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    Mikiesboy
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The content presented here is for informational or educational purposes only. These are just the authors' personal opinions and knowledge.
Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are based on the authors' lives and experiences and may be changed to protect personal information. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

My LIfe: In Pieces - 3. And Remember I Love You

Okay, wow. So many of you asked me to continue. I thought a lot about it, and decided I would. I think the second chapter was the worst one, it was pretty graphic.
And it really upset me - peoples reaction to Jeff. I understand it, I do. So there's an extra bit following the main chapter. Some background on Jeff ...

And Remember I Love You

I was born in Ontario, in the city of Toronto in the east end. I lived the usual life of a little boy. I loved my mom and dad and my brother. I didn’t want to go to school when I could be out playing baseball with my friends. I liked to watch TV, play games and eat!

I did go to school, and as I grew and got closer to puberty, I found I liked to look at boys and often snuck the Sears catalogue into my room so I could look at the men – especially the underwear models. Oh yeah. The women were interesting too and I liked to look at them both as I rubbed my seemingly always-stimulated dick.

In school I developed a boy-crush on my “he must be gay” teacher. Mr. Cocks (yes, really) was a great guy and my English teacher. I’m about 100% certain he was gay, but he never was anything but a professional. He was a gentle, kind guy and one of the few teachers whose name I remember. I’d dream at night that he’d take me in his arms and kiss me. Nothing ever happened between us, but the thoughts I had made me realize I was at least bisexual, maybe gay because of how I leaned more toward men. I had no clue how to tell my parents or what they might say or do.

My mother Joann was a pretty blond Canadian who fell in love with Peter, my father. He was of Portuguese decent and was hotheaded and unforgiving. Looking back, I know a lot of that anger was from how his dad treated him, and sadly he treated us with the same contempt he’d experienced. In addition to that, he was a bright man stuck in a dull life. He’d never finished high school and said he didn’t believe he could, so he was often frustrated.

His anger and frustration often spilled onto us, and for some reason me especially. My brother Joey was bigger and stronger; he played football in junior high. I think my father knew that Joe wouldn’t be a victim for too long, if ever. So he turned on me.

I was taller and slimmer than Joey, and not as manly in my father’s eyes. I cried at things that touched me, was happy to spend time with my mom in the kitchen. I wasn’t interested in doing sports in school, though I loved to watch baseball and mixed martial arts later in life. But to my father I guess I was a weakling, certainly not a real man. My tears and softness often angered him and he used his belt on me regularly. But it wasn’t punishment, no, he did it to toughen me up and make a ‘man out of me’.

It was September of my 15th year that my dad got a coveted promotion. He’d worked hard for it and deserved it, and I think it he felt proud they’d given it to him. In spite of everything, I was proud too and was happy for him.

That summer my dad was at his happiest. But school started in September and with it the beginning of the death of my beloved mother. She began losing weight without reason it seemed until we found out she had lung cancer. Cancer tore through her like a starving beast and left her wasted and just alive. I wept often and she’d comfort me and tell me to be her strong boy.

Strong? Me? She saw the look in my eyes and said, “Yes Timmy. Out of the three men in this family, you are the strongest. You just don’t know it yet. Don’t be afraid of who you are, and remember I love you.”

I loved her too. She was my mother, my ally, my best friend. Mum passed away in November, the month before my 15th birthday. My dad was never the same. And I wouldn’t be either.

We buried my mother and I cried every day for weeks afterward. That was a weakness in my dad’s eyes and he used his belt on me more often in an effort to make me stop, or to ‘give me something to cry about’.

By March the following year, things were calmer and dad was dating. That made me angry. My mum hadn’t been gone for 6 months, but dad couldn’t cope being on his own. Darlene was a nice woman and I tried hard not to blame her for coming into the family and replacing my mom.

Darlene and Dad were happy, and life at home improved. They were happy and they dragged us along with them.

I was a mass of anger and raging hormones now. It was my brother Joe that caught me jacking off to pictures of men. He is older and kind and said to me, “Timmy if you’re a fag, don’t let Pop find out. Cuz he’ll be pissed.”

