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RON'S
STORY |
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My Own Personal
Holocaust by Lal Shah |
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I was born at 10.40am on the 9th December 1961 in
Ross Hospital, Paisley, Scotland. My white Scottish mother was married and
already had one son to her husband when she arrived at the hospital to
give birth to me. She was 19 years old. My appearance at birth as a
coloured child was a shock to both her and her husband. The social
worker's notes from that time in the "Statement of Case" read: "Letter
from Almoner, Rottenrow, Glasgow, stating this baby was coloured.
Apparently the mother had allegedly been assaulted by a Pakistani who had
been staying in the same lodging house. This had never been reported to
Police and Mr T had only been informed when it was discovered that the
baby was coloured. Due to the fact that the child is coloured the husband
is prepared to allow his wife to return only on the condition that the
baby does not accompany her." Also there were notes that "maybe the baby
won't be so dark as his skin doesn't seem so dark today"...And thus began
my painful journey.
Named after my father, Lal S and given the surname of my mother, T, I was
sent to Crosslet House, an orphanage, at 5 days of age. When I was 5
months of age I was adopted by J and M M - both white and Scottish. My
adoptive mother had been a nurse at Crosslet House and over a period of
time she had decided that she wished to adopt me. She would often tell me
that she had had a choice of me and a little girl and she choose me
because I was so beautiful. She told me that all the nurses loved me and
that I was special...
At this time she had no children. When I was 18 months old she gave birth
to her first biological son, P. We then moved down to England when I was 3
years old and I began my schooling there. My first school was Holy Trinity
Infants and then I went to Milk Street Public School. During this time,
and up till the time we migrated to Australia, I have no recollection of
being different in anyway at all.
My adoptive mother has told me that she explained to me that I was adopted
when I was young. She and my adoptive father had even taken me for a visit
to Crosslet House to show me where I came from but I was too young to
remember this.
When I was one a few weeks short of 9 years old we immigrated to Australia
arriving on October 30th 1970. We stayed at a hostel for British
immigrants at Bradfield next to Lane Cove. My first Australian school was
Gordon Public School. On my very first day in an Australian School racism
discovered me...
The other kids called me names - (they thought that I was an aboriginal)
and after a few days this included bashings. I told my parents that the
other kids didn't like me and were calling me names and I remember my dad
telling me that "sticks and stones will break your bones but names will
never hurt you". He repeated this mantra many times over the years. I ran
away from school and my adoptive father caught me. I cried and cried and
pleaded with him not to send me back because the other kids hated me and
were fighting with me but my adoptive father forced me to go back.
My schooling over the next few years usually found me as the only dark
skinned person or one of very few dark skinned kids. I cannot remember
periods of time when I was not racially discriminated against in my
Australian school experience. I was not generally accepted by the other
children unless they were also part of an ethnic minority - usually the
Greek guys who let me hang around with them. I was also in an ethnic
minority - of one - the smallest minority of all.
Many many times I remember crying bitter tears at night when I was alone
wishing that I could have blonde hair, fair skin and blue eyes and be like
everyone else. I wet the bed until I was 12 years. The doctor told my
mother it was anxiety from being adopted. I had to use one of the electric
buzzer sheets and it was very humiliating.
Over the schooling years I had many fights and was spat on and called
names like wog, black bastard, abo, black Jew, f*** wog c*** etc. I
listened to the Beatles a lot at this time and particularly their sadder
songs. I always wanted the "Reprieve to Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band" to be played at my funeral. My favourite song of all time was a
Beatles song by John Lennon called "Across the Universe" - the words go:
Words are flowing out like endless rain into a paper cup
They slither wildly as they slip away across the universe
Pools of sorrow, waves of joy are drifting through my open mind,
Possessing and caressing me
Nothing's gonna change my world,
Nothing's gonna change my world,
Images of broken light which dance before me like a million eyes, They
call me on and on, across the universe, Thoughts meander like a restless
wind inside a letter box, They tumble blindly as they make their way
across the universe
Nothing's gonna change my world,
Nothing's gonna change my world
Sounds of laughter shades of earth are ringing through my open ears,
Inciting and inviting me Limitless undying love which shines around me
like a million suns It calls me on and on, across the universe
Nothing's gonna change my world,
Nothing's gonna change my world,
This song echoed the sadness that pervaded my entire being. I played it
again and again especially when I was feeling sad (As an irony, given my
racial background, I always liked the Beatles songs that made use of
Indian sounds such as the Sitar). Another group I liked and whose songs I
identified with was Queen. I especially liked Freddie Mercury, the lead
singer. I understood that he had searched for "somebody to love" all his
life and found no one. I used music to change my moods. Particular songs
seemed to be themes to events in my life.
