Showing posts with label Battered Mothers Custody Conference 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Battered Mothers Custody Conference 2011. Show all posts

Jennifer Collins Reflects on Battered Mothers Custody Conference 2011

On Saturday afternoon January 9th 2011 I sat in the living room of our family home in the Netherlands intently listening (via the internet) to my mother giving a live presentation at the Battered Mothers Custody Conference in Albany New York.

As I watched my little brothers and sisters cheerfully distracted in a board game I was engrossed by my mother’s words of how she sacrificed everything she had to rescue her two fragile children from abuse. My mother’s words rang in my ears as the headset muffled the laughter from my siblings. My youngest sister is exactly the same age that I was when I was being severely abused by my own father. I looked at her tossing her hair as she laughed carefree at our brother’s jokes and I remember how different my life was at that age. Life was hell back then. My father was beating me and my brother, and even worse we thought that our mother had abandoned us.

I listened to my mother profess how hard she tried to rescue us and it still surprises me today because it doesn’t coincide with my own memories. I remember doubting and yet believing at the same time my father and his wife as they insisted that if our mother really loved us she would come get us because Lord knows that they didn’t want us. I remember crawling underneath my bed and pulling out a crumpled piece of paper I had hidden which had a copy of my mother’s handprint. I would lie on the floor with my little hand on the carbon copy of my mothers and muffle my cries for my mommy. I would sing songs she taught us and pray to God as she instructed but it eventually got to the point where it was futile. I watched my brother deteriorate, loose faith, shut down emotionally and become full of anger and hate.

I listened to my brother's words through the headset as he spoke after our mother explaining how he is still coping with his anger. I choked back the tears as he recalled his childhood memories of blaming our mother for every bad thing which happened to us and I cringed when he called her a liar because “if she wasn’t capable of protecting us then she never should have promised she would in the first place.”

When I hung up the phone I realized how lucky we were to get away. How distant that world of abuse and betrayal was from the life our mother stole back and recreated for us. Here I was safe in Holland and I realized that we were given a second chance. I feel indebted to my mother and I so desperately want to honor her courage by being a voice for other children who are not as lucky as my brother and I were.

As my mothers attorney said in his follow up after my mother and brother “once a child has been abused there is no justice” The abuse can never be undone. But we can prevent it from being compounded.

I still haven’t found a way to articulate how devastating the family court's actions were to me and my brother. It is inhumane to rip a child out of a loving mother’s arms under the guise of “restoring a father’s rights.” The misdirected law reforms should not be about whether a father (or a mother) has a right to be in their children’s lives. It should be about children having the right to be safe, happy and secure.

Being abused as a child was devastating but being ripped away from our mother, having the contact with our primary parent severed and the maternal bond we shared destroyed is what has damaged me most. I am determined to find a way to be a voice for the child I was and for the children who are now...

~Jennifer Collins
CA3 - Children Against Court Appointed Child Abuse

Holly Collins' Son Speaks Out Against Child Abuse

My big brother spoke out at the 2011 Battered Mothers Custody Conference 2011. It took a lot of courage. I am so honored that he is my brother.

Hi, My name is Zachary and I'm the oldest son of the infamous Holly Collins. I've been asked multiple times to speak my mind concerning this subject and until now I've been pretty successful in turning each of these requests down. My sister Jennifer has wanted to save the world ever since she was a little girl. I'm afraid I'm a bit more selfish than that; all I've ever wanted is to obliterate my past from memory, though admittedly this hasn't solved all of my problems either.

Ever since it was revealed that we had been hiding in the Netherlands, I assured myself that I wouldn't be discussing any of my experiences with the public. No matter how many speeches and appearances my mother and sister would be making at conferences such as this one, I didn't feel threatened by their increasing popularity, because I wouldn't be sharing any of my emotional crap.

Of course, in the back of my mind I knew that I would eventually have to break this promise to myself. Since the load of BS directed at my sister by certain male figure-heads (who won't have the honor of being named in this speech) my Big Brother instincts told me it was finally time to lend little sis a hand. Mind you, I'm not saying Jennifer NEEDED my help, so don't anyone go getting me in trouble. I don't quite know how to go about dealing with an ignorant male chauvinist, and anyhow I think Jennifer meant for me to share something that most of you could relate to, instead of getting down on the same levels as those...

One thing I do know about is anger. Ever since I was old enough to grasp the concept of anger, it's been eating away at me. I never really stood a chance. I had been exposed to this miserable emotion from such a young age, though it didn't consume my being till the day that custody of my sister and I was awarded to my abusive father. Ironically, rather than vent my rage at the bastard who installed this heinous trait within me, I blamed my mother for every bad thing that happened from then on. 'If she wasn't capable of protecting us , then she never should have promised she would in the first place... the liar!'

I'm a grown man now, and intelligent enough to know that my mother isn't to blame for the actions of a corrupt court-system or a hot-headed coward, but it's not that simple. As a child I was taught that it was acceptable to take my anger out on those who couldn't protect themselves, while I was simultaneously taught that I should never, ever, ever talk to my mother that way... or my sister... or my dog... or my Nintendo. But I wasn't going to cry every time I got a funny feeling in my toe. Crying made me sad, and that made me angry. But I wasn't allowed to get angry! So eventually I learnt the art of bottling it up.

When you've been holding as many bottles as I have, for as long as I have, you drop a few from time to time. Sometimes you drop a lot, and that's when a hurt and confused sibling is left wondering how spilling a drink can trigger an explosive fit of cursing. With so much experience in the matter you'd think I'd learn a thing or two. And all I can come up with is "I'm sorry", "I know its wrong", "I can't help it". My mother one day lovingly explained to my younger brother who is autistic, that "Zachary is having a bad day because he also is kind of autistic. Sometimes he just doesn't understand why he's angry." No one like me deserves such a convenient excuse, but I couldn't think of a more perfect explanation for those who'd think it inconceivable that a 6 year old could be so angry that he would repeatedly bash his own head into a wall.

This is not to say that there's no hope for me, or for any of your angry little boys and girls. The psychologists and therapists who treated me as a child, a teenager and a young adult, I hate them all, but thanks to them I've been able to recognize my anger and control it to a certain degree. Because of my mother and the people who helped us I have a wonderful life and a loving family. And I have a beautiful and understanding German fiancée waiting for me in the Netherlands, whose only flaw is that she still doesn't know that I don't deserve her.

I can't help any of you get your children back, or compare in the slightest to my sisters determination and generosity. I only hope that these words have given you some understanding as to why you have such an angry child. I hope these words will help you to understand that you are not to blame for these crimes committed against your families. But most of all, I hope you realize, when you finally get those kids back, that eventually they will stop blaming you and, eventually they too will understand why they USED to be so angry.