Posts tagged Mother’s Day

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT 2016: Amy Roberts, 43, USA

The Pixel Project is proud to present our third annual Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2016. The annual campaign runs throughout the month of May 2016 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This campaign was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

Our third 2016 Survivor Stories interview is with Amy Roberts from the USA.

TRIGGER WARNING: The first Q&A in this interview may be distressing for some Domestic Violence survivors.

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

The Survivor Bio:

Amy Roberts is a Biotech Representative specialising in AS and PSA in Northern Ohio.  She enjoys coaching her children in sports, dancing with her boyfriend, reading, and is writing a book for women called “Chaos” in her spare time.  She is still in therapy “to take custody of herself” and with each day, is getting stronger and living a peaceful life with her three children in Northern Ohio.

Amy Roberts

1. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

My experience of abuse began when I was seven years old with a female babysitter. This lasted for a few years.  Years later, I was in my freshmen year in college when I was drugged and woke up to a man raping me.

The domestic violence in my marriage started one day after my honeymoon and did not end until I got a Civil Protection Order (CVO) on May 27, 2014. I was strangled and beaten to the point of unconsciousness on 31 December 2012. Prior to that, he had mentally and verbally abused me throughout the entire marriage.  He also beat me and head-butted me when I was pregnant with my second son.

I filed for divorce in 2013. He had me stalked and drugged me by switching my medication out. I ended up in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and, later, the Psychiatric ward, as it was classified as a suicide attempt.  He also hacked into my work computer pretending to me and anonymously called the head of compliance at my company.  I resigned shortly after because my company was concerned about what was going on, and I decided to leave quietly.  I was making close to $200k when I quit, and it was the end of my career.

 

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

I met a very hard-core counsellor that specialised in Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) from Domestic Violence (DV). She made me get real about the façade of a life I was living.  We talk often about how all survivors at one time are liars, and I, like many, went to great lengths to hide what I was living with every day.

I was a very good mother, very successful Biotech Representative, and friendly in the community. When I told the truth about who I was, people were in shock.

I spent two to three sessions a week in therapy for a year, and then filed again for divorce on 17 April 2014 (my birthday). I received the CPO on 27 May 2014 for a period of one year, and began to rebuild my life. I got a job, moved houses, and rebuilt my sanity.

 

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

A friend who was helping me handed me a prayer book and I began to pray, even though at the time I was not a spiritual person.

I started therapy, did yoga, self-reading to understand PTSD and triggers, started journaling, and walked away from people who didn’t support me in my quest to be healthy for myself and for my children. This included my entire immediate family and some “close” friends.

Today, I surround myself with people I trust and focus on what I can control, and my kids.  I no longer have to be everything to every person I meet.  I also am very honest about the person I was and the person I am today.

 

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

  • Take custody of yourself first and the rest will correct itself.
  • Listen to people who are helping you in the chaos – they will guide you out of the storm.
  • Do one small thing a day to tackle getting out and getting healthy.  Small steps often turn into big movements toward freedom if you start to focus on the things you can control.

 

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

I think we need to start making people feel uncomfortable in big waves about the true impact of domestic violence and violence against women in general.  Nothing ever changes in life until the status quo is no longer accepted and challenged.

After a woman makes the decision to really leave her abuser, she is faced with the anxiety and fear of a long custody battle and the possibility of losing her children, or not being able to protect her children during visitation.

In the U.S., the Safe Child Act would stop abusers from going after our precious children.  Imagine a federal law in all 50 states that would protect the children, making it easier for more women to leave and for more children to get treatment in order to break the generational cycle of domestic violence. Many court systems today are holding on to “shared parenting”, the Safe Child Act would change the status quo allowing mothers and children to get healthy.

 

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

I support the Pixel Project because it is a supportive action-oriented grassroots organisation full of people who help survivors tell their stories, provide starting-point resources for victims and survivors, and educate the public about violence against women.

The hope is that people will pass these stories and resources along to create hope and awareness that you can change your life and you can get better.  Only through educating ourselves, our children, our families, our friends and our communities, can we start to make people feel uncomfortable about the status quo people associate with abuse, and the stigma by admitting you are a “Survivor”.

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT 2016: Becky Paroz, 42, Australia

The Pixel Project is proud to present our third annual Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2016. The annual campaign runs throughout the month of May 2016 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This campaign was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

Our second 2016 Survivor Stories interview is with Becky Paroz from Australia.

TRIGGER WARNING: The first two Q&As in this interview may be distressing for some Domestic Violence survivors.

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

The Survivor Bio:

Author Becky Paroz’s alter ego is Bekstar. While Becky had an award-winning career as a Project Manager in the construction industry, Bekstar was the personality that learned to manage the outcomes of growing up in a domestic violence situation and being diagnosed with a crippling disease while still a teenager. Her published writings capture her insights, journey, horror and humour that encapsulates her life, including the solutions she found to live her life to the fullest. Her style is conversational, practical, easy to read and designed to offer the lessons learnt throughout her tumultuous life for others to benefit from.  

Becky Paroz1. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

My first memories are of violence from my father.  He was an alcoholic and I grew up with domestic violence as the norm.

