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My story: I still have dreams

CrashCoyote
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hi everyone,

I am writing this post following a request from a fellow member to know more about me. I do not wish to hi-jack another post so have started this one.

I am fifty years old and the father of five. Divorced twice and in a few other relationships over the years. My friends sometimes joke that I am looking for my next ex.

I am an honest man and try very hard to be a good person, a good partner (when in a relationship) and a good dad. My life is not extraordinary and I am starting to realise how far too many people have far too much trauma in their lives. Is this our evolved society?

I grew up in a housing commission house with my mum and younger sister. Dad left mum when my sister was born and I was a barely a year old. He was never in my life. His bother (we are good wogs!) did his bit to fill the void and to this day he is the closest thing to a dad I have ever know and I love him dearly. My dad died a few years ago but I did not grieve for him. I did not know him. His brother told me of his death and was crying when he told me. I was upset that my uncle was upset but not that my dad had died! Mum was never very mentally stable but did her best. We were poor and mum never did drugs or booze or gambled. I love my mum but as a parent I struggle with her parenting style and we are not close these days.

I was the "man" of the house since I was about fourteen and I guess I just continued that caring role until I ended up taking on the ultimate responsibility - caring for the community. I joined the Police.

My career path started at Darlinghurst, then Redfern, later I was a radio dispatcher and 000 telephonist. I worked at Fairfield when we had the highest murder rate in Australia (late 1980's) and Green Valley, Campbelltown, Campsie, Ashfield and Granville. I was mostly operational and in uniform and working alone. (More common than you might think.) I have been physically threatened with death many times. I have arrested dozens of people at gunpoint, sometimes at the point where I was applying trigger pressure before the offender surrendered. I have talked three people out of suicide.Twice people have died in my arms. I have been assaulted more times than I can even remember. I have seen babies and children suffer in ways many cannot imagine. I have taken statements from victims of sexual assault that have suffered in ways most could not imagine. 

After over thirty serious work injuries and a good dose of PTSD, I was pensioned off from my career and a job I was lucky enough to have loved for the time I was in it.

In my personal life my third daughter died of SIDS at the age of eight weeks. It led to the breakdown of my second marriage. As a direct result I do not even see my subsequent daughter as my ex wife cannot stand to have her away from her and has forbidden her from seeing me. It is a form of child abuse and it certainly messes with my head, but at the end of the day my daughter is being denied a loving father because her mother cannot cope with her own issues.

I have always liked the company of ladies but it took me until I was forty two to find "the one". She was and is the love of my life but has her own anxiety issues and after three years of a sort-of-normal relationship I spent a further four clinging to what was a dying relationship in which I think she loved me but could not control her anxiety over other issues. She dumped me last year. I do not think I even knew what true love of  woman was until she came along and now I feel I have nothing to give another woman because she still has my heart, even though we are no longer together. My addiction? I guess so.

Anyway, that is my life in a nutshell. I fight every day to battle my depression and I won't give up. I have four other children that love me and need me. I have a new grand daughter who is so beautiful that I still cannot suppress a smile every time I open my mobile phone - she is my screen saver! I may drink a bottle of spirits tonight, or not. I may go to the gym tomorrow, or not. I may have a minute or two of euphoria interspersed with the general depression, or I may not.

I still have dreams. I like to write and have been published. One day I will write that best seller. One day I will live on a hundred acres out of Sydney and feed chickens and muck around in my man shed. There is always someone worse off and I will do my best. Part of my inspiration is this site, and many of you will never know how much strength I draw from your posts, but I thank you one and all. I wish you success, such that it is, in your own lives.

Thanks for reading.

John.

76 Replies 76

Jo3
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Dear Neil

Thanks so much for sharing your story.  I already knew some of it but not other parts. So thanks again.

I understand how difficult it is for you to write about your dad and brother, how it still haunts you and I am sorry that you are still struggling.

Neil, you amaze me so much and now John too. I just wish I was as strong as you guys, but I'm not.

Thanks again John & Neil for sharing your stories.

Your friend

Jo

Jo3
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Dear Mares my friend

Thanks for sharing your story on here.  I know how hard it is for you at the moment but you always find time to help and talk to others including me.

Your children are so lucky to have a mum like you, you are a real fighter, a strong willed woman who has gone through so much trauma in your life and still are going through some tough times; but you inspire. Things that you have done and said to your husband - boy you are strong.

