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P. 12
[Debby is telling about a talk with her sister, Cherry, while
they sit on the bathroom floor in a
Tokyo hotel while on tour. Debby's father had
gotten angry at her when he suspected her of smoking cigarettes. She was 15
at this time.]
"Now look, Debby. I know what it's
like. And I admit that Daddy doesn't always handle situations the best way
possible. But I swear to you, his motives are right."
"He's smothering me!"
"He loves you. He's concerned and he's
trying to raise us the best way possible. He wants so much to protect you
from danger. All kinds—physical, emotional, and spiritual. He's just trying
to save you from making mistakes that could really hurt you. Can't you see
that? If he didn't care … "
"Love? Restrictions, accusations,
rules, spankings—that's all I see! I don't see any love. I hate being in
trouble all the time. I hate not being allowed to do anything fun. I hate
being accused of every darn thing that happens. I hate …"
P. 15
[Debby noted that she began to be in real conflict with her father
after the age of 12.]
My father and I clashed constantly. He
didn't seem to understand me. I would get spanked for what he called
"glaring" at him. We would be fighting about something, and he would grab my
face and shove it towards a mirror. "Do you see that look? Do you think
that's pretty? Do you?" In an instant, the look would change; my face would
soften. "What look?" I would ask demurely. "I'm sorry if you don't like my
face, but it's the only one I've got."
P. 39
[Debby is relating a conversation she and sister Lindy had when they
volunteered to work for a year in a home for children with emotional
disturbances (which was evidenced mostly in old-fashioned bad behavior).
Debby is 18 at this time.]
"You know," she [Lundy] began. "I've
really had to face up to some things, watching these kids. The ones I've
gotten to know have been raised in homes where discipline is either
hit-and-miss or nonexistent."
"I know what you're going to say," I
interrupted. "And I hate to admit it, but I'm beginning to agree. I still
think Dad and Mom were overprotective with us, but I have to say that I can
see some good in the way they set boundaries and really enforced them."
"Yeah, have you seen it? Most of the
time, when one of the kids starts having a fit, he's really asking someone
to give order and direction to his life," Lundy said.
"Even if it means having someone sit on
him," I added.
"Remember how Daddy used to tell us we
were just asking for a spanking?"
"Yeah, I guess we were, too—sometimes."
Spankings, however, were not part of
the program at the school. Instead, the staff had two major procedures for
controlling the children's behavior—in addition, that is, to wrestling them
to the ground and sitting on them. One was drugs …the other was a system of
rewards.
By the standards that governed the
school, spankings were regarded as detrimental. But are they, really? I
wondered. Are drugs and sugar a better way to handle behavior problems?
P. 61-64
The Last Spanking [this is actually the name of the
chapter]
[I have included the entire text, except for about the last 1 ½
pages. This is the summer of 1976. Debby is 19.]
"After the end of the
Vinyard Bible School
in the spring, our family started a tour of one-nighters which ended at the
Ohio State Fair. The last show was marked with a tinge of melancholy. The
chances were unlikely we'd be performing again as a family, since Lundy and
Cherry were both soon to be married.
After we said goodbye to our musicians
and staff with many hugs and a few tears, my sisters and I trudged back to
the hotel. Mom and Dad weren't there yet, still at the fairgrounds finishing
up business. It was late, but I was hungry. I knew the hotel restaurant and
coffee shop were closed, so I decided to get something out of the vending
machine in the hallway. As I headed out the door, I neglected to say where I
was going and just told the others I'd be back in a minute.
Out in the hallway, I changed my mind
and took the elevator down to the lobby. There were more food machines on
the first floor. I stepped out of the elevator, and there was our drummer,
Bobby. He and I had developed a close friendship over the years that he had
worked for the family.
"Hi, Bobby,"
"Hi."
"You feeling a little down, too?"
"Yeah. I really am. It's so strange to
think of this whole thing coming to an end and all of us going our separate
ways."
We began to reminisce, and I could see
that Bobby wanted to talk his feelings out a little bit. Though I knew my
family would be wondering what had become of me, I hung around and listened.
Meanwhile, upstairs, Mom and Dad
arrived back in our rooms and began to get worried as my absence lengthened.