My dad and Darlene married in June. I swallowed my anger and tried to be happy for them. Darlene knew I was hurting and often hugged me and told me to never forget my mother. She told me she felt lucky to have Joe and me in her life as she wouldn’t have any other children. Partly she was right, I did miss my mom and resented her, but the confusion over my orientation was what was upsetting me. It was eating me up inside.

<<><>>

Dad got a month off work during summer vacation, and he took the family up to a cottage they’d rented. It was the best summer I’d ever had. Dad and I did so much together; he was happy and Joe and I had never seen him laugh so much, even at himself.

I thought things changed, I thought he felt the same way because he hadn’t hit me once during the summer, and when we got back to Toronto I decided I had to tell them how I was feeling. I was confused and scared and just wanted some help from my folks. It was a Friday night. I asked them if I could talk to them both, and after ten minutes of stammering I said, “I think I’m bisexual.”

Darlene was the first to move. By this time silent tears were running down my face and she left her seat and sat beside me. Her arms were around me and she rocked me and held me close. That memory still brings tears to my eyes.

I glanced at my father who I could tell was furious. He kept saying “You’re a fag. A fucking faggot. In my house, out of my body. Oh my god.” over and over.

Darlene tried to explain on my behalf, but he just told her to shut her pie hole and mind her own goddamned business. I could see Joe sitting on the top step of the staircase; he was crying too, shaking his head.

My father pulled me out of Darlene’s arms. “Come here, you fucking faggot. You. Are. Not. My. Son.” He brought the words home with a nasty jab in the chest after each one.

He hit me then, slaps on both cheeks so hard I saw stars. I could hear Darlene begging him to stop and Joe joined her. He hit both of them as well. Then he shoved me to the staircase, screaming, “Get to your room. Pack your clothes. In ten minutes you’re out of this house for good.”

I crawled up the stairs and went into my room. I was crying and hurt, but I was angry too. I pulled out an equipment bag and shoved in clothes without looking at them. Joe came in and put his hand on my shoulder. “Tim, here let me help. You gotta make sure you take the right –” then he was just bawling. “Tim why did you tell him? I told you what he’d do.”

I shook my head. “Cuz of the summer, he was so different I thought … I thought ….”

We sat on the bed and held each other. He made me swear to keep in touch. I didn’t know where the fuck I was going to go or how I’d keep in touch with him. Joe put my winter jacket in the bag and extra shoes. He gave all the money he had: like $200 from his paper route.

Dad arrived in my room. “You were always a whining bitch. But your mother always protected you. She made you into this fucking thing you are!”

That made me angry; I took a swing at him, but he just stepped back and laughed.

He took my bag and dragged it and me downstairs. He pulled my summer jacket from the hook in hall and threw it at me, shoved $50 into my hand and said, “Get the fuck out, faggot, and don’t come back. And don’t think your aunts will help you because they won’t. I’ll make sure of it.”

Darlene was begging him to reconsider, and now that he was pushing me out the door, I was too. I even called him 'daddy' for fuck's sake. Fucking daddy.

Then I was on the porch; the door shut and the porch light turned off. I pulled on my jacket and hefted my bag onto my shoulder. There was no choice about going back now, so I walked down to Queen Street. I wiped my face and decided I’d grab a streetcar into the city.

I had no clue what was coming or what people would do to me. If you had told me people could do those things to another person I’d have said you were nuts. If I had had an inkling, I never would have said a word to my father, never in a million years. I’d have made myself into the man he wanted, because his treatment of me that night was like sweet and kind, compared to how some people would treat me, who came into my life later on.

I didn't know where to go, and I was thinking about that between bouts of tears on my way to Queen Street. As I walked in the dark I heard footsteps, well, running, behind me. It was Joe. He caught up to me and hugged me.

"You better go back or he'll do the same to you, Joey."

"Where you going, Timmy? Where?" He threw his arm around my shoulders.

"Dunno, downtown I guess."

"You stay away from people, okay. Fuck. I wish I was on my own."