Mares, I wish I was different but I am not. So I guess I just have to keep fighting this damn depression; although at the moment I think it is winning; not me. I feel like I am falling big time.

Pls take care Mares, I always think of you and hope you are okay tonight.

your friend

Jo xxx

Jo3
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hi John

I can't remember if I have replied to you earlier or not. 

I am not good tonight; I wish everything would go away forever.  I hate those guys; i hate the memories; i hate what they did; i hate it all.  i hate not being able to have happy childhood memories and what these memories have done to me now.

i hate having depression, anxiety and everything else that goes with a mental illness. i hate the fact that depression is still stigmatised in the community. 

John, I really appreciate your kind caring words and help.  I have a friend who is a retired police officer in Victoria and do you know what his words to me were - oh Jo you have to toughen up, move on, forget about your parents.  Do you know how damn hard that is. - I thought maybe it was because he was a police officer and that's what all officers are like but I am wrong because you are so different. You have compassion, empathy and care for others, not like my friend.

i think i am seeking help; can't wait for tomorrow morning when i see my GP.

i need help and no one is listening

I  really appreciate your story and what you have gone through and still going through. But reading your post I can see that you are a great dad.

Take care, talk soon

Jo

CrashCoyote
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hi Neil,

Thank you for your post. I am glad that your lip-bitten-off-by-dog thing didn't turn you against dogs. I love 'em too.

I'm guessing from your post that the lip injury is he least painful (emotionally) of the three demons you mention. So often I have seen loved ones lost while close by to another loved one. It is obvious that they would have done anything to effect the rescue but couldn't. It must be very hard to relive that and keep on with the "what if's". I still ask myself what I could have done differently to prevent my daughter's death. Of course, there wasn't anything I could have done. Yet I still ask myself.

As for your old dad, if you have faith I suppose it isn't hard to imagine him at heaven's bar, where the beer is always ice cold and the peanuts are not stale, waiting for the day you can shout him another one.

And for the record, mate, even if you could "change channels" it wouldn't change the person your partner of twenty years is still with. (I have a face like a dropped pie myself, but I cannot claim to have had any serious injury to it. Just how it is!!!!)

Cheers and keep posting.

John.

CrashCoyote
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hi Mares,

I did write you a lengthy response to your post but it has not come up yet. If it is not published by tomorrow I will re-write it.

Thinking of you.

John. 

geoff
Champion Alumni
Champion Alumni

dear Neil, my friend as well as John, both your posts must have been very traumatic, and I can't forget Mares and Jo, and so many other people as well, but what I want to say is thank you so much for disclosing some more information that is keeping this beast to continually hover your heads.

There are so many problems that linger on in our mind and still haunt us day in and day out, and to be able to find peace with them is so hard to find.

No one can ever say to you all 'that's it's long gone, so drop it', because we have to find another chapter before we are able to do this, and it maybe 20 books that you pencil out, and those memories still linger on.

It's no different than people who have gone to war, their memories still haunt them even after all those years, and we can never say to them 'forget it it's long gone', because it's edged into their mind, and there is never anyway to put a bandaid on these thoughts let alone eliminate them.

I really appreciate reading your past.

It reminds me of a horse called 'scotch and dry', it would bolt out to 50 lengths in front of all the other horses, but slowly the horses would catch up with him, so there's an analogy to this. Geoff.

Mares73
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member
Hi all

For me this has been one of the best threads as we are talking about real issues for each of us & I mainly try to help others but sometimes I have thoughts like oh I'd like to tell Neil this or get Goffs advice or jos & it's really difficult. How can I get around this? Do I just write "Question for Neil" etc?

geoff
Champion Alumni
Champion Alumni

dear Mares, I think that's a great way for either Neil, myself or anyone else to answer some questions, because there maybe times when I miss a post when a question is asked towards me, but I may miss it, much to disappointment for those who ask this particular question.

We aren't the only one's with answers, although we do have the most posts, so even if you ask a question then others hopefully will also add their comments as well. L Geoff. x

Jo3
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hey John

Are you around?

Jo

CrashCoyote
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hi Jo,

I am around after about 5pm. I need to go do some rehab at the pool for an hour or so.

How are you today?

Kind regards, John.