I always longed deep down to know where I had come from. However, when
anyone asked I would say that it wasn't important and that I wasn't
interested. I said this so often that I think I believed it myself for a
long time.
Every meeting with new people I relived the shame and pain of telling them
I was Scottish. I would always get a look of disbelief and feel obliged to
explain my origins as I knew them. This has continued to this very day and
will be with me the rest of my days.
One of the strange aspects of my experience which messes with my head is
that my upbringing has given me a "white man's mind". I think like a white
man even though I am not. I am very sensitive to racism of any kind for
obvious reasons but I have had the mind bending experience of looking at
people I know to have the same features as me and having racist thoughts
about them. I often would joke to people that I'd always wished I could be
a white supremist racist but was the wrong colour to be one.
My mother told me that my father was Persian and that my name meant the
"Red Prince". I never felt Persian (they never said Iranian) and I often
wondered why I had been given up for adoption. I used to think that maybe
my mother was Elizabeth Taylor as I had been given the surname Taylor at
birth!!
To add to the pain of adoption my mother's brother - my uncle had sexually
assaulted me on 2 occasions. When I told my adoptive parents about this
they brushed it under the carpet - it was like the racism - they didn't
have the ability to cope with it.
I was a lonely and rebellious kid in my teens and I 'acted out' with my
mother in particular. At one stage I was so bad that she had a mental
breakdown from the stress of the fights. On one occasion she broke a large
wooden spoon across my face and told me "You are demon possessed and I
wish that I had never adopted you". I ran away just before my 15th
birthday. When I returned after my birthday my family had eaten my cake,
thrown my birthday card away and given my presents to my brothers (I had
two brothers now - both my adoptive mother's).
I asked my adoptive mother recently why she had the breakdown and she said
that it was because my adoptive father had sided with me against her. I
can remember my adoptive father was often trying to keep the peace and he
displayed a great deal of love towards me all my life. I can remember him
and my mother arguing about me frequently. I wonder what I would have been
like without his constant love.
At 15 I tasted alcohol for the first time and I got very drunk the very
first time I tried it. I drank brandy straight out of the bottle and with
only one intention - to get "out of it". I was to use alcohol and drugs
for the next 24 years for that express purpose - to escape my own mind.
Around the age of 11 I had told my parents that one day I wanted to live
in Israel and I was very interested in Israel (I still am). I remember
very clearly when I first started identifying with Israel - it was during
the Yom Kippur in 1973. My psychotherapist has told me that I identified
with the Jewish people because of their suffering and wandering.
In school my behaviour with the teachers fell into one of two categories.
I either acted like the "teachers pet" or as the most rebellious kid in
the class depending on the teacher. I had a very strong sense of justice
(I've had that all my life). If I felt that someone had perpetrated an
injustice against me or anyone else I would get very angry.
When I finished high school (with a reasonably high mark in the HSC - a
miracle considering how unhappy I was at School) I worked for 3 months. I
then left Australia to go to Israel on a one way ticket, without a
re-entry visa (I had a British Passport). Once I arrived in Israel I
studied Hebrew full time and worked on a Kibbutz. I started drinking very
heavily in Israel and some people called me the "Kibbutz drunk".
I had my first physical relationship with a woman in Israel and I got very
drunk both times. She was older than me (most women in my life were older
than me) and from South Africa - I used to wonder that she wanted to go
with me when people with my colour skin were called coloureds in her
country. I acted very immaturely and she left me for another older guy on
the Kibbutz.