"I know. Look, I'll be okay. I have that money, maybe I can find a place like the Y or something."

"Please be careful, okay? I'll talk to him and see if you can come back."

"Don't okay. As far as I'm concerned, he's not my father." Big words, which in truth were big lies; for years I’d want his approval, and accetance but I never got it.

He hugged me then, crying. "Am – am I still your brother?"

"Fuck yes. Of course you are. I love you. I'll stay in touch the best I can."

He waited for the next streetcar with me. "Watch yourself if you go to the bus station, okay?"

"I will." The streetcar arrived and I climbed on and put in my fare. I waved to him.

It would be a couple of years before I saw him again. I did send a card to him, but I had no home, so he couldn't reply. Funny how you can disappear in your own city.

But it was better that way. I didn't want him to see the me, I was going to become.

 

 

Jeff

Jeff was a hard man. He’d grown up in a home that made mine look like Wonderland. Both his father and mother abused him physically and sexually, usually together in their marital bed. It started for him at age 5.

I fucking cry as I write this because I can’t imagine the pain; the anguish of having people you trust do that to you.

If that wasn’t enough, they rented him out. Like a chair or lawnmower. Rented to the sickos of this world who like little boys and no, it’s not only men who do.

He ran away often, but was caught and dragged back and punished.

Finally at 14, he got away for good. He came to Toronto where he was met at the bus station and groomed by his new friend. And when his friend died, Jeff was on his own again, until the night the met me.

So he groomed me and showed me what to do to keep our customers satisfied.

Over the years, god, there were over 17,000 customers. I look at the number and I just can’t believe it.

So yes, Jeff did things. He beat me, sold me, fed me, loved me, sometimes he’d hold me close. He was a hard man, because there isn’t a choice out there and he cared for me the best he could.

I can see him still, sitting on the couch in that horrible squat we shared, telling me his story one night when we were drunk and so fucking high. I can see the tears he shed, as the story and the pain poured out of him. I used my t-shirt to wipe the snot from his nose.

Then I held him, like the little boy he was at that moment, until there were no more tears to cry.

And yeah there's more but it'll keep for another day.

 

Thanks for reading.. I know it's hard, but don't be too hard on Jeff.

tim

I hope this doesn't upset anyone too much. If you want to leave a comment I'm grateful. But I hope you'll understand if it takes me a little time to reply. I will but I get a bit emotional.
Thanks for your understanding.
tim
BTW, AC didn't edit all of this, so any and all errors are my own.
Copyright © 2017 Mikiesboy; All Rights Reserved.
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The content presented here is for informational or educational purposes only. These are just the authors' personal opinions and knowledge.
Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are based on the authors' lives and experiences and may be changed to protect personal information. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

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Tim: it is hard to read, but I appreciate how honest you are being. I try to read with the eyes of love and forgiveness, as you have surely loved, and perhaps forgiven. And I pray that if I ever have the need to forgive, or to be forgiven in the same measure, I will have the strength you have had, for your mother was surely right. You have been the strongest.
Many thanks for this.

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tim, I will give you a like later when I have one to give.

 

Simply put, we can't always know or understand why people do what they do. Of course , that doesn't mean we aren't quick to judge them either. Judgements are usually based on our own experiences, so I don't think they are necessarily wrong, just uniformed at times.

 

I guess, what I am trying to say is that you, tim, have taught me to open my eyes and look at the bigger picture - don't judge abook by it's cover so to speak. I consider that a gift.
Thank you. :hug:

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I think I understand Jeff a little more now. I can't imagine being faced with that life and those choices so I can't judge. He seemed to be doing the best he could with what life had given him.

 

Your mother sounded like a truly wonderful woman. She obviously loved you a great deal. I also have a great deal of respect for your stepmother and your brother for trying to stand up for you, even though it got them hurt. Your father on the other hand? I would like to give him a piece of my mind, if I thought it would help.

 

Thank you for sharing this Tim. It brought some things in to perspective.

