MY LIFE IN HORROR: NO TURNING BACK
8/11/2022
Content warning: frank discussion and description of child sexual exploitation and abuse. My Life In Horror Every month, I will write about a film, album, book or event that I consider horror, and that had a warping effect on my young mind. You will discover my definition of what constitutes horror is both eclectic and elastic. Don’t write in. Also, of necessity, much of this will be bullshit – as in, my best recollection of things that happened anywhere from 15 – 40 years ago. Sometimes I will revisit the source material contemporaneously, further compounding the potential bullshit factor. Finally, intimate familiarity with the text is assumed – to put it bluntly, here be gigantic and comprehensive spoilers. Though in the vast majority of cases, I’d recommend doing yourself a favour and checking out the original material first anyway. This is not history. This is not journalism. This is not a review. This is my life in horror. No Turning Back And I’ll never forget the way I feel right now… with you… no way… I’m somewhere between 16 and 19. I’m lying in his bed. It’s early afternoon and I haven’t been awake long. I have, blessedly, nothing to do, and nowhere to be. No college to go to, no parents to bug me, no flatmates to wind up or disappoint. I’m free. I stick on Meatloaf’s Bat Out Of Hell II album and slide back under the thick, warm duvet, light up a Marlboro Red, and let the music wash over me. Later, I’ll say to The Ghost's roommate (a kind and blameless man, to be clear - he didn’t know what was going on, and how could he? I didn’t either) how great it is to smoke a cigarette whilst listening to Meatloaf after a long sleep, and he’ll tip me a wink and grin and say something like ‘it’s even better if you’ve had a reason to wake up!’ and I’ll grin and nod back and work out his actual meaning about a day and a half later. But that’s later. For now, I’m in that room, in that warm bed, drawing the smoke deep into my lungs, snuggled in the warmth of the sheets. The Ghost is an early riser. I am, at this point in my life, not so much a night owl as a creature of chaos living a series of 28 - 30 hour days. There’s a mattress on the floor, my ‘official’ bed, but I’ll often share his, or else take his spot when his early start inevitably wakes me; preferring the firmness of his mattress, and the thickness of his duvet. I remember the smell. In the room itself, it should be air freshener vs. cigarette ash, a titanic, whoever-wins-we-lose battle for the ages, but it isn't somehow; or at least not to me and my smoker's nose. I like it. And then there’s the smell of him on the sheets; soap and store own-brand deodorant with just the mildest undercurrent of his own odour. This smell, too, I like. It’s a smell of comfort. Of safety. Of love. At this point, we’ve been together for somewhere between five and seven years. In this room, so much of my ultimately futile magical training will take place. Hanging from the wardrobe door is an oil painting his brother made. It depicts the flying creature from the Donnington ‘94 Monsters Of Rock poster, complete with the circled, winged A symbol of that year’s headliner, Aerosmith. We’d attended that show together, camping out the night before. It was one of the best live shows of my life. On my left, in the space where the fireplace used to be in this Victorian London house, is his altar. There is a chalice, a tarot card (The Magician, of course), other things I can’t recall, probably an owl ornament of some kind, and a bronze spearhead. I grew up around altars. My mum had one. I, at this point, have one. It’s normal. One evening, before or after this cigarette, this morning, we will be having one of our rambling conversations, and he will ask me about my night obsession, and I, full of teenage bullshit romanticism and faux darkness, will describe Night as containing ‘a wondrous savagery’. The Ghost straightens up, becomes commanding. ‘Come here’. I’m in bed, in just my boxer shorts, or possibly nude (‘anyone who sleeps in clothes when they don’t have to is an idiot’, he’s always insisted) but I immediately go to him. ‘Turn around.’ I do. He takes my shoulders, pulling me back and down, so I’m sat on the edge of his bed, facing the wall, back to him. He moves away, rummages. I sit, looking forward, waiting. This is instruction, he’s in Telling Mode (earlier, he’ll tell me about The Voice, the power to command - his gran had it, he explains, and it’s something he can do too; he’ll claim he used it on me when he caught me attempting to steal his cigarettes in my mum’s house, and I’ll believe him) and so I wait. His arm comes into view over my shoulder. He’s holding the arrowhead in his fist. (it has Celtic designs on it. He claims it’s ancient, that he found it hiking on Dartmoor. I believe him) He presses the tip to the centre of my chest, not hard. The cold, blunt, rounded point of metal rests at the top of my collarbone. Then, slowly but deliberately, the point moves down. It traces the central divide of my ribcage, then down to my stomach. He brings it to rest just above my belly button. He holds it there. Then he says okay. His arm goes away. I turn around. As he replaces the arrowhead on the altar, he explains; that my statement had made him worry that I might be moving toward The Dark; that what just happened was a test; ‘nobody of The Dark would allow that, you’d have stopped me when it was clear where it was going, you wouldn’t have been able to help yourself’. He asks me how I’d felt during the test. I told him the truth; that I felt calm, but at a heightened, elevated level; intense. He nods, smiles, happy. I think we smoke. I ask him what would have happened if I had reacted, pulled away. He tells me our training would have trailed off gradually, and he’d have found a way to drift away from me. I accept this without further question. In this room, he’ll lead me on many guided meditations, attempting to get me to astral project; the breakthrough proof he knows I’m craving, that will move the magic from something I desire and infer to something tangible. In this room, he’ll explain to me how lowering my inhibitions is crucial to my obtaining the openness I need to let go. In this room, under his verbal guidance, and the power of my own imagination, I’ll experience something agonisingly close to the things he’s described to me in vivid detail, only to find myself surrounded by a roaring, booming sound that starts me out of my trance. He’ll explain it was my heart; that I’d Travelled Within, as the meditation led me to, but I’d ended up inside a chamber of my heart, and the experience had overwhelmed me. He’ll tell me I’m really close to a breakthrough, though in reality, this is as near as I ever get. In this room, he’ll tell me to masturbate in the bed on the floor, while he lies in his own bed. He’ll tell me it’s part of the training. That sexual energy is a kind of magic, and masturbation is a way to channel it. He’ll advise me that there might be magical spells or rites I’ll be able to complete as part of sexual congress with my then-girlfriend, if I want - ‘you might be sitting face to face, fully inside her, but not moving’ I remember him saying, a stray fragment from conversations in The Room. He’ll tell me, too, that my own sexual energy is potent, can affect the mood of others. One evening, after I’ve masturbated, lying on the mattress on the floor next to his bed, he’ll tell me about how he’d heard the man in the flat upstairs reinitiate sex with his girlfriend, triggered by my jerking it in the room below. I believe him. Later, I’ll try and deploy this power to get his flatmate to go to bed with his girlfriend so I can play on his PC, jerking off in the bathroom next to the living room where his flatmate and the computer are situated. I will be disappointed when it doesn’t work, and when I tell The Ghost, so is he. In this room, he’ll give me instructions on how to masturbate better. He’s backed me into a rhetorical corner, by this point; there’s no logical reason for me to resist the lesson. It won’t be sexual for either one of us, and he’s concerned I might be hurting myself, wants to help. As I present my erect penis to him, he explains that the skin is unusually tight and that I should be gentle to avoid chafing. I can’t remember much of what he told me; I can mainly recall how my concentration was on breathing normally, treating the situation with casual indifference, no big deal. I do remember at one point his finger touches me, as he points out an area of particular sensitivity. Two decades later, I’ll see the two women police officers exchange a glance at the moment I describe this, an unspoken communication passing between them. In this room, we’ll have countless conversations. I’ll pour out my heart, my desires, my hopes, my fears. We’ll talk about things fantastic and mundane. Among many other things - computer games and role-playing games, and music, and books - we'll talk about maturity and the age of consent. He’ll patiently explain to me that it’s arbitrary; that different people mature, physically and emotionally, at different ages, so the law just draws a line because it has to be drawn