This was a pattern for the rest of my life - I would begin a relationship
and then begin acting crazy - deliberately saying or doing terrible things
to provoke my partner. I could never understand why I did and said these
things. I was obsessive about being touched. I wanted my partners to
always cuddle me, stroke my hair, and scratch my back etc without ceasing.
After approximately 1 year in Israel I fell sick with Hepatitis A and was
put into a hospital in isolation 3 days before my 19th birthday. On my
birthday I was very unhappy - no one was allowed into my room and then at
11am in the morning they announced that John Lennon had been shot dead. I
was already in a depression from the illness and this plunged me into an
even deeper depression. It seemed to me that life was very unfair and that
I was destined to suffer more than most. This thought has been a constant
in my life.
I often considered that my future was to die on the streets an alcoholic -
alone and destitute. This was such a powerful drive that I used to joke to
my friends, when I saw the Salvation Army in the pubs, that I was
investing in my future when I gave them some money ie that I would be
destitute one day and they would be looking after me on the streets. I
would always get a laugh but inside my head I would be telling myself that
I meant it. I believed it was my deserved destiny.
I returned to Australia after 5 weeks in hospital and still too unwell to
work. After a few weeks my mother threw me out of the house when she found
30 empty bottles of Sherry under my bed.
I then spent the next 2 years using drugs - whatever I could get my hands
on. I used Cocaine, LSD, Hashish, Marijuana, Ephedrine Hydrochloride,
Codeine Phosphate - anything that would help me escape reality. I
literally spent 2 years stoned.
At the age of 22 a significant event occurred that caused me a great deal
of pain. I had become very friendly with a girl at the Church and over a
period of time we became very close. I started to have quite strong
feelings for this girl and one day I was at home and I decided that I
would tell her that I wanted our relationship to become a more serious
one. I believed that she was the one that God had chosen for me. That very
night, and without prompting from me, she arrived at my door step. I
opened the door and she told me "R, I'm sorry but I don't ever want to see
you again". I left the Church that I had been going to and began a
downward spiral - drinking heavily. A girl that had been flirting with me
and to whom I'd paid little attention suddenly became more important to
me. I soon married Robyn, a girl 4 years older than me (I was 22 and she
26). She was very domineering and strong willed. Her interests included
her 18 month daughter from a previous relationship (of whom I was very
jealous) and Satanism (eg, Satanic Bible and the Occult etc).
Of the 15 Church friends I invited to the wedding only one turned up. All
the rest told me that I was making a big mistake. Even my parents told me
I was making a mistake. I think that down deep I knew it was a mistake but
I kept telling myself that I would be "left on the shelf" if I didn't
marry her. I really believed at the time that it was my last chance to be
with someone - as insane as that sounds now. When we married (I never
asked her to marry me - I just followed her lead) she told me on the
wedding night that she didn't want to sleep with me so I emptied the bar
fridge in the hotel room and slept on the carpet.
The honeymoon was a nightmare and I had to beg her to sleep with me. I
remember that we "made love" 5 times in the first 3 weeks and I felt
totally rejected. She pined for her daughter and I was so sick of it that
I drove her back from Cairns to Sydney in 3 days. Our marriage lasted 4
1/2 months and I was drinking heavily towards the end of it.
One night we had a big fight over sex and she tried to stab me with a
carving knife. I had been trying to force her to have sex with me. She
stabbed the knife into my Bible when she couldn't catch me. When she again
tried to stab me I slapped her once and then I was arrested and spent a
night in the cells for "drunk and disorderly conduct".
After 6 weeks separation we got back together again for 2 weeks and then
we broke up for the final time. I left to return to my parents and a few
days later returned to her place to get all my work clothes (I was working
for the railways and needed my uniforms). She called the Police and the
Police told her to give me my clothes and then told me to leave. At this
time I was telling myself that "I have no reason to live" and I was
telling myself this all the time. I hated myself and wished that I'd never
been born. I've wished that I would have been aborted. (I have returned to
these thoughts many times in my life).
Back at my parents place I took a packet of tranquillisers (I was on
tablets for depression because of the break-up) and drank a lot of
alcohol. I went into the bush at the back of my parents place and used my
scuba knife to cut my wrists. I woke up in Hospital and they pumped my
stomach out and put more than 30 stitches in my wrists. I spent some time
in a Psychiatric ward and when I left the ward, my Dad whom I always loved
a lot and who treated me as his favourite, nursed me back to health. It
took a few months.
