A POST HILL PRESS / MTV book
Published at Smashwords
ISBN (hardcover): 978-1-61868-9-795
ISBN (eBook): 978-1-61868-9-801
Pride Over Pity copyright © 2014
by Kailyn Lowry with Adrienne Wenner
All Rights Reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author and publisher.
“Beauty is Sizeless” photography by Kate Hedrick
Cover Design: Travis Franklin
Published by
Post Hill Press
109 International Drive, Suite 300
Franklin, TN 37067
Posthillpress.com
MTV
1515 Broadway
New York, NY 10036
mtv.com
This work is a memoir. It reflects the author’s present recollections of her experiences over a period of years. Certain names, locations, and identifying characteristics have been changed. Dialogue and events have been recreated from memory, and, in some cases, have been compressed to convey the substance of what was said or what occurred.
The views and opinions in the book are solely those of the author and do not represent the views of MTV, its parent company, Viacom Inc., or the publisher, Post Hill Press.
Table of Contents
1. The Intoxicatingly Wicked Witch
2. Sidewalk Sex
3. My Precious Prom Night
4. 16… 17 and Pregnant
5. I Want My MTV
6. The Dreaded “D”
7. Fat or Pregnant
8. The Persistent Push
9. Single to Homeless
10. Regrets
11. Fixing My Fortune
12. Sister, Sister
13. Love Comes to Town
14. Girl Friends
15. Steadfast Convictions
16. Ink Insanity
17. The Three Rings of Marriage
18. Airman Marroquin
19. For the Love of a Daughter
20. Psycho Bitch
21. Chocolate Wasted
22. Baby in Her Belly
23. MilSo Life
24. Moving on Out
25. State of Love and Trust
26. Little Lincoln
27. The Mermaid and Dory
To everyone who taught me that life does not end at sixteen and pregnant.
It is only the beginning.
I felt different. There was something about me that just wasn’t the same. I had to clear the mess up right now. I locked myself in the bathroom and peed on the little stick that would determine my fate. I stared at the strip as the little plastic window revealed a positive sign. I laughed nervously and threw it onto the bathroom counter. Pregnant? I was pregnant? But I was only 17. The reality of the situation took a while to sink in, but once I accepted that the test wasn’t lying, I knew my life would never be the same again.
Chapter 1
The Intoxicatingly Wicked Witch
My six-year-old legs were not long enough to help me run through the house fast enough. As I made a turn around the kitchen island, my heart pounded a little faster. Her dodgy movements were slow and predictable, but my fear never lessened.
“I’m gonna get you my pretty,” my mom slurred in a high-pitched voice. She popped out from behind the kitchen island and cackled evilly, “And your little dog too!” The poor yet spooky imitation was enough to send me running out of the house, but I settled for screaming and sensibly locking myself in her bedroom.
My mom knew Mrs. Gulch, aka the Wicked Witch of the West, scared me more than anything. To have a fictional villain come to life is a child’s worst nightmare, but for me this was typical for my mother during her escapades. At the time I never understood why my mom always transformed into the bad witch after drinking. Nobody liked her. Nobody wanted to be her. As birthdays flew by, I realized the problem was much bigger than what it seemed. My mother was an alcoholic.
I didn’t have anything to compare my family to, so I struggled to understand what was going on with her on my own. I began to question everything. Is it curable? How long had she been this way? Why her? Why me? Was I the only one who thought she had a serious problem? At such a young age, normal isn’t yet defined, but I sensed my family was different. There was no hiding the fact that my father wasn’t and hadn’t been in the picture since I was a baby, but drinking was still something I did not fully understand—yet.
I guess the only part of my childhood that could be considered typical was my insatiable need to be active. Every bright-eyed child holds hopes and dreams closer than reality. In fact, at that age, dreams matter more than what reality or destiny hold in store for you. It’s so beautiful to think that, at that age, I didn’t believe anything could hold me back. Becoming president of the United States, starting my own clothing line, becoming a vet, a dentist, or maybe even a singer seemed like achievable goals back then. The future held endless possibilities—until it started to feel like my mother was a big deadbolt on the door. I don’t recall her ever giving me outlets to test my dreams out on. I wasn’t involved in clubs or sports or any sort of activity or hobby.
