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Every parent dreams of giving their children a better life. Yet, no matter how hard we try, we cannot protect them from the pain of trauma.
Ironically, even our parenting style can be a source of suffering for our progenies. Many psychological studies have documented this. But, we must find some peace in the knowledge that, whatever we did—even when in hindsight we judge our actions as mistaken—it was not done to hurt them. Our actions were based on the best available information at the time as interpreted by our level of consciousness.
My story
Most people know the history of how Fidel Castro took the reins of Cuba’s government in 1959 and changed the fate of the island forever. But few are aware of a US/Catholic Church sponsored program, called Operation Peter Pan, that allowed Cuban parents to send 14,000 children, unaccompanied, to the USA. I was ten years old and my two older twin brothers were eleven at the time my parents took advantage of this program and placed us on a plane to a better life.
Operation Peter Pan is but another example of the desperate measures asylum seekers will attempt when life in their country has become unbearable and unsafe. Fortunately, when my parents sought help for their children, Americans opened their arms broadly to the Cuban children and the parents who later took refuge in the land of freedom.
Yet, despite my parents’ efforts to save us, they could not prevent my brothers and I from experiencing trauma. The pain I felt as we boarded that plane towards a country where our fate was uncertain was so agonizing that I wanted to die. To this day, I consider this event the most harrowing experience of my life so far.
The emotional damage I suffered
When trying to measure the extent to which trauma causes damage to children, it is important to remember that minors do not understand the nuances behind the behavior of adults. Children have no clue about politics, law, or the difference in governments. They rely on being taken care of by adults. When children are confronted with adult actions and circumstances they cannot understand, their brains will explain it and then suggest the action they should take. This is part of the human survival instinct.
Because someone had taught me that God punishes us for our sins, my instincts told me I was responsible for the pain and suffering I was feeling because I had been less than a perfect boy. In my judgment, I was flawed and, if I didn’t change, Over the years, this self-blaming became so ingrained in me that it became an unconscious reaction. This belief has been at the root of the fear I have lived with most of my life; others will reject and abandon me if I do things that upset them. This has been my hell, and, although I learned to overcome this tendency in business, I was not able to do so in my romantic partnerships.
Difficulty in handling life changes has been another side effect of my parental separation. As we all have learned, change is the only constant in life, but for me, it triggers deep seeded and dark emotions. Every time I am confronted with change, especially a physical move, my mind returns to those dark times when I was ten years old. Even positive change, like a work promotion, could send me reeling into a period of depression that would last months and even years.
There but for the grace of God go I
There have been several times in my life I didn’t expect to make it, but somehow, I had enough grit to tread emotional waters and make it to the other side. However, I also know how close I came to giving up. This was the burden planted in me by this horrible trauma.
It has taken me a long time and a lot of work to become aware that my life was being driven by these feelings of low self-worth, but I am finally free, for I can proclaim that I am a good person and that I was not, back then nor now, responsible for the bad behavior of others.
Hurting children deliberately is abuse
There is no moral imperative that can justify hurting children intentionally. Sadly, this is going on in our southern borders. The justification for this policy is that it provides a strong disincentive for people to immigrate into the United States. But supporters of this policy have not considered the frantic steps desperate people will take to help their families survive.
Reports so far show this policy has not altered one iota the rate of people seeking asylum into our country. However, top psychiatrist around the country continue to warn us about the damage we are perpetrating on the psyche of these children. Sadly, our government continues to drag their feet in stopping this abuse.
Perhaps the thousands of children whom we have separated from their families will fare better than me, but I doubt it. There are many ways their instincts can take them. They might choose like me, to believe they are flawed and at fault. Or worse yet, they might decide that the world is a hostile place where you have to hurt others before they get the chance to hurt you, a place where you better take because you cannot expect that anyone one will give to you. This is how hatred and self-loathing begins, a bitterness that can corrupt an innocent mind into antisocial and psychopathic behavior. This is the legacy we are creating by our actions.
Parallel between Castro’s Cuba and the USA today
Castro deliberatively abused the 14,000 children of Operation Peter Pan. His rationale was like those being used to justify our actions today. He was not interested in allowing Cuban professionals to leave the island and produce the brain drain that ensued, but he goaded Cubans to seek refuge for their children in the United States thinking they wouldn’t separate their families. But Castro miscalculated, as thousands of parents did just that.
As Cubans continued to leave, the Cuban despot actually made it harder for parents to reunite with their children in their new home. But parents didn’t stop trying.
Does this kind of cruel reasoning sound familiar? Our government’s rationale to use this as a deterrent is eerily similar.
Conclusion
One of the most important things our global citizens need is hope for a better world. President Ronald Reagan understood this when he referred to the United States as the shining city on the hill.
He was right, the USA has served as the ray of hope for people of the world to know that a nation can strive to support life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for all of its citizens. This is important because it gives the world reason to improve.
But when the world sees us hurting children, it extinguishes our light on the hill. This is a travesty for humanity, for without a vision of what is possible, our species will regress to barbarism. Without this hope, we will destroy our species.
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Originally published on guillermovidal.me
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