I then returned to the Church and after a year or so I met a really nice
woman called M (she was 2 years older than me) and we became engaged.
Whilst we were engaged I fought and argued with her many times.
Racism was always just a little distance away and I remember one day I was
working on the railways and working at a North Shore station. I was only
working at the station one day as the Station Master and there was a girl
working with me who was selling tickets. I asked her if she wanted a break
and I took over the selling of tickets. An elderly well dressed woman came
up to the ticket window and asked for a return ticket. I started looking
for it as I wasn't familiar with the layout. She looked past me to the
girl sitting behind me and said, referring to me, "I think that it's a
disgrace that they let these Indonesians into the country when they can't
even speak the language. The worst thing is that my husband fought against
people like him". I told her that she was a racist bitch.
Another particularly vicious example that caused me a lot of pain occurred
when I was driving in my car with M and R. I accidentally cut someone off
on the road. At the next lights the woman driver got out of her car and
walked up to my window and said "You f***** wog c***". I remember shaking.
One of my bosses on the railways called me the "black pearl" in front of
all the other staff - I never complained but inside I was hurting.
When I was studying on the railways in the Station Master's school there
was a Lebanese guy who was being racially taunted by two Australians from
the country. I stepped in and the situation became so violent that the
lecturer had to let me and the Lebanese guy go early everyday for the rest
of the course so that the two Australian guys couldn't catch us and beat
us up. I was about 25 when this happened.
When my daughter R was born I felt isolated and useless. I began to have
affairs. I would start an affair and then whilst I was seeing one woman I
would see another. We separated for 18 months and I returned to Israel to
have a series of affairs. In Israel I met a German girl and began an
affair with her. She told me that she wanted to have a physical
relationship but not an emotional one.
I fell totally in love with her and she began to reject me. I decided to
destroy the relationship first by having another affair and then by
running away so I went to Egypt by myself. I was very suicidal at this
time and I didn't care what happened to me. I got into trouble in Egypt
with the Police on two occasions and was threatened with jail. I just
didn't seem to care what happened to me. I returned to Israel and I was
drinking Vodka around the clock out of the bottle. So, after 7 months in
Israel, I returned to England where I checked myself into a hospital in
Maidstone to detox from alcohol.
I then returned to Australia and M forgave me and we started again. For
more than 6 years we were together but there were always fights and she
told me that I was very controlling and threatening. Birthdays were always
difficult times for me and I would always behave badly. My behaviour has
often been very odd. I would describe my behaviour as bizarre at times. I
would often wonder why I did and said things.
After 5 or so years I found that I was no longer interested in M although
I believed that we were good friends. I started flirting with a girl at
work, J, and soon I was emotionally attached to her. I went through quite
a dilemma and M and R went to stay with a friend in Canberra for a week. I
didn't want the marriage to fail and I wanted to be good but I felt
destined to follow the hard road.
During this week I started drinking again and I was feeling quite
suicidal. Suicidal thoughts had been with me for a long time and I often
planned how I would kill myself. I think that the thing that has stopped
me making another serious attempt has been the thought that it would be
worse on the other side of the grave and also fear of the act itself.
We separated and I moved out to live by myself. I placed a lot of pressure
on J and she left her husband of 2 years and we moved in together.
Immediately we began to fight over our sex life. I wanted sex everyday
and, of course, she didn't. I treated a no from her as a personal refusal
- a rejection. This has been a life long experience. Sex for me has been
an affirmation of love and a refusal a rejection. I have equated love and
sex and have sought them again and again and again. I estimate that I have
had about 35 partners of various durations.
The women I have been involved in fall into 2 categories: the first and
larger group I used purely for gratification and then 'dumped'. The second
group were women I "fell in love with". I behaved in a particular way with
the second group. I would be overly zealous in pursuing them and in
displays of affection. I would write love poems, give them flowers etc etc
and eventually they would reject me because I had smothered them.
After 3 months I began drinking and within a year I left. I have now lived
alone for 2 years although my relationship with J went on for a long time
after I left.