It seemed like my mother had enough trouble just remembering to pick me up from school. I remember being dropped off at friends’ houses and sometimes not getting a phone call for what seemed like days. For most kids, sleeping over multiple nights in a row is a chance to have unsupervised fun. For me, it meant wondering when I would see my mom again. I didn’t want to be part of the tumultuous lifestyle created by her unpredictable behavior. I wanted consistency and stability, but I felt like my childhood lacked structure and steady parenting. I found myself weaving into the crazy more without recognizing that it wasn’t normal. I even started to lie to cover for my mother’s behavior.
The day after September 11, 2001, my mother came to pick me up from my after-school program at Lakeside Elementary School. It was a program where the teachers sent you to an open space in the school—like the gym or cafeteria—until about 5:00 or 6:00 when your parents would pick you up on their way home from work.
The previous day had been marked in American history as one of tragedy and loss on our soil. Everyone can remember where they were and what they were doing when the planes crashed. The following day, there was a heavy silence around the school. Even though I was only in the fourth grade, I was aware of a sense of the atmosphere being off.
Sitting between the two tables at the front of the cafeteria, the pair of teachers in charge watched as my mom leaned over the sign out sheet. Their disparaging glances caused a sense of a panic to rise in my chest. I rushed up to my mom so she didn’t have the chance to speak to them. Did Jack Daniels suddenly make a perfume? Every word pouring out of her mouth sounded slurred. I was embarrassed and hung my head in shame, hoping no one else caught on as fast as I did. I thought I had gotten away without being interrogated, but the next day my guidance counselor called me into his office.
“My cousin works in New York City so my mom was really shook up,” the rehearsed line rolled off my tongue in a monotone.
“Is that really it, Kailyn?”
“Yes,” I replied, “she was just really worried.”
That was the day I started lying for my mother’s alcoholism. In that moment, I became an adult. It became my natural instinct to take care of people because it felt like my mother couldn’t take care of herself—or me. Cleaning up vomit after a hard night of drinking made me look a little like Cinderella, except my version was even more twisted than the Brothers Grimm could imagine up.
Although I was fortunate enough that my mom was able to provide clothing, a roof ov
er my head, and food on the table, her job working at multiple bars as a bartender caused more problems than it was worth. I remember how sometimes, when she got off of work, she’d disappear for a few days. Meanwhile, the person she hired to watch over me was, unbeknownst to my mom, a coke-snorting babysitter—who preferred the dollar bill method. In those times, when she would disappear for days without warning, I’d wonder if I would ever see her again. The possibility of her becoming a newspaper headline seemed inevitable to me because of her impulsive lifestyle. I guess no one told her she wasn’t a rock star.
I’d like to pretend my mom never hurt me, but the truth is she did. It felt like a bottle of liquid brought her more joy than spending time with her own daughter. There’s no denying I took it personally. How could I not? At some point I gave up on her because it seemed like a disease and I knew that disease wasn’t thinking of my mom’s best interest or mine. The insatiable need would always win out over a desire to make our lives better.
In fourth grade I moved to the next town over and spent a solid two years there. I was nearly always alone unless my mom had paid the babysitter by way of cigarettes. I wasn’t sure who I was becoming or what I wanted. The deadly combination of loneliness and no sense of self hadn’t become lethal quite yet, but I was seriously sick of moving around. As I entered middle school we moved again, this time even further away to Whitehall.
Moving from rural Pennsylvania, where everyone knows you and your family, to a more populated area didn’t help my social standing. Moving around so much took me away from the few friends I had and, if anything, I was more withdrawn than ever. No one understood my situation, which made everything even more difficult for me.