somewhere, and that’s okay, because children do have to be protected against predators. He really doesn’t like paedophiles. In one of our conversations, he claims he, with some friends (the implication is magical friends, fellow shaman, but I can’t remember now if he ever made that explicit) castrated a paedophile once, in Ireland. I don’t remember if I asked if the man survived, or what his reply was. I suspect I didn’t ask. I suspect I just nodded at this obviously just turn of events. Anyhow. Consent is important. Consent is key. Physical and emotional maturity might make a sexual relationship possible, but never without consent. Rapists must die. How old, he asks me, must someone be before a sexual relationship can be considered? I know it sounds like a copout, but I swear it’s the truth - I cannot remember what reply 16, or 17, or at the outside 18-year-old me gave. But I do remember his answer. Twelve years old. Not, in point of fact, because of physical or emotional considerations, it turns out (some girls start puberty as young as nine, he tells me, and I nod, believing him), but because ‘nobody under the age of twelve can be trusted to keep it secret’. Yeah. What about your childhood? It’s defective! I was ten years old, I think, when I first met The Ghost. I met him at a Live Roleplaying event put on by my local youth theatre group. He was attached by some means to a local troop, even though he was living in London at the time. I can’t remember, now, what his role was; he had a wizard character who was quite powerful and involved in that system, but was he any part of that first event? As I think more, I suspect not. Kez was, for sure, a bear of a man who had the job of guide for our party. And that event was the primary kids Vs the teenager theatre kids, and they massacred us in the final encounter. Yeah, I think maybe The Ghost wasn’t at that event, but a later one. Anyway, the LARP bug had well and truly bitten, and for the next ten years, attending LARP weekend events would be a significant part of my social calendar. And The Ghost would take me. It’s the summer of 1992. I am 14 years old. Summerfest has loomed large in my imagination since I first heard the name; a vast event taking in thousands of attendants for a weekend of drinking, bonfires, and latex swords and silly costumes. It sounded like heaven, and The Ghost, possibly already dating my mother at this point, scores permission to take me. Due to a political and/or rules-based schism, a new group is formed, and so, for my first large event, I am attending not Summerfest, but The Gathering - the first event to hold this name. In the long car journey from North Devon to the Derbyshire scout camp that hosts the event, I smoke my first cigarette. I just ask him if I can have one, and he says yes. I smoke it like I know what I’m doing, but of course, I don’t, and when I confess at the end it was my first, he tells me he knew. I remember the feeling so clearly; a warmth in my cheeks, the flush of the forbidden, the comforting smell of tobacco smoke, now reborn as a taste, my mouth full of saliva. “If you start to feel like you actually need them, cut back, and if you feel your breathing being affected, just stop,” is his sage advice. I nod. When I get home and tell Bev and Freddie, they'll both be delighted, and we’ll immediately form the village underage smokers club, sneaking cigarettes from the vending machine in the village pub - Marlboro Reds, same as Slash smoked. …I want show you how to use it… Either that trip, or the next one, we’ll become blood brothers. We’ve been talking about it for months. He’s told me all about it; how we’re both old souls, who have shared many past lives together. ‘In many of those lives, we've been lovers. You can call me a dirty old man, I don’t care’ he says at one point, defiant. I don’t say it. I don’t even think it. I don’t want a physical relationship, but I do love him. It’s all the cliches you’d expect; he combines the best elements of my mates with all the advantages of being a Grown Up. Sure, access - to cigarettes, whiskey, LARP events, concerts, plus a pretty mean music collection on cassette. But it’s not just that. It’s access to wisdom. The ghost knows stuff. He’s from the adult world, but not really of it; he tells me what my secret heart already knows; that all that grown-up bullshit is bullshit; magic is real, hidden just beneath the surface, and those of us that can do it, ah… the rules don’t have to apply to us. And of course, I’m not just a magician, but one of unusual power; there are just seven this generation that have the kind of power