Thursday, August 28, 2014

Not My Brother's Keeper



Children of abuse are always, always thinking about their personal safety.  How could it be otherwise?  One misstep, one wrong move, and the child can become the object of the abuser’s wrath.  And that misstep might mean you don’t get up out of bed for 4 or 5 days.  So while I was obsessing on remaining safe; being hyper-vigilant to protect my own heart, my own mind, my own body, to somehow navigate the dangers of the landscape of my childhood, my relationships with my brothers and sisters were stillborn.  

I had no time for closeness with my siblings and no emotional capacity even if I had wanted to.  I had no frame of reference for the idea of peaceful or relaxed or friendly interactions with my siblings.  No “kid” chatting happened at my house!  Can you imagine this as a rule in a household of 13 kids?  Who would even think of any sane way to keep a lid on the bubbling happiness and joy that would be natural in a large family?  But, in my household joy and chatter and laughter were not so much suppressed by parents as truly beaten and terrorized out of us!  

There was no ability in my home to sit quietly and think or play or wander or discover, for myself or anybody else.  The standard daily activities you might expect of a lively household of 15 people were simply not heard in my house.  An uncomfortable silence was more the order of the day.  No more than a prisoner in a prison camp or a soldier on the battle field is capable of activities of the heart which are possible only when there is peace and safety, I could not attend to my companions of childhood.  And in this sense of “wartime” at my house we were left without the benefit that a military group might be afforded; with their creeds and their training and their preparation; we were all children with only one objective . . . survival. That was simply all that mattered to any of us.

When my brother, Fred Jr., was 18 years old he decided to move out of our family home. My father, Fred W. Phelps, Sr., vehemently opposed this, but Fred Jr. stood up for himself. Finally he and my father compromised: the firstborn son would go and live with one of our father's business associates. Bob Martin was a retired army officer who ran Bo-Mar Investigations, a private detective agency. After Fred, Jr. had been staying with Martin for a week in his house, I remember my father got a phone call. It was Martin.

"Let's go!" said my father to me! I had become the squad leader in my father’s schemes. While we drove to the detective's place, my father explained the plan he and Martin had for my older brother, Fred Jr. We were to wait till he was in the shower and then confront him since a naked man would obviously feel vulnerable and powerless. Fred Jr. had just come in from work and gone into the bathroom. "When he comes out, we'll be waiting," said my father, with delight in his voice.

And so we were. As Fred Jr. walked out, towel around his waist, he was confronted by my father, by me, and a suddenly hostile Bob Martin.

"Get your clothes! You're going home!" snapped my father. The eldest son complied without argument. The next part I'll never forget. When we got out to the car, I was in the back seat, on the right, my father was behind the wheel, and Fred Jr. was in the front passenger seat. Bob had followed us and he opened the door on my brother's side. Through the space between the front seat and the door, I could see Bob place a revolver against my brother's right knee. And he said: "If you run away again, I have orders to come after you. And when I catch you, I'm going to shoot you right here." Of course his father, Fred W. Phelps, Sr., had issued the orders!

. . . And I just sat there in the back seat stunned; and did not say a word!  As an adult the thing I am stunned by is the brutality that was being threatened if my brother did not comply with my father’s wishes, and still wonder about what impact that threat had on my brother’s psyche.

Another time I remember was of my sister, Katherine, who at the time was attempting to live on her own in a quiet Topeka neighborhood. She was dating a boy from our high school. It was the summertime, about 6:30 in the evening. Katherine’s boyfriend pulled in to pick her up for a date. My father and I, with some of the other children, had been waiting for her to come out of the house, and when she did, we just swooped in.

We had two cars. I was driving one and my father was driving the other. It was a real 'Starsky and Hutch' maneuver. We blocked off the departing vehicle, and pulled Katherine out of the car while her date just sat there stunned. Back at home her father beat her terribly. It was then her father confined her in the little nook area outside his own bedroom for 40 days and gave her nothing to sustain her but water.  This 'parental intervention' was actually a kidnapping: Katherine was 18 when it occurred, just as my brother Fred had been.

. . . And I willingly helped, and never once opened my mouth on behalf of my sister Katherine!

When my father was suspended from practicing law for two years our family was left with no income.  My father’s brainstorm was to have his children sell candy for his ‘church’ and he would keep the money to provide for his family. Sure we told people we were selling candy to raise money to buy an organ for our church, but that was just a little lie compared to the rest of our lives.

My brother, Nate was obstinate and resistant toward my father’s schemes and this so angered my father that, by age nine, when regular candy-selling family outings were planned, frequently Nate was forced to miss them. He was required to stay behind with my father at the house/church building.  And during the course of the day, my father would beat Nate whenever he wished.  I recall once the family returned home to find my father jogging around the dining room table, beating the sobbing boy with a broom handle on the arms, hands, back, head, face, shoulders, rear end and legs, at will. My father would hit him in a different spot on his body each time around the dining room table.  While doing so, my father was alternately spitting on the frightened child and laughing an evil laugh of delight.