I have had a very difficult relationship with my daughter since I left. In
the last year I have not seen her very often and the last few times I have
said dreadful hurtful things to her - sending her home absolutely
distraught. I had no idea why I was so cruel to her. Some times I would
meditate on something that she had done and then when I saw her the next
time it would be inevitable that I would say someone. This is a pattern I
have repeated with many others in my life.
One thing that made me wonder a lot was that I didn't seem to have any
feelings for R. I didn't seem to miss her or think of her. In my life when
a relationship finished I would throw out all of the mementoes of that
person eg photos clothes etc. I did this with R's photos. Thankfully R has
started to communicate with me again and one day I hope to be able to
explain why I have behaved the way I have to her.
My consumption of alcohol continued to increase and I was soon drinking
every day and binging all weekend. My moods and personality began to get
worse and I started fighting with my boss at work who is the Executive
Director of my organisation and a very powerful woman. Powerful women have
always frightened me and I have had some very difficult experiences with
strong women. I once had several weeks off of work on stress leave after
fighting with a female boss.
One day I had a particularly difficult situation with my boss and she was
very angry at me. Instead of fighting with her which was my normal
response when anyone challenged me, I put my hands in the air and said, "I
can't take this anymore - please just sack me" and I walked out. I then
went on a 5 day binge.
I drank very heavily and gambled more than $3000 on the machines. I drank
Bourbon straight from the bottle and flagons of Sherry until I had no
money left. I picked up the kitchen knife and dragged it across my wrists
wishing I had the courage to kill myself. I was on a train and saw someone
I knew and told them I was going to throw myself under the train. I
planned to gas myself in my car, to throw myself off a building - all I
thought of was destroying myself. My life seemed like a total disaster. I
felt like I had no friends, no reason to live. I told people I knew that
they could have my possessions. I said to myself that as everyone else had
rejected me that I should reject myself too.
I constantly played the Queen song, The Show Must Go On. Some of the words
are below.
The Show Must Go On
Empty spaces
What are we living for?
Abandoned places
I guess we know the score
On and on does anybody know what we are looking for?
Does anybody want to take it anymore?
The show must go on
Inside my heart is breaking
My makeup may be flaking
But my smile still stays on
Whatever happens - I leave it all to chance
Another heartache - another failed romance
On and on does anybody know what we are living for?
I guess I'm learning
I must be warmer now
I'll soon be turning round the corner now
Outside the dawn is breaking
But inside in the dark I'm aching to be free
The show must go on
I'll face it with a grin
I'm never giving in
I have to find the will to carry on
On the 5th day I woke up with empty bottles all around me on the floor as
well as the kitchen knife. For some reason I cried out that I needed help
to God and then I went to the phone and called a friend. The friend took
me to hospital and they sent me to a private hospital to be treated for
alcoholism.
In the hospital we were required to "id" which means tell our story, e.g.,
"Hello I'm R and I'm an alcoholic", and then explain how we began to drink
etc. The first few times I told my story I would mention the circumstances
and people in my life that I believed had "caused me to drink". After
reading a small book called alcoholism and the family by Doctor George
Wilson I realised that I had been deceiving myself all these years. I was
powerless over alcohol and my life was truly unmanageable. Once I realised
this my heart began to slowly change.
At the hospital I met with my psychiatrist and I asked him what he was
going to write on my medical certificate. He said "Alcohol Dependence". I
said "You can't do that - I'll get sacked". I started panicking. He said
"I can't tell lies for you but I can call you GP and he can put down
nervous anxiety for you if you want". I was very happy with this and I
left his office. I then had what may turn about to be the most profound 2
hours of my life.
I thought over the conversation and I was very nervous wondering if I
would lose my job and be destitute. Then I thought that I needed to face
myself for the first time in my life. I considered that having alcohol
dependency on the certificate was like looking into a mirror for the first
time in my life. I would be looking at the truth for the first time. I
decided that I wanted the Doctor to write alcohol dependency on the
certificate and I asked God to look after me. I felt an intense sense of
well being and a feeling of love. It was like a feeling of ecstasy. I knew
that at that time I would be telling the truth and I didn't care if I lost
my job or not. I believed that God would care for me.
