Erase and Start Over

The resurfacing memories of a woman with PTSD.

Losing Bill Cosby

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November 20, 2014

Bill Cosby is all over news and social media for alleged sexual assaults. Alan Chartock asked this morning, on WAMC, what is the thing that draws people to this story, making it go viral?

I don’t know about anyone else, but for me, he was an icon that represented the good in my childhood. My mom had his Wonderfulness album, and we listened to that record over and over until we knew the stories by heart. We would laugh together, as a family, and it was – well – wonderfulness.

I saved my pennies and when he came to Albany, NY, I bought a ticket and went to see him at the Palace Theatre as a birthday present to myself. It felt great to sit in the same room with this man who could make my mother laugh, who unknowingly brought motherly hugs and kisses and tickles to girls who were desperate for their beautiful mother’s love, this woman whose smile could light the Empire State Building.

Even today, just thinking about Tonsils or the Chicken Heart, I feel that happy warmth of those very rare, loving hugs from Mom. But if the news about Bill Cosby is true, then a part of me will know I’m listening to the work of a rapist. My heart and prayers go out to his family and his victim(s).

I know, I know. Whatever he may have done, it doesn’t change the fact that those happy childhood moments did happen; they were real. I’ll probably get over this feeling that those memories are now tainted. But today, my visceral reaction is to wish I could punch this man in the nose for being unable to control his baser instincts. He’s a national family-man icon. He has a responsibility to behave like one, and if he can’t do that, to at least not do anything criminal.

My answer to Chartock’s question is that I’m drawn to the story because I feel betrayed by a public figure I trusted, that the little girl inside of me trusted. It is very hard to lose a childhood hero.

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Author: Jo Bautista

This blog, Erase and Start Over, covers topics that can be a little tough to take. If you have PTSD or other mental health conditions, please consider carefully before reading my blog. There will be triggers. I am a middle-aged single parent who has been successfully managing PTSD and severe depression. I can hardly believe my own story about how I got here, especially the resurfacing memories that have appeared decades after they happened. This blog is my place to talk about it as honestly and frankly as possible, given my own doubts about my memory. I have been kidnapped by a parent, beaten, and raped by the time I was 10. Went to five elementary schools. Was beaten and sexually assaulted over the years until I was 25, when my first marriage ended with me in the hospital and him in jail. I know hunger. I know poverty. I know the fear of not being able to keep your child safe, fed, and clothed. I know bankruptcy. I've worked as a stripper and as a legislative analyst and everything in between. I have also known incredible joy and empowerment, heart-filling gratitude, centered peace, and much love. Through it all, the one truth that has helped me rise from the valleys is the knowledge that I can always: Borrón y cuenta nueva. Erase and start over.

Your thoughts are welcome.