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You did good by continuing, tim. We need all the pieces, the good ones and the bad ones, to appreciate where you were, and where you are now, and why. Your forgiveness of Jeff is a big 'piece' of how you were able to survive and have the life you have. Your protectiveness tells me Jeff was family... far from perfect... but he gave you what he could of his abused and damaged self. I find myself caring greatly for Darlene and your brother. Woulld I wish they could have done more? Absolutely, but I'm sure they wished that too. It's real and it's honest, and I want to read more, even if it's difficult at times. Since you don't hate Jeff, I won't either. He had a crap life... he deserved better. Much respect, my friend... it was a harsh thing you went through in this chapter, but you told it well... Gary... xoxo

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On 11/22/2015 07:48 AM, Parker Owens said:

Tim: it is hard to read, but I appreciate how honest you are being. I try to read with the eyes of love and forgiveness, as you have surely loved, and perhaps forgiven. And I pray that if I ever have the need to forgive, or to be forgiven in the same measure, I will have the strength you have had, for your mother was surely right. You have been the strongest.

Many thanks for this.

Hi Parker, maybe doing this was the best choice.. I didn't think through well enough I guess. Those words were Mums final gift to me but they kept me going through all of it.

 

Thanks for reading and your comments and your support Parker.

 

tim

  • Like 3
On 11/22/2015 08:19 AM, Reader1810 said:

tim, I will give you a like later when I have one to give.

 

Simply put, we can't always know or understand why people do what they do. Of course , that doesn't mean we aren't quick to judge them either. Judgements are usually based on our own experiences, so I don't think they are necessarily wrong, just uniformed at times.

 

I guess, what I am trying to say is that you, tim, have taught me to open my eyes and look at the bigger picture - don't judge abook by it's cover so to speak. I consider that a gift.

Thank you. :hug:

I'm thinking.. breaking up this story probably wasnt the smart thing to do.. a bit unfair to all of you who read it because you didnt have the info you needed.

 

Thanks for you thoughtful comments and your support.

 

tim

  • Like 3
On 11/22/2015 09:20 AM, dughlas said:

Ah little brother, you have made them human to our eyes and taught yet another lesson.

You are truly a kind and sensitive soul, with the courage, the strength to bare yourself to us. Thank you.

 

Namaste

Hey dugh, i should have posted these in order i think.. oh well. I wasnt always so nice I'm afraid, I've done a lot of not so nice stuff, I'm not proud of it. But the streets make you hard and mean. I've lost most of the sharp edges .. thanks for your comments and kind words, dugh.

 

tim

  • Like 3
On 11/22/2015 09:58 AM, EagleIsaac said:

I think I understand Jeff a little more now. I can't imagine being faced with that life and those choices so I can't judge. He seemed to be doing the best he could with what life had given him.

 

Your mother sounded like a truly wonderful woman. She obviously loved you a great deal. I also have a great deal of respect for your stepmother and your brother for trying to stand up for you, even though it got them hurt. Your father on the other hand? I would like to give him a piece of my mind, if I thought it would help.

 

Thank you for sharing this Tim. It brought some things in to perspective.

Thanks for reading it Isaac. My mum was great. Darlene and Joey tried their best and well dad's gonna get his just rewards this week. Darlene's divorcing him and he's in court for assault.

 

Thanks for your comments and support. I appreciate it.

 

tim

  • Like 3
On 11/22/2015 10:46 AM, Headstall said:

You did good by continuing, tim. We need all the pieces, the good ones and the bad ones, to appreciate where you were, and where you are now, and why. Your forgiveness of Jeff is a big 'piece' of how you were able to survive and have the life you have. Your protectiveness tells me Jeff was family... far from perfect... but he gave you what he could of his abused and damaged self. I find myself caring greatly for Darlene and your brother. Woulld I wish they could have done more? Absolutely, but I'm sure they wished that too. It's real and it's honest, and I want to read more, even if it's difficult at times. Since you don't hate Jeff, I won't either. He had a crap life... he deserved better. Much respect, my friend... it was a harsh thing you went through in this chapter, but you told it well... Gary... xoxo

Yeah Gary, he had a crap life and I still feel guilty cuz I didnt try harder to save him. I know what he did to me, but i just cant hate him. Darlene and i still talk and Joe is coming for Christmas.