My mother was frequently subject to this violence until I was old enough and then also subjected to his physical violence. It was so much a part of my life, I do not remember a time that it was not happening. I have memories, at about age 10, of his dragging my mother around by the hair and raping her at knife point. She does not have these memories, but rather large blanks spots throughout this time of her life.

At age 13, he also started to sexually assault me. This continued until I was able to leave home. My mother was “committed” after I had left home, which led him to ask me to “take on the wife duties” for him while she was incarcerated in the mental institute.  There are too many incidents to simply pick one to discuss. I am very pleased that he is dead now.

 

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

I left home, but it was not an escape. After a while, when it became clear I could not remove my mother from the situation, I simply removed myself. I refused contact with both my parents and their situation for many years. My mother had no contact with her family at his behest, and when I realised I doing the same thing, I re-entered their lives.

I set very strict ground rules, making it clear that I would have no hesitation in contacting the police and airing all the dirty laundry  if the behaviour was not to an acceptable standard in our interactions. I also made it clear that I was not to be touched or in any way inviting touch for any reason as another rule of our interactions. It was an act of power over him and as such, as most bullies do, he submitted.

I never felt free until he passed away. At that point my mother came to live with me and 4.5 years later is slowly healing her life and coming to terms with what she experienced.

 

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

I took every action I could think of (and plenty I do not recommend).

I was faced with a chronic illness, diagnosed at 18 (shortly after I left home), which was another kind of debilitating incident to impact me. However, I do believe this decision point around the disease – to continue and make the best of my life, or give up and quit for keeps – was instrumental in moving me forward in controlling my life, obtaining the outcomes I wanted, and getting the education I have sought to deal with my experience.

I have read every kind of self-help books I could find, undertaking coaching and learnt how to be a coach, and various other activities to move towards the desire for myself to be in control of my life.

My main thought for the aftermath is that while I could not choose what happened to me during his controlling years, I could certainly choose my actions beyond that point. Making conscious choices about what I want as a person, instead of what I don’t want as a result of those experiences, is the most clear way I can phrase how I have become the successful person I am today.

 

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

Get out.  Cut ties.  Once clear of the situation, seek advice, support and knowledge, and read everything you can on the subject of what happened to you and also who you wish to be.

Spend time with healthy families and learn that not every fight leads to violence. Spend time with people who drink and realise that not everyone who drinks is an alcoholic one step away from violence outbursts.

Read others’ stories. Talk to qualified and trusted advisors. Listen to everything, but in the end, own what you choose to think and be clear why you choose it. That is the only power you will ever need to be a whole person again.

Also, understand and accept that the rage never leaves you, and that it is okay to mourn what happened, as long as it does not dictate the rest of your life, your choices and who you are being in every moment.

Make the most of your freedom once you have it as you know what it is like to not have that freedom. Demonstrate empathy for others, but do not try and save others in that circumstance. Show them how you did it and let them make their choices.

 

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

Teach children about empathy, about differences, and allow them to express themselves in a safe environment if it is happening to them. Believe them when they talk about what might be happening at home.

Educate young adults about consent, about violence, and how it is not always from an alcoholic, or from a fist. Words wound more than bruises. Bruises fade, bones heal. The words you hear as a child stay with you forever.

Speak out and stand strong as a collective against the bullying that is so casual in our world. Publish books and make sure young people, even children, can access this information so they can learn early about what might be happening to them.

Encourage women to stand together and not to tear one another down is also a good start; if we can stand together and stop pulling each other’s hair (metaphorically speaking) then we would be a force to be reckoned with.

 

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

Because I believe in what The Pixel Project does. Because I have been there and experienced first hand the damage a broken childhood causes. Because I believe that I need to be a part of the solution, not merely an observer with experience. Because I made it out of that cycle and I want to be a part of assisting other women to break the chains that violence creates inside your own head.

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT 2016: DeMetria Hayes, 46, USA

The Pixel Project is proud to present our third annual Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2016. The annual campaign runs throughout the month of May 2016 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This campaign was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

Our first 2016 Survivor Stories interview is with DeMetria Hayes from the USA.

TRIGGER WARNING: The first two Q&As in this interview may be distressing for some Domestic Violence survivors.

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

The Survivor Bio:

DeMetria Hayes is a domestic violence survivor and a single mother of three. In 2014, she became a renowned author of “Daffodil, A Mother’s Journey,” a book about surviving domestic violence. In 2015, DeMetria was a Special Guest on the Red Carpet at the Pan African Film Festival and a finalist for the prestigious Phillis Wheatley Book Award. Many academics and activists have acknowledged DeMetria as a bright, fresh voice in the battle for gender equality and ending the silence surrounding domestic violence. She has been the featured guest in newspapers and on the radio for her work facilitating seminars and workshops throughout the country to raise awareness of Domestic Violence. DeMetria founded a self-publishing consultant company, Grace Under Fire Publishing, which gives others the opportunity to publish their story. She also enjoys participating in outreach ministry to reach other women throughout her community.