Pretty quickly they started out to look for me.
I guess I had been out of the room a
little less than half an hour when I spotted Daddy striding firmly toward us
from the elevators. I saw that look on his face which said I was in trouble.
I thought to myself, this could mean a scene. Bobby's going to end up
feeling worse than before. He'll think he's responsible for getting me into
trouble with Daddy. My whole plan of offering him comfort was suddenly
backfiring.
I quickly decided what to do.
"Where have you been?" Daddy demanded
as he walked up.
"Oh, just standing here talking with
Bobby a few minutes. I came down to get a snack out of one of the machines."
Keeping cool and smiling, I was trying to keep a lid on the situation and
spare Bobby. That turned out not to be such a wise decision.
"You've been gone thirty minutes.
Didn't it occur to you we might get worried about you this time of night?"
My attempt to be cool had been seen as total indifference.
I persisted with my plan. "Well, no, I
didn't think it was any big deal. We were just having a harmless
conversation."
"No big deal?" Daddy glared.
"Why, what's wrong? Did you need me for
something?" Now I was beginning to feel very uncomfortable and angry, too.
"You just come upstairs with me right
now."
I had set down a full ice bucket and
candy bar on a chair across the hall, and I turned to pick them up.
"I said now!" Daddy was furious.
"I'm just getting the bucket," I
explained, still hoping my cool attitude would control the situation and
make it work out as I wanted. Instead, Daddy strode back to the elevators
with me, leaving Bobby behind, feeling exactly as I had not wanted him to
feel.
Daddy continued, "You act as if you can
just come and go as you please—like you couldn't care less what worry it
might cause anybody else."
I wanted to say I was sorry, but I
couldn't. I was locked into my routine of being cool, despite its obvious
failure. I felt trapped by my own behavior. And Daddy was getting madder by
the minute.
The whole family was gathered in my
room. "I found her chatting in the hall off the lobby with Bobby," Daddy
announced. "She doesn't seem to understand why we might have been worried."
I flushed with anger and embarrassment.
Daddy turned back to me. "Now just what
was so important for the two of you to be talking about so intently at this
hour?"
"Well, we were both feeling a little
sad about tonight. Especially Bobby."
"What do you two have to be so sad
about?" Daddy's tone was more demanding than inquiring.
Resenting his condescending attitude, I
snapped back, "If you don't know, I'm not going to tell you!"
Nothing I could have said would have
enraged my dad more at that moment.
"What did you say?" he yelled.
The ice bucket fell from my hand and
sent ice sailing across the floor.
Daddy grabbed my arm. "Don't you ever
talk to me that way?" I began to pull away as he tried to lay me over his
knee for a spanking. In the struggle, Daddy's arm slipped and his elbow
struck me in the head.
"Oh, my God!" I screamed. "You hit me
in the head!" I proceeded to fall over on the bed, crying. That distracted
him for a moment and picked up sympathy for me from my sisters. In fact, the
whole scene must have looked pretty bad, and a couple of the girls started
crying. My mom had even yelled out, "Pat, be careful!" during the struggle.
The phone rang. My dad answered it and
after a minute said, "Look, Bobby, I know you think it's your fault, but
it's not. This is entirely between Debby and me. I'm sorry, but I can't talk
right now. Goodbye."
Daddy turned to me, glaring. I felt my
forehead. A nice lump was rising, just the evidence I needed to make my dad
out to be the villain and me the victim.
The phone rang again. Daddy turned to
pick it up. I looked over at Laurie. She was lying on the bed, seething with
anger at my father for being so rough with me. She looked back at me as if
to say, "Don't you hate him for this?"
It was just the response I had wanted.
But at that very moment, something clicked in my mind. The whole scene
flashed before me—and, strangely, I could see it from my dad's point of view
as well as my own. I had never been quite so free to do that before. The
anger drained away, and I couldn't savor the expression on Laurie's face any
longer. I smiled to indicate that everything was going to be alright.