When Nate wasn't allowed to go along he would literally scream and chase my mom as she drove off with us kids in the car. He knew what was coming after we left.  I remember little Nate racing alongside the car windows, screaming and crying out begging us not to leave him until, like a dog, he could no longer keep up.  I am sorry to admit it, but I did not allow myself to feel any empathy for my little brother Nate, only relief it wasn't happening to me.  I just stared straight ahead.  I didn't allow myself to think about what Nate was yelling about. I was just glad to get out of there.

. . . It never crossed my mind to say a word to my father on my brother’s behalf, EVER!

One cold snowy day, the snow was crunching under the mailman's tires, and under his boots, as he put the day’s mail into our mailbox. With the mail that day came grades from the junior high.  “It’s time for the meat to get separated from the coconut”, my father said as he opened the letter.  My brothers, Nathan and Jonathan, showed poor grades . . . and the meat DID get separated from the coconut.

The beatings were so severe the boys were covered with massive, broken, purple, black and red bruising extending from their lower back to below their knees. Neither Jonathan nor Nate were able to sit down since the blows to the backs of their knees had caused so much swelling they were unable to bend them and because they were in such pain from the beatings.

And after the beatings came the shaming. It was 1972-the age of shoulder locks. Both boys had begged our father not to give them crew cuts, which had always been our family norm. They already felt exposed to enough ridicule as the odd ducks whose father didn't believe in Christmas, whose home no one was allowed to visit, who lived in a church building, and who were forbidden to visit others' homes (Remember isolation is the lynchpin to most abuse). 

Jonathan and Nate had a teenage dread of braving the corridors of the junior high with flesh-heads in an era of long manes, and their father had relented. Their hair had been allowed to touch their collars. But when the grades turned bad, out came the clippers. No attachments. Brutally short! Shaved bald.  It was not a haircut. It was a penalty . . . and a further way of cutting them off from the outside world

. . . Who me? Oh yes, you’re right . . . I uttered not a peep!

When I was 19 ½ years old I mustered the blind courage to leave my family and my father and his ‘church’.  I had no particular thought or concern for my family; my mother or my brothers or sisters.  It certainly never crossed my mind that they would miss me or that it would even matter to them if I were gone.  There was no place or time for sentiment or goodbyes.  Nothing could have been further from my mind!  In fact I quietly prepared my little basket of possessions and crept out very carefully so as to be unnoticed and safe . . . at 10:30 at night.   

. . . And my father verbally destroyed me, publicly from his pulpit, and privately to my family, and later, to his grandchildren in the years after I left.  And for many years it produced its intended effect which was to create an environment that would simply not allow leaving, not allow independent thought, and not allow each of us the opportunity to live the lives we were meant to live, with freedom and dignity.  

As far as my family is concerned, I am the worst of the worst, the lowest of the low.  I am the most evil heretic, reprobate conceivable and doomed for hell.  My mother, brothers, sisters, nephews and nieces all know full well the consequences of making any contact with me.  They will end up as I; banished and condemned to hell!  That was the ever-present threat from my father and it hangs over my family members to this day.  

And I doubt any of them would want to contact me anyway because I stood quietly watching their devastation and uttered not a word. And most of them are still there, except for two, and now a few nephews and nieces out of 50+ people.  And the price for staying is to do exactly as father bids, and now after so many years, and with my father’s passing, it has become . . . exactly as they now bid. His bidding has fully become their bidding. And for all who leave . . . banishment!

As for me, I forgave myself after years of anguish and sorrow.  I worked on discovering the truth of the abuse, the truth about the Lord and the truth about my father.  And through much prayer before the Lord and help from professionals, I worked through the darkness and into the light.  And I was finally able to forgive myself for my part in the abuse of my brothers and sisters, and the hurt I have caused my mother.  And I was gradually able to fully forgive my father.  

Though it has been 40 years, and though my father has now passed away, I still have no contact from my brothers and sisters, nephews and nieces, with three wonderful exceptions, all three of whom have also left.  For my family members who remain in my father’s ‘church’ it is as though I do not exist.  I am the black plague and there is no incentive to venture towards me.  I’m all trouble, as far as my family is concerned.  I also have no contact with my mother.  

My brothers and sisters were fellow prisoners with me; my mother too.  They know what they have been taught from the day they were born.  The same is now true for my nephews and nieces.  I have nothing to forgive them for; they are doing what they think they must do.  They are doing what they need to do to avoid hell and avoid banishment, which is what they believe they would experience if they made contact with me.  I accept this. 

Through it all I have learned that chronic, pervasive, extreme physical, emotional, psychological and religious abuse has many faces to it . . . it:

-destroys the ties that bind

-poisons the heart

-crushes the spirit

-cripples the soul

-devastates the mind

-hardens the heart

-produces outcasts

-generates utter chaos 

-spawns mindless compliant followers

-exalts pride and arrogance

-institutes and formalizes deceit

-dictates the assigning of scapegoats

-concocts and perpetuates lies

-twists the Holy Bible endangering the soul

-requires someone to blame 

-hatches and perpetuates preposterous suppositions

-enables the free rein of evil

-dismantles the ability to think objectively

-shatters trust

-imprisons and enslaves for life those unable to escape

-mandates secrecy 

-wrecks the family

-actualizes the goals of the abuser in the lives of those unable to escape

-creates a fear of hell greater than the hell they are living

-causes those abused to hate

-turns each abused heart away from the true living God

-is a scourge on society at large

-begets fraud

-causes harm to every human heart it touches and

-just messes everything up

Love, in the form of the person of Jesus Christ, is the antidote, the balm, the restoration and the hope, for anyone who has experienced abuse. It is also essential to have human beings who love and support you; and professionals to aid your recovery.  But it does not happen easily or quickly.  It has taken me years to put straight what was made crooked and twisted deep at my core. But I am now free because of the truth. 

