sure how much to say. So I
did what I usually do and fell back on a straightforward approach, “Because I
care. I care what happens. And long haul flights are just shit mate.” But what I
couldn’t and didn’t say out loud was “because it happened to me too.” But he
knew and we just kind of shrugged at each other and I said “this, what you’re
doing, is for all of us.” And my voice was choked and the tears were welling
and we just did that shrug thing at each other and shook hands and went back to
our beers.
Yep. Something was definitely askew inside me. I
hadn’t had these feels for a very long time.
Fast forward to Pell ducking and weaving in Rome
in front of the video link and I’m watching at home on my own in Bendigo, in my
pyjamas. Pell has nothing and everything to do with me. I watched his
performance for days. I was appropriately outraged.
I did nothing.
And then it was over. A video statement from
Team Roma popped up on my Facebook time line thanks to the Loud Fence supporter’s
page. It was the Survivors, giving thanks for the support they had and
continued to receive. My mind went into quiet overdrive as a particular phrase
said during Pell’s ‘evidence’ repeated itself on an endless loop. The
Commissioner had mentioned “gentle euphemisms”, referring to the code Catholic
priests may have had for what was being perpetrated against those in their
care. The meaning I took from it however was the silent code we survivors have
for recognising one another in a crowd. An unspoken code – a secret handshake
if you will: “Oh, you had one of those did you? Right. Snap.” I have been asked
what it is that marks us in such a way, that we are able to see it another
person. I don’t know - yet. It’s body language, tone, behaviour. Something that
says “this happened to me and I see it in you too”. A nod and a wink that means
it can be left unsaid because, hey – we’re not meant to talk about it.
On the last day of Pells ‘evidence’ I cried for
a few hours with no idea what or who I was crying for. I finally decided that
if these guys could do what they were doing, some of them travelling overseas
for the first time in their lives, then screw it. No more silence. All I did was
say a few words in a Facebook status update. I don’t know what I expected but
it sure as hell wasn’t the outpouring of love and revelation that continued for
days. Friends said yes, this had happened to them too. That it happened to a
family member. To a friend. That it had somehow influenced their lives. I spoke
of intergenerational trauma. But most of all I discussed why it was that this
event – this collective of broken men taking action against their abusers – had
had such a huge emotional impact on so many people.
I truly believe that Team Roma had and continues
to have so much widespread support because so many people have been affected by
child abuse in some form or another, either directly or across generations. And
while many of us won’t get a Royal Commission into our abuse because it was our
families, not institutions who were the perpetrators, by no means do we
begrudge the justice and recognition finally given now. Because seeing anything
done at all is an incredible relief. And release.
Last week I called my local CASA
to book in for a session. I haven’t talked about my abuse in a counselling
environment for decades because I’ve always been ‘over it’. I haven’t wanted my
life to be defined by something that happened 33 years ago. What my brief
contact with the Ballarat Survivors has shown me is that while it may not
define me, it’s there and it’s not going away. So like a cold sore that
appears in times of stress, every now and then it will show up and I need a
better treatment kit than the one I have now. When I spoke to the counsellor
making my appointment I mentioned that it was in response to the Commission.
“You’re not the first” she said. “I doubt I’ll be the last.” I replied.
So thank you to the Ballarat Survivors and all
involved for putting this issue front and centre in the world’s view. It’s been
a tough few weeks and there’ll be more tough weeks, but I want the Survivors to
look at this shining thing you have done and hold it and own it and know it is
yours.
* Update: since this article was first published
the Mutual Friend has told me that she did in fact introduce The Guy and me
precisely because of our shared history. I may or may not have known this
previously but one of the things I have come to realise about myself is that my
memory is really weird.



What an honest and gutsy piece, Tash. I was really moved by the Ballarat Survivors and their fight for justice, and it triggered many people. It also offered hope that restitution can be sought and that if those who are left can stand up to their abusers, not wear the soul-crushing, festering shame and self-blame that silence enables, then the same goes for all of us. I've not been sexually abused but grew up in an abusive home (emotional abuse and sometimes violence), and like you said, it surfaces at unexpected times. Great piece.
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