I turned and walked into the bathroom
and began to wash my face. Bobby had called Daddy back, and this time my
father couldn't get off the line so quickly. As the cool water rinsed my
face, I looked in the mirror—and laughed. I was no amusing picture, with big
red eyes and that throbbing lump on my forehead. The whole thing had been
pretty silly, actually.
Then I saw Daddy's face in the mirror.
He wasn't glaring. He put a hand on my shoulder and said, "Debby, why don't
you meet me in my room in a minute?"
P. 80-81
[Speaking of friend Donna Freburg and another friend, when they were
children.]
"I remember another time the three of
us were together, this time staying overnight at Donna's home. … Around
midnight
we lit up, giggling at each other, trying to blow smoke rings and choking on
inhaled smoke. …"
"When Donna's mom opened the door, we
were all tucked in, pretending to be asleep. Unfortunately, the swirling
smoke from all corners of the room gave us away."
"… we got a much-deserved lecture for
having stupidly created a fire hazard by our attempts to conceal the
evidence. I was grateful not to have been in my own home that night. If I
had been, I would have received a good spanking, in addition to the
lecture."
P. 107-108
"As do most sisters who get together
after a long separation, we reminisced about less serious times growing up.
Laurie was quick to remind me that I usually had been the instigator of
trouble and the ringleader whenever my sisters and I were disobedient. Yet
often, if we were caught, they were punished instead of me."
"When Laurie and I were about six or
seven, we shared a bedroom. Every afternoon about
1:00 my mother sent us to our
room for a nap. One day we were horsing around instead of sleeping and
accidentally knocked over a big lamp. The clatter was sure to attract
attention. I heard someone coming down the hall toward our room. Jumping
under the covers, I left Laurie to face our angry father. He caught her out
of bed and she got the spanking, while I pretended to wake up startled from
all the noise."
"Spankings, especially from my father,
were not just a perfunctory pat on the behind. He meant for us to remember
them and used a slipper, belt, or anything else that stung. The number of
whacks on our bare bottoms depended as much on our reaction to being caught
as the offense itself. We could expect more if we had lied or talked back."
"Often with tears still fresh in our
eyes, the four of us would go up to my room and compare war wounds. Bending
over, we'd back up to the mirror to see whose backsides had the reddest
marks. Mine were always the worst, mainly because I had the most sensitive
skin."
"Another time Laurie was paddled when I
deserved it came when we were playing "truth or dare." The game involved a
choice between answering any embarrassing questions the other players could
think up or accepting a dare to do crazy or sometimes dangerous things. One
summer at camp, I made others eat horse manure and even tried it myself. At
home, I had been known to dare my sisters to jump from tall trees or
rooftops."
"This time I made Laurie take off her
clothes and ride her bicycle around the driveway. She was only nine, nothing
too obscene, but there she went after we taunted her sufficiently. Our
family home is right on a busy intersection, and Laurie had to ride around
our circular driveway and out onto the sidewalk—five times in all. Lundy and
I hid in the bushes, laughing hysterically, especially when a tour bus
drove by to show out-of-state visitors "the homes of the stars.""
"Laurie was tooling around on her
fourth trip, when our mother came back from a shopping trip. The car
screeched to a halt in the driveway, and Laurie was grabbed off that bike
almost quicker than we knew it. Lundy and I stifled our laughter as we
watched Laurie's bare behind disappear through the front door under my
mother's strong right arm."
"I never said a word to protect Laurie.
She had once told me she'd rather take the punishment than watch me get
paddled. That was fine with me. I figured at the time that if she was that
dumb, I wouldn't stand in her way. Today, I recognize that Laurie wasn't
dumb. What I mistook as stupidity was really the seed of warm sensitivity
and compassion for other people."
P. 141
"Even when I was looking at them with
hate in my eyes [her parents], they still didn't let me go where they
thought I shouldn't be. I guess deep down a small part of me recognized
their motive; they really loved me and were concerned about me. They never
showed anything different. I'd get spankings, and I'd get punished, but I
was always told everyday, "We love you." After a spanking, they'd make me
hug them, and sometimes that would make me the angriest—but when I really
thought about it, or when I had to get down to the basics, I knew that a lot
of my friends who were allowed to do things I wanted to do had parents who
just really didn't care."
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