I then told my Doctor and told him I was going to tell my boss. He was
surprised.
My "id's" after this were different and I no longer spoke at length about
reasons I drank. Rather I spoke of my experiences as an alcoholic. I have
wondered since then which came first - the problems and circumstances or
the alcohol problem. Obviously I was adopted before I drank but what
caused the problems? I decided that for me it was best to accept that I
was an alcoholic by heritage - that is that I was born an alcoholic. Of
course being adopted has had a devastating impact on my life but to
believe I was born an alcoholic means that I'll never be able to convince
myself that I'm cured of my drinking problems and can now start drinking
like normal people.
I asked my Personnel Manager to come to the hospital and see me. I knew
that she was expecting me to talk about what had happened and she thought
that I was in the hospital for stress because of my boss. Some people at
work had wanted me to make a formal complaint against my boss for
screaming at me. When she arrived I said to her "Thank you for coming to
see me - I want you to know the reason that I am here is that I am an
alcoholic". I was nervous but elated to tell her. She responded
"Alcoholism is a treatable disease and we will do all we can to help you".
I then asked her to ask my boss to visit me and I made my peace with my
boss - telling her that I was an alcoholic. Since that time my work has
been extremely supportive in helping me.
I left the hospital after 12 days and participated in its 10 day out
patient program. The very day after I finished the program someone knocked
on my door and was looking for someone I didn't know. I tried to help and
the guy, who had a carton of beer on his shoulder, asked me if I wanted a
beer. I said "You know, I don't think I will - but thanks for asking".
The last few weeks I have started to see a psychotherapist and my first
words to him were: "I have 3 issues in my life I need to learn to deal
with and accept. One is that I was transracially adopted. Two is that I
suffered a great deal of racism and three is that I was sexually assaulted
by my uncle. I am an alcoholic but I go to AA meetings to deal with my
drinking. These 3 issues are triggers for my drinking".
I now attend 8 or so AA meetings a week and have found a wonderful Church
with real people. I still have problems with low self esteem and self
doubts. I still wonder if anyone really likes me. But I am letting more
and more light into my darkened soul. I have started to explore my
feelings about being adopted and even to express some very painful
emotions. Today I cried when I was explaining some of the issues to my ex
wife. This is probably the first time I've cried when sober in many many
years. I have started reading books about adoption and whilst reading the
"Primal Wound" I found myself in it's pages again and again. One statement
I particularly identified with was that the adopted child has an identity
like "Swiss cheese" - ie full of holes. My personality was a front that I
had created to protect myself from further hurt. I have been hiding behind
this false representation of my persona as I knew no better. I didn't even
realise this until I read the book.
The one thing that made any chance of overcoming my adoption issues nearly
impossible was my personality. I had developed a very strong sense of
humour and was always the class clown. I laughed a lot on the outside and
whilst alone cried bitterly on the inside. People couldn't tell that I was
in pain. I often felt like the boy who cried wolf. When I cried out for
help no one believed me. I also suppressed the thoughts in my head and
wouldn't think about them except to feel bad about myself.
I have never truly loved anyone in my life - I understand this now. I
think that in my present state that I'm incapable of love and trust. What
I've thought is love is me reaching out for someone to replace my missing
mother - to touch me constantly, to suckle me at her breast, to be there
always. It has been a very childish and immature concept of love. My
affairs with women, as though they were a game, have always been to the
accompaniment of music like the following Queen song:
I don't want my freedom - There's no reason for living with a broken heart
This is a tricky situation
I've only got myself to blame...
You win you lose
It's a chance you have to take with love
Oh yeah I fell in love
And now you say it's over
And I'm falling apart....
I try and mend the broken pieces
I try to fight back the tears
They say it's just a state of mind..
When your love has cut you down to size
Yes it's a hard life
There has always been an underlying current that the relationship will
fail once they get to know me. And who is me anyway? I don't know me so
how can I offer me to others? I have tested everyone who has tried to care
for me and I have eventually found them all wanting. I have sabotaged
every relationship - male and female but especially female relationships.