 

Thanks for reading this and for your support Gary. I appreciate it.

 

tim xoxox

  • Like 3
On 11/22/2015 12:30 PM, WolfM said:

tim, Thank you for sharing this and thanks for sharing this other side of Jeff. It puts him into a different prospective from chapter 2. I hope there comes a day when kids like we were don't end up beaten and thrown out for being ourselves. You do have a lot of strength in you and each tear you shed is evidence of that. Hugz.Wolf

hey Wolf. Yeah I think breaking this up was a mistake, I thought it would be easier to deal with but it didnt really work. I hope you're right that one day everyone will be accepted.

 

Thanks for your support and thoughtful comments.

 

tim xo

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Your bravery, sensitivity, and humanity are astounding! Not only are you able to see the humanity in Jeff, you have forgiven him. Very few people would come out of your circumstances being sensitive, optimistic, and vulnerable. The fact that you share your experiences with us is amazing. I feel very privileged that you choose to share your story with us. Keep up the good work! It always makes me feel like no situation is insurmountable.

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As I've written before, "Ah, hell."
I've been on the viewing end of guys who have been through similar stuff. In Iowa rather than Toronto, but it's still the same. Thrown out of the house because of bigotry/hate/intolerance like a piece of trash. But for F...k's sake, they are HUMAN BEINGS. And they hurt, and they suffer. But, in spite of it all, they do what they have to to survive. And then everyone else gets judgmental about what they do to survive. What a miserable cycle that is. And then, someone like you, Tim, seems to break through all that. Survive, thrive, and thankfully live to tell the tale. So, thanks.
In graduate school, we took better care of our research specimens (in my case lobsters) than some people do to others. It confounds me how people, especially family, can be so wrapped up in their own biases that they can't see through and recognize that other folk might just be a little different. I call it the "yellow brick road." Follow it and all will be well. That may be for some, but sometimes that little dirt path off to the left looks better and more enticing and most importantly, more natural. But you are damned if you deviate.
I'm a deviate. And proud of it. And reading stories like yours reinforces my choice to take the dirt road rather than the yellow brick one.
Well done.

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On 11/23/2015 03:07 AM, ElleRachelle said:

Your bravery, sensitivity, and humanity are astounding! Not only are you able to see the humanity in Jeff, you have forgiven him. Very few people would come out of your circumstances being sensitive, optimistic, and vulnerable. The fact that you share your experiences with us is amazing. I feel very privileged that you choose to share your story with us. Keep up the good work! It always makes me feel like no situation is insurmountable.

Hi ElleRachelle, I think there's a few reasons why I came out of this as I was lucky enough to, my mum, a guy named Paul, and Michael. The 3 of had profound effects on my life. Thanks for your support.

 

tim

  • Like 3
On 11/23/2015 05:45 AM, alanb said:

As I've written before, "Ah, hell."

I've been on the viewing end of guys who have been through similar stuff. In Iowa rather than Toronto, but it's still the same. Thrown out of the house because of bigotry/hate/intolerance like a piece of trash. But for F...k's sake, they are HUMAN BEINGS. And they hurt, and they suffer. But, in spite of it all, they do what they have to to survive. And then everyone else gets judgmental about what they do to survive. What a miserable cycle that is. And then, someone like you, Tim, seems to break through all that. Survive, thrive, and thankfully live to tell the tale. So, thanks.

In graduate school, we took better care of our research specimens (in my case lobsters) than some people do to others. It confounds me how people, especially family, can be so wrapped up in their own biases that they can't see through and recognize that other folk might just be a little different. I call it the "yellow brick road." Follow it and all will be well. That may be for some, but sometimes that little dirt path off to the left looks better and more enticing and most importantly, more natural. But you are damned if you deviate.

I'm a deviate. And proud of it. And reading stories like yours reinforces my choice to take the dirt road rather than the yellow brick one.

Well done.

Thanks alanb. I appreciate your support and your comments! Sorry I'm so late.

 

tim

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