I do, and I haven’t been this powerful since I was Taliesin. And he and I have known each other before. Life and life again, we find each other. Sometimes men, sometimes women, sometimes one of each. Always friends, always together, often lovers. And I feel it. So we do the ceremony. Naked, at his insistence, we sit in the tent, facing each other, lit by candle flame. We use needles in our fingertips to draw the blood we mingle. ‘Normally, at the end, we’d have an open-mouthed kiss. To prove our trust in each other,’ he’d told me earlier, and I’d snorted before replying ‘yeah, that’s not going to happen’. We do embrace, naked, in the tent, blood brothers now, the ceremony completed again, ensuring the cycle will perpetuate, and we’ll be connected in the next life. We sleep together, naked, in two sleeping bags zipped together. We smoke in the pitch dark, and he teaches me to read symbols in the glow of the ember. …it’ll kill you right back… It’s the summer after, 1993. Two amazing live shows in the space of a week - my beloved Guns N Roses, on the third leg of their mammoth Use Your Illusion tour, with The Cult as the main support band, and Metallica touring the black album (with Megadeth in tow) the following Saturday. I’m fifteen years old. I go to these shows with friends. The Ghost is not in attendance. I stay with my father, and I have an amazing time at both gigs. In the week in between, The Ghost takes me to another show. Ugly Kid Joe, at The Island in Islington. Screaming Jets in support. At the show, there is a group of girls, a similar age to me. I think they are beautiful. The conversation starts teasing, but they actually warm up to me after a while. I tell them The Ghost is my father, and that he lets me smoke. They’re venue regulars, and they flat-out do not believe Ugly Kid Joe are actually playing there. ‘They won’t show up, I mean, why would they?’, she insists. But they do, and It Is Good. After, we’re walking back. I remember - God, it’s wild, what comes back - passing a Burger King, the lights on, but the door locked. A leather-jacketed man rattles the door angrily, drawing wary glances from the staff inside. He turns to his companion, and with a tone of whining exasperation and an angry smile says ‘If they’d just had a little imagination…!’ On the way back, I talk about the girls a lot, excited. They really seemed to like me. I wonder if we could go back sometime. He demurs, saying the acts there are usually dance bands. I cool on the idea quickly, but not without regret. He laughs and says ‘anyway, you’re getting a bit ambitious for someone that hasn’t even painted the ceiling yet!’ I’m taken back to The Ghost's house. He lives with his parents in a block of flats. He explains that they’re not here, and they don’t know I’m staying. He explains that he won’t tell them, because his dad’s brother had a thing for boys, and so his parents were hypervigilant about that kind of thing. I smile, laugh, nod. We share a bed that night. Naked. We laugh and joke around. At one point, he pulls me onto his chest, so we’re lying face to face, me on top of him. ‘Come here!’, he says. ‘Why?’ I ask. ‘Because I want to control you!’ he says, still smiling. Something in my stomach flips over. I say something, and flee the bed. He immediately apologises, says it was a joke. He says my reaction was good, He says it was a test, and I’ve passed. He says that if I’d responded positively, he’d have known he was on for a love affair, rather than a magical trainee. ‘It’s a shame, though, I could have done with a love affair,’ he says, mock wistfully, and I laugh at his silliness. And looking back on moments like this, knowing what I know now, for just a second, I can feel a glimpse of what it must have been like, for him. What he must have imagined, desperately hoped, was about to happen there. I don’t know if he really loved me - to be honest, I’m not sure he’s capable of love, in a way you or I would recognise - but I do believe that he believed that he loved me, and that his desire came from that love. It’s the only way I can make sense of his fetishisation of consent; though as I type that, of course, it’s possible it was nothing more than survival instinct, right? Consent makes the waters muddy, if it ever comes to that; gives shame as leverage, makes talking at all less likely. Let’s face it, I was never supposed to write this down. You were never supposed to read it. The next morning, the conversation ends up coming around to self-defence, a perennial obsession of mine at that age, in the final year of an unhappy school career. He says he can help with