Demetria Hayes - Headshot_cropped1. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

I was in a once-good relationship which turned into a vicious trap of mental and physical abuse full of lies, deceit, doubt, guilt, and fear.

The vicious cycle began less than two weeks after I delivered our first child.  I remember the scar, lying on the floor with the sensation of my skin having been ripped off my face. He used intimidation to keep me there. He said that no one else would want me.

It didn’t stop there: While he was driving about 45 miles per hour, heading toward the freeway, out of nowhere he socks me in the nose. I couldn’t take the abuse anymore, so I jumped out of the car. I hit concrete, rolled out of the way of oncoming traffic. Cars started honking and yelling out of their car windows, “ARE YOU OKAY?” Shocked, scared, ashamed and embarrassed, I put my head down and limped away with a sprained ankle, cuts, scrapes, bruised and bleeding

 

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

My route to escape took some planning:

My three children and I had to move out of our condo, but we had no place to go. I started packing and giving everything away to the Salvation Army including the Christmas tree. I had to be careful to make sure I was not raising any suspicions. I had to act like everything was okay.

When the time came for us to vacate the place, I called a local shelter to see if they had room for myself and my children. I made excuses to my husband about why I couldn’t see him, such as there was a curfew and he was not allowed near there because it was a women’s and children’s shelter. I also told him they would assist us with housing if we stayed for thirty days.

After that, I was able to safely move into an apartment with my children.

 

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

I had to regain control over my life and I recognised that I needed help to become emotionally healthy and heal, not just for myself but my children as well. I could not do it on my own. I held this secret for nearly twenty years.

I had to separate, disconnect myself from my abuser as much as possible. I had to replace negative talk with positive messages. I had to deprogramme my thoughts. I started listening to positive messages on the radio, took self-esteem classes, watched preachers on the computer, read books and read the Bible. I found a university who offered student counselling.

I enrolled in college and took exercise and yoga meditation classes. I spent time with people who built me up. I kept a journal of events that happened and began to write out my thoughts and feelings. This led to writing my bookDaffodil, A Mother’s Journey. It was therapeutic.

 

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

Believe in yourself. Never give up. You are strong, You have the inner strength inside of you. Choose You! Know that you do not have go through this alone. Seek help from support groups and start the healing process. You can do it. Silent No More! I believe in you!

 

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

By bringing more awareness to this this issue. So many people I speak too are still clueless what is classified as domestic violence. Education is part of the process. Have open conversations about the issue, not just when a professional athlete or celebrity is involved, but in day-to-day conversation.

Let’s implement more preventative and awareness programmes to combat domestic violence and sexual assault. I’m willing to be part of the movement.

 

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

I support The Pixel Project’s work as an anti-violence against women organisation. As a global leader, The Pixel Project is raising awareness on many different issues, such as sexual assault, honour killing, and human trafficking among others. They are also an information portal generating conversation and globally evoking activism.  They not only help survivors, but provide education to family and friends of survivors. I believe The Pixel Project is a great resource.

The Pixel Project has affected me personally because their Survivor Stories campaign gives survivors like myself a platform to share our stories and give hope to someone in need. To express the desire to live is real, not restricted but restored. My wounded wings have healed and blossomed to their full potential, my arms stretched wide to uplift inspire and empower. I have an internal smile that gives me everlasting joy, peace, harmony… and the Freedom to be free. Thank you!

CALL TO ACTION: The Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project 2015

Blog and PenIn honour of Mother’s Day 2015,  The Pixel Project cordially invites women and girls who have survived gender-based violence to join our second annual Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project.

The project will feature an interview with a survivor per day on The Pixel Project’s blog throughout the month of May 2015. A total of 31 survivor stories will be featured and the focus of the interviews would be on how survivors have rebuilt their lives and/or healed from the violence.

The Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project is created to:

  • Give interviewees a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Give girls and women currently experiencing or have survived the violence ideas and inspiration and hope to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

This project is also part of a programme of initiatives held throughout 2015 in support of the Celebrity Male Role Model Pixel Reveal campaign which aims to:

  • Raise US$1 million for NCADV and The Pixel Project to fund our respective programmes, project and campaigns to end violence against women and girls.
  • Raise awareness about the role of men and boys in helping stop violence against women in their communities through highlighting the importance of positive non-violent prominent male role models.

Survivors of any form of violence against women including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, acid attacks, sex trafficking, breast ironing, and forced marriage/child marriage, are welcome to participate. Survivors may also come from any part of the world.

The interview will take the form of filling in a short Word-format interview form in English; then returning it to The Pixel Project by emailing it to info@thepixelproject.net or pixelprojectteam@gmail.com by the deadline of 31 March 2015.

To download the interview sheet, click this link:

 http://reveal.thepixelproject.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/The-Pixel-Project-Survivor-Stories-Project-Interview-Sheet-2015.doc

For further information and assistance:

Email The Pixel Project team – info@thepixelproject.net

For more information about The Pixel Project: 

Visit http://www.thepixelproject.net

For more information about The Pixel Project’s Celebrity Male Role Model Pixel Reveal campaign:

Visit http://reveal.thepixelproject.net