I have thought that it was my destiny to be alone and I have worked
subconsciously and overtly to that end. I hope that this recently acquired
knowledge of the self destructive nature of mine will help free me from
this vicious cycle.
I hope that one day I can love normally.
Even my relationship with God has been warped and unhealthy. I have always
had a strong faith but I now understand that I never really believed that
God could love someone like me. To me God was angry with me for being
adopted - born in adultery and God hated me when I did bad things and only
liked me when I was good. The concepts of grace and forgiveness were
beyond my comprehension. Thinking of God this way has added to my unstable
ways. As I am constantly falling in and out of favour with God I can never
be at peace with myself. God is waiting to punish me. Obviously awareness
of this is helping me to reform my attitude to God and learn to accept
myself. I now believe that I have projected my own poor self image of
myself onto God.
Perhaps the hardest part of this adopted life has been the loneliness that
it induces and the lack of people who understand or give credence to my
experience. I did try several times in my life to explain my pain and
never found an understanding person. I hope to remedy this with a network
of transracial adoptees that I have joined. If anyone asked me what I
think of transracial adoption I would say that it can prove to be an
unspeakably horrible and hellish experience. Not belonging anywhere - not
fitting in my family - looking different - being constantly reminded - not
knowing my racial background - not being able to defend myself against
racism - terrible terrible loneliness - never ending sadness - rejecting
oneself.... I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy.
Meeting my birth mother
I was 30 years old and had wondered about my mother and my father all my
life. My mother always seemed more important to me than my father and I
wanted to find her. However, I often told people who enquired that I
wasn't interested in finding her. I alternated between hating her and
fantasising about her. I am sure that I transferred my hatred of my birth
mother onto my adoptive mother and that all my relationships with women
have been distorted as a result.
From time to time I wondered about my father and I have said many times in
my life that I'd like to find out about the "dark side of me" and I used
to call myself "the dark sheep of the family" - intended puns about my
father's racial background. At 30 I knew the name of my mother, C Taylor
and that I was given the birth name Lal Shah Taylor at birth. I was in
Scotland for a few days and about to return to Australia. I was staying
with my father's sister in Bearsden, Glasgow whom I liked a great deal and
one Thursday I told her that I wanted to find my mother.
So I caught the train to Edinburgh and went to the General Registry House.
I paid the fee and began my search. I felt a great deal of excitement as I
searched and my head was spinning with many thoughts.
I found my mother's birth certificate and traced a beginning of a family
tree. Then I found a cousin's Marriage Certificate who had been married in
Dundee a few years ago and I took this information back to my aunt's place
on the Friday night about 6pm. I found the cousin's phone number in the
telephone book and in a state of high excitement (I was shaking) I called
the number.
My cousin's wife answered the phone and I explained who I was and that I
wanted contact details to contact my mother. She said that she had the
phone number of my brother J and that she would have him phone me. A few
minutes later J, who is my older 1/2 brother by 1 year called. He was very
emotional and he obviously knew about me. He was guarded when I asked him
about C. I remember feeling very strange when I asked him about "our
mother". He told me that no one in the family had spoken to C for 4 years
because she was an alcoholic. He briefly described the difficult and
abusive life he and my other half siblings had had. He told me about my
half sister, my dead half brother R and my other half brother P. (I
remember thinking that it was strange that I now had 2 brothers called P).
I asked J if there was any information that he could give me that would
help me find my mother and he told me that she liked drinking at a
particular pub in Glasgow and that she was hanging around with a friend
called John M. At around 6.30pm I caught a taxi from Bearsden into Glasgow
and went straight to the pub. I asked many people in the pub and no one
had ever heard of her or John. I then spent the evening going from pub to
pub and asked many people. I got a lot of suspicious reactions from people
as I asked.
The evening wore on and I started to get very despondent. I had to catch a
train back to England the next day to make my flight back to Australia. I
decided to give up when it was about 1am in the morning and I jumped in a
taxi that looked like a black London cab. The Taxi driver said to me on
the journey in a conversational way "You're not from around here - what
are you doing?". At that time I thought to be smart and wanted to say that
yes I was from around there but instead I said that I was from Australia
and that I was trying to find my mother. He asked me what my mother's name
was and I told him. He said" I'm sorry I don't know her".