that. He holds a large cushion against the wall and instructs me to punch it. Naked, of course. So he can properly see what my body is doing, how it moves. Boxers often train naked, he assures me. I believe him. … they’ll never let a night like tonight go to waste… It’s the only way it’ll work, he tells me. We’re back in The Room. The meditations are going nowhere; following the Big Heart moment, I can’t get close to that state again. I’m frustrated. So is he. He insists the issue is sexual. By this stage, I have a girlfriend. In point of fact, he’s in my home, the night I lose my virginity, and the following morning, he sits on the end of the single bed we’re curled up in, beaming with pride. That she took this in her stride seemed inconsequential at the time, and seems nothing short of miraculous today. Anyway. I need to ‘really let go’. I can’t do that with her, but I can with him, because he’ll let me. He lays it out. ‘You can do whatever you want. If you want to touch me, you can. If you want me to touch you, I will. If you want to penetrate me, you can. If you want me to penetrate you, absolutely not.’ It will be safe, he insists. I need it, he is clear, and it’s the only way it’ll work. And there’s simply no way. The proposition is the opposite of appealing. I don’t want to ‘let go’, be out of control sexually. Why would I? Why would anyone? I’ve only been having sex for five minutes, but it’s already clear to me that the more attentive and responsive you are, the better for both of you. And anyway, it’s him, and as much as I love him there’s not a single remote spark of physical attraction. Do I want the astral projection, that power, that proof? Sure… but, you know, not that much. I’ve been unsparing in terms of showing you my credulity to this point, but I have to give myself a bit of credit, here; I was firmly in touch with my own desires, and, despite years of careful path laying and preparation and manipulation and lies; despite that enormous investment of time, and energy, and imagination, it all crashed against the solid wall of implacable Do Not Want, leaving not so much as a mark. I don't know for sure where that selfish, unmovable core came from, but, obviously, I’m grateful. There’s much more I could tell, but the hour grows late, and honestly, I don’t think he’s worth it. But I do need to share one further moment because it’s very, very instructive; and a big part of me finally writing this out is, as always, an attempt to answer a question. Unusually for this series, however, the question this time isn’t ‘why’, but ‘how’. So. …baby, we could talk all night… It’s sometime between 2009 and 2010. I’m married, and settled, baby on the way or possibly recently arrived. And I get a phone call out of the blue from one of the old LARP crew that’s stayed in touch. And he’s got questions for me about The Ghost. Turns out, The Ghost has gotten cosied up with another family. This time, it’s a girl child he’s getting close to. The parents are concerned; the kid won’t talk. And it’s at that moment, over twenty years after we first met, ten years after I stopped living with him in London, in the flat we shared and split the rent and ran D&D games and bickered like an old married couple as we drifted apart; as I became more and more aware of how regularly and pointlessly he lied, about everything; as any talk of magic and magical training faded before drying up entirely; ten fucking years after we parted, still on friendly terms, still Facebook friends, still the guy I thought of as my brother… It’s that exact fucking moment, and not one second before, that the scales fall. And, you know, I’ve gotten better at this writing gig, thanks in no small part to eight years at this particular coal face (thanks again, Jim), but, sorry, gang, I cannot fully put it into words what that moment did to me. Hell, real talk, what it’s still doing to me. Because, all at once, it was so gobsmackingly obvious - what he’d really been, what he’d done, what I'd almost done - that the overriding initial tide of emotion that hit me - before the shame, before the baffled anger, before the sorrow - was embarrassment. ‘You were a kid. You couldn’t have known. You’re not supposed to need to. That’s how it works.’ Well-meaning loved ones and counsellors. And of course, they’re not wrong… but it didn’t happen to them. It happened to me. And I fucking should have known. I should have. It was screamingly obvious. I mean, You’ve come this far, you know. And, not a clue; not as a kid (understandable), but also not as a grown ass, in-his-thirties-with-a-wife-and-career-and-kids adult; and that’s the part that’s still a little hard to swallow, some nights. And then there’s the guilt. As you’ll have gathered, I went to the police, the phone call from my friend ringing in my ears. The two officers were incredibly sympathetic and sensitive. I told as much of the story as I could remember - less than I’ve told tonight, as I’ve had more time, since, to think about it, and the events that surrounded it, to piece together at least some of the chronology - but enough. A couple of weeks later, I get a phone call from another officer. They tell me they’re not pressing charges. They interviewed him, and he denied everything, and it’s word against word, and that’s it. They were tempted to go for it anyway, they said, because I was a compelling witness, but in the end they felt without a single piece of corroborating evidence there was no way forward. I think about that a lot. About the fake secret I knew I was carrying, and the real secret I didn’t. How he hid in plain sight so well, I couldn’t see it until I found out I was neither the first, nor the last Yeah, I think about that a lot, when I can’t help it. The police said they’d keep my testimony on file; they’d made it clear to him that they had an eye on him, and he was no longer welcome at live role-playing events. ‘You came forward because you thought it might corroborate what was going on with someone else, but sadly it looks like it’s the other way around’ said the officer, on the phone; or something very like that, anyway. And at some point came the twist of the knife I should have expected. The officer told me that The Ghost had denied it all, of course, and then; ‘he did say that he’d always thought of you as like a younger brother’. Yeah. Yeah, me too, you fucker. Me too. Anyway. Oh, he had at least one prior conviction for child sex offences, I learned that, too. That’s where the ‘not the first’ revelation came from. And if the stories his daughter told me are true - and I have no reason to disbelieve her - his father was also an abuser. I remember replaying the conversation in his parent’s flat, about the dodgy uncle. Right there, in plain sight. Fucking hell. I don’t know what happened with the family he was cosying up to, the child he’d clearly started working on. They were not people I knew or had direct contact with. I don’t have their names. I do know he vanished from social media days after I went to the cops, and my understanding is that he can no longer take part in UK LARP events, though I don’t know how they’d enforce that. I suppose, technically, I don’t know if he’s alive or dead. Though my money’s on alive. Sure, he was starting to develop a middle-age spread by the time we parted company, but he was in pretty good shape. Maybe the smokes got him in the end, or will do soon; but I think, if he were gone, word would have gotten back to me by now. Hell, there’s even a part of me, a holdover from that believer kid, that thinks I’ll know, when it does finally happen. Still, I hope he is dead, or dying. Not because the thought gives me any satisfaction - I’d say if it did, without shame, it just doesn’t - but for a simpler reason; once he’s dead, he can’t do it anymore. Because that’s the weight of this thing that I can’t ever quite shift. I remember a friend actually saying to me ‘I don’t feel safe having him around my niece’ and thinking, hard, and replying ‘I don’t think he’d do anything intentionally to harm her’, and God help me, I meant it, and what the fuck does that say about me? I knew about everything you’ve read above, and I fucking said that. And, you know, not for nothing, but I went through an aggressive, ugly New Atheist phase, around 9/11, and somehow I was also carrying this entire doublethink about my ‘brother’ in my head that exact same time, and I dunno, you guys, I think maybe, in certain fundamental and important respects, I’m just not that bright. …endless winters, and the dreams would freeze… I don’t like knowing he’s still out there, and still a danger, that’s the beginning and end of it. And I guess this is where we draw the lesson, right? And I think - I think - the lesson might be this; no secrets. Or. no, that’s too proscriptive; too radical, even for the guy who wrote A Song For The End. Okay, how about this? Interrogate your secrets; and, especially, the secrets others want you to keep. Because it felt so plausible. That’s the thing. Because I was bright, and imaginative, and angry, and rebellious, and a kid. And because he knew just what to say. ‘You know if you’d been into football, it’d have been football’, a wise friend told me, and she was