At first the truth is hard to see. But as the lies are chiseled away, as the terror is reduced, as the hurt is acknowledged and the balm of healing is applied by the ‘Balm of Gilead’ Himself (Jesus); through grieving, through mourning, through much re-examining and searching; healing can occur, truth can be identified, and the heart can be made mostly whole again. Lies will cease to stand when they are in the presence of the truth.
If there are lies you still believe that were told to you by your abusers, you can be set free by the truth too.  The beautiful, powerful, amazing cleansing of truth can heal you, too. It can!

This same learning of the truth, and the ability to be set free, is the hope I have for every member of my family.  However I realize such healing can only happen for the willing; for the sick who know they need a physician.

God says in the Bible “I will bring the blind by a way they did not know; I will lead them in paths they have not known. I will make darkness light before them, and crooked places straight. These things I will do for them, and not forsake them.”  Isaiah 42:16

Healing and wholeness is what I desire for you too, no matter what your hurt, however severe or mild.  If you have been broken, I bid you to come to the source of all hope and healing, the Lord Jesus Himself, our Maker, the Great Physician.  I encourage you to find one or two people to love you and support you, and a professional or two who can aid you in your healing journey.

My wife and daughters know they have a man in their lives who is whole (enough) and who loves them deeply.  My daughters have always known this, for I was able to do the healing work, for the most part in time to avoid infecting them with my poison.  My wife was not so fortunate.  She came into the fire with me, to get me out, and she has some scars to show for her courage.  But through it all, my wife and I are fully in love, and we fully love one another today, by God’s grace.  

May this kind of blessing be yours as well!  If you choose to brave this journey of healing, the darkness can be made light for you; one step at a time.

Mark Phelps

8 comments:

  1. Peace and healing to you, Mark, from a fellow cult survivor (different cult, slightly less brutal techniques, still harmful).

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    1. Thank you Beverly! I hope your heart is whole again!

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  2. Good job Mark very sad about Nathan of how you were not able to help him, and when Nathan and Jonathan got beaten so badly and the school officials say it I'm surprised child services didn't take you, Katherine, Margie, Shirley, Nathan, Jonathan, Rebekah, Elizabeth, Timothy, Dortha, Rachel, and little Abigail away from your mother and father. And what baffles me is that your father didn't want you or your siblings to pursue other careers besides lawyers, a real father would support his children's wishes and I believe that you and your wife support your daughters wishes for any career they want to choose. Am I right? God bless you Mark

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  3. My father intimidated the entire community. Nobody could stop him.

    Of course my wife and I support our daughters as any good parent does.

    Thank you for your comment Abraham!

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    1. Couldn't you have just rallied the community to put and pardon me for saying this but your fraudulent excuse of a father in clink by bringing the US government into the equation. Even now and I know this wouldn't mean much I bet right now in Hell he's getting his comeuppance in the form of one of the following:

      1. Stewing in the black sludge of the Styx like a pig in the mier of the hatred he possesed.

      2. locked away in an iron casket that burns with the eternal flames of Hell in the city of Dis or is it spelled Dys?

      3. Having the flesh ripped from his bones as he wanders aimlessly across the sands of abomination for the violence he commited against God granted it's more verbal violence than it is physical but it's still violence against God.

      4. Having his head twisted 180 degrees so he can never see what's in front of him like the hypocrite he is.

      or finally

      5. Freezing his carcass off in the depths of Judecca at Satan's mercy as Lucifer prepares to devour his soul like he did Judas Iscariot's

      Divine comedy references in all of the scenarios I think your old man is in not Biblical ones.

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  4. Mark, thank you. I didn't think I could continue reading. A deep sadness rushed in for Nate, for you, and your family. But I did keep reading. Your words deserve to be read and the truth made known. Thanks for your bravery in writing this blog. I'm so glad God brought you out of the darkness.

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  5. You are brave. Thank you, Mark. I wonder what, if anything, has changed since Fred Sr passed. It's sad that his terror lives on even after death. I live in Topeka and have heard the stories for years, but not to this extent. Makes me want to kidnap the little ones and show them real love. Speechless....

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  6. Chelsea,

    Thank you for your kindness in writing.

    The world at WBC and within my family (one in the same) has not changed since my father passed.

    Now their drive is to live up to his legacy. Anything to be in his favor. The terror is deep in their hearts and they are unconscious of it, for the most part; those who remained.

    Makes me want to kidnap the little ones and show them real love too!

    My family lives with the kind of insanity that does leave a person speechless!

    Thank you again Chelsea!

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