Almost as an after thought I asked him "Do you know John M"? He said "I
know John". I said to him "Can you please take me to John's place -I've
got to go back to Australia tomorrow and I won't have another chance". He
took me to John's place which was a tenement flat and I knocked on the
door several times - it was about 1.30am. John eventually came to the door
and it was obvious to me that he had had a big night drinking. I told him
my name and started to explain my story. He stopped me and said "I know
all about you - your mother has talked about nothing else for 20 years".
We talked for a few minutes and I asked him to take me to my mother's
place. He said "If I don't take you and she finds out she'll kill me". So
we walked to another tenement flat. It was about 2am. Ironically the flat
was about 50 metres from a school where I had stood several times with my
aunt when she was picking up her grand kids.
John knocked on the door and the Irish landlord opened it. John explained
what was happening and we were let in. The Irish guy knocked on my
mother's bedroom door where she was staying with her new husband B. She
came out in a night gown and I held my hand out and said "Hello I'm R M
but you probably know me better as Lal Shah". She started trembling and
shaking and she fell down at my feet. She held my feet and started crying
bitterly. She said "Please forgive me" over and over again. Her tears were
falling on my shoes. I remember feeling like it was a dream - that I was
having an out of body experience and that I was looking on. I do not
remember having any feelings at all - neither good nor bad as this was
played out in front of me.
B calmed her down and she and I sat down on the lounge. She was holding on
to me very tightly and she started to talk saying that I had been stolen
from her and that the matron at the hospital had forced her to give me up.
She told me that she had never stopped thinking about me - she said that
she once saw a boy that she thought was me and she had followed him. She
thought that I lived in a nearby Glasgow suburb and was surprised that I
was living in Australia. She had a very strong feeling that I had lived in
Scotland.
I started asking her questions like: how did she meet my father, what was
he like etc. She insisted that it was a one night stand. I deliberately
asked her about the adoption papers (which I had) saying that she had been
assaulted and she said that it was not an assault but a one night stand.
She told me that she had hoped the baby was her husband's and she was
shocked when I was born. She told me that she was beaten up by two of her
brothers a few days after she went home from the hospital. Even 30 years
after my birth only one uncle from 5 uncles and an aunt would meet with
me.
B got a bottle of whiskey and we all started drinking whiskey. It seemed
to answer the question as to why I was an alcoholic (although at that time
I would not have considered that I could possibly be an alcoholic).
Early in the morning I went back to my aunt's place and packed my bags. My
aunt drove me back to C. I spent some more time with her and took some
photos. I remember being very excited to be with her. C was quite bitter
when she talked of the hospital staff and she was also very angry talking
about my adoptive parents. She talked as though they had stolen me away
from her.
It was apparent that she had had a very hard life and it would seem that
my birth had been a major event in her life if not the major event. She
had mourned for me ever since I had been taken away. It seemed to me that
I could not blame her for giving me away anymore.
Two years later I returned to see my mother with my then wife and my
daughter. C was very friendly with M and especially R and had bought R an
expensive present. Unfortunately on the third day of visiting her she had
been drinking and she became very abusive to M and was saying quite nasty
things about my adoptive mother and the Hospital staff. M and R then left.
I remained and she calmed down. I stayed in touch for a few years but then
stopped writing. The last contact I had with my birth family was a
communication from my brother J to tell me that B and C had had broken up.
As I look back at meeting my birth mother I have no regrets that I
undertook to search for her. Obviously I felt sympathy for her predicament
but the feelings for her personally were not strong. I seem in later years
to have trouble feeling strongly for anyone. I do want to re-establish
contact with her if I can. I think it is important that we have contact. I
think that in my enlightened state now I would get more of the
relationship.
Recently I began a process to track my birth father down. I had wanted to
find him a long time ago but Barnardos had informed that the chance of
finding him was very slim. However, I feel I need to try. At the very
least if I could definitely confirm my racial background I could then
investigate it and try to absorb some of the culture - a process I think
is absolutely essential for my personal growth and future well being.
Ron's Story 3 Years On
Ron's Adoptive Mother's Story
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