right, of course, but I couldn’t see how it was tailored for me, because it was tailored for me; such a perfect fit, I’d carry it long and far past the point I should have known better. There's one last thing I’ve got to share, too, because it’s too perfectly macabre, and I’m a horror writer, but also, it’s a true thing, and it’s this: increasingly, I look like him. I’ve got long hair (though mine is already thinner than his was, damn his eyes). I’ve got the glasses. Since lockdown and working from home, I’ve even started working on the belly, now I’m not cycling 40 miles a week in commute. And when the beard’s short, it’s okay, but I gotta tell you, lately, when it fills out, and I catch myself in the mirror… well. Because I’m about the age he was when he met me. And that’s when the sadness comes in. What I think is, he was empty, in some fundamental way. Empty in a way that can't be fixed, can’t be filled. I don't think he was capable of love, as you or I would understand it. But I was. I am. And I loved him. And that’s why nobody knew what was going on. Because I didn’t know what was going on. Because I trusted him, and I loved him, and so I knew the secrets he needed me to keep were good, were right. I dunno. I’d hoped when I got to this point, I’d have something useful to say. I’d imagined there’d be something I could say to the parents and kids who don’t know they’ve invited a predator into their lives; some wisdom from what I lived through that might stop some kid from making bad choices, or help twitch the antenna of some well-meaning parent. I really thought I’d get there. Well, okay, how about this? My sister - who knew nothing of any of this until decades later - told my mum, at the time The Ghost was courting her, that, if he moved in, she’d run away. And mum broke off the relationship, though whether or not it was in response to that, I don’t know, and frankly don’t want to ask, at this distance. But. She didn’t know. Obviously. But she knew something. And who knows how this story plays out, if he’d moved in? I’ll say this too, for whatever it’s worth, and if you’ve come this far, you may see this as a weakness or defect rather than a strength, and fine, whatever, but; I refuse to reject my capacity to love. Because love may have trapped me into lying for someone who didn’t have my best interests at heart… but it also saved me, over and over. And it’s still saving me, as I spend the rest of my life wrestling with the fact that the most important relationship to me, in my most formative years, was with a man who was a pathological liar with a sexual interest in children. …does it get any better, can it get any worse? I am acutely aware that, as I type this, there are people - children and adults alike - who are suffering at a level that renders what I’ve described as trivial. I say that neither to aggrandise or diminish my own story; merely to acknowledge reality. I wouldn’t wish what was done to me upon anyone, and I was profoundly lucky, and both these things are true. Just… look out for each other, okay? And okay, maybe, maybe... Maybe we need to be even more fearless about expressing what we know to be true. Because this is a dark time; maybe the darkest our species, and our planet, has endured since a big space rock did for the dinosaurs. Our kids, if they live at all, are going to live through cataclysms not merely outside of living memory, but actually unprecedented. And, as a father, I can relate on a cellular level to the desire to protect, to shield. But. I think, maybe, that’s not always the best way to go. Because I think, maybe, that if we resist that urge, and instead speak painful truths, we’ll give those kids a fighting chance to be the beacons of hope we’re all desperately going to need, in the decades we’re cursed to face. And, as an added bonus, we will, hopefully, leave them less vulnerable to those skilled, brilliant operators who will mix lies with truth, in service of appetites incomprehensible to those of us with souls. Because, while such people are blessedly rare, they do exist; and, left unchecked, they can do an awful lot of damage. And I feel like that’s probably worth doing. Given where we are. …objects in the rearview mirror may appear closer than they are… Thanks for coming this far. Good luck out there. KP 19/10/22 PS - There are a few - a vanishingly few, I suspect - who knew me back then and might come across this. Know that I’m okay, and also, respectfully, I don’t want to talk about it. If you know, you know. If not… let’s leave it here, okay? Thank you. 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