Today, I have a new apartment. There is a shelf in my kitchen. On it is a messy stack of cookbooks, a coffee mug with a chip in it, and a fake flower my daughter made from pipe cleaners. Nothing is aligned. Nothing is perfect.
In our living room, there was a small wooden shelf. It held three things: a ceramic bird from his mother, a clock that didn't work, and a small succulent. Every single day, I would dust that shelf. Every single day, I would stand back and make sure the bird was facing exactly 45 degrees to the left.
I became obsessed with the angle of a ceramic bird. I measured it with my eyes. I built my entire emotional existence around avoiding his sighs and his silence. 7 SOE 019 Rape -Sora Aoi-
When I finally called a hotline, my voice was a whisper. "He doesn't hit me," I said, ashamed. "He just... moves the bird."
If the bird was facing forward, he would sigh heavily when he walked in. That sigh meant dinner was "too salty" or the kids were "too loud." If the bird was facing right, he wouldn't speak to me for three days. Silence was his weapon of choice. It was colder than any winter. Today, I have a new apartment
Control is control. Isolation is a cage. Walking on eggshells fractures your soul long before your body breaks.
If it isn't physical, it isn't abuse.
The advocate on the other end didn't laugh. She said, "That isn't a bird. That is a cage."
Leaving wasn't one dramatic night. It was 400 small mornings of choosing myself over his mood. It was moving out while he was at work, taking only the children's drawings and my dented pots. I left the bird on the shelf. I left the clock that didn't work. I left him the silence. Nothing is aligned
Trigger Warning: This story contains references to domestic abuse and coercive control.
For ten years, I thought I was a curator. I thought my job was to keep things neat. To keep him calm. To keep the peace.