No matter how lonely and isolated I became, the moving didn’t stop and neither did the boyfriends my mom was racking up. She wasn’t happy with herself so I think she hitched herself to others to escape feeling that way. When I was a freshman, one of the boyfriends tried getting her help. She listened to him and signed temporary custody over to my neighbors, the Hopwoods. I lived with them for a couple of months, while she pulled herself together. The Hopwoods knew my mom had issues and were willing to take me on to alleviate the stress in hopes that my mom would use the opportunity to get the help she needed. As I remember it, while she was supposedly doing her part to get better, my mom moved out of the house without giving me a heads up. Along with her boyfriend, she picked up and left, leaving me to run wild and free.
Every time my mom got help I secretly held onto a little bit of hope that she might look for a new job or change her way of life. But in the end nothing ever changed because it seemed like she never truly wanted to get better. I think that she was afraid of change because it would have meant struggling for a higher standard of living. It’s easier to crawl around on the ground than it is to stumble while trying to achieve full balance. I think my mom always chose crawling because she preferred comfort to working for a better life
I did too in a way. Without much adult supervision, I got away with anything I wanted to. I had too much pent up anger and too much freedom for a teenager. Smoking pot became the hobby I’d never had as a little girl. It made me feel like I was part of a group. But it didn’t take away the hurt or fury I was holding onto. If anything, it contributed to my self-destruction.
Meanwhile, I was getting into fights at my high school. At first my defiance was mostly verbal. Anyone I disagreed with would get attitude from me. I talked back to teachers, peers, anyone who rubbed me the wrong way. Occasionally, I got physical and would throw a punch at the person bothering me. The consequences for my aggressive behavior began with in-school suspensions, but eventually I landed a ten-day out of school suspension. In retrospect, this acting out was an outlet for my anger and frustration. It also placed in me a particular group of friends the way smoking pot did.
By the end of my freshman year, the trouble I was getting into escalated to the point that there was no way I could pull a solid four years at that school, so I moved back to Nazareth with my mom and her boyfriend to start anew as a sophomore. My life felt a bit like the movie, Thirteen. I had started out as a good kid, but just like Evan Rachel Wood’s character, I felt alone and angry and this led me to make very poor choices. Although I can’t deny I sometimes enjoyed the lack of parental supervision, it was hard to be left alone. Children and Youth services came and went. They tried intervening, but with no proof of neglect, they had no jurisdiction. I had all the basics: food, clothing, and shelter.
TOP: Me, 1 year old. BOTTOM: Me, 3 years old
It was hard for me feeling that my mother seemed to choose alcohol over me, but my sense has always been that she drank to mask the pain of losing her sister, Jodi, who was killed in a car accident when they were in high school. My mother has never really recovered from the loss.
She and Jodi were opposites. From what I can piece together, they had a sisterly rivalry. Representing the two spectrums as varsity cheerleaders, my mom was the partier and Jodi was the studious one who kept out of trouble. The night of my Aunt Jodi's death, they had gone out together, but eventually parted ways. At around round 11:00 p.m. word had begun to spread about a terrible car accident. My mom ran to the scene, fearing the worst.
Her memory of the event is slow, faded, and possibly factually incorrect. She remembers hundreds of bystanders looking on as her sister was placed in the ambulance. In reality, there weren’t many people present at the scene of the accident. Maybe my mom imagined a crowd to feel like she was surrounded and not alone watching her sister being pulled from the wreckage of the accident. She was the one who made the phone call to my grandparents, informing them that Jodi had been in a serious accident. At the hospital, they learned Jodi was brain dead. My mom told me that my grandparents made the painful decision to pull her off of life support.
My Uncle Jerry, my mom’s brother, believes that when someone dies all the bad is forgotten about that person. Maybe the large lurking shadow my mother seems to always be running from is Jodi’s memory. No matter what my mom does, she can never live up to the memory of the “good” sister who died so tragically.
The demons that had consumed my mother were now doing permanent damage to my well-being. As I settled into my new high school, our bad habits followed us. The freedom to go where I pleased resulted in me smoking constantly, more than ever before. Smoking weed had become my escape from loneliness.
Chapter 2
Sidewalk Sex
If I ever gaze at the past, I shudder. I shudder to count how many times I mistakenly thought I was loved. I quiver unpleasantly to recall the person I used to be and how I acted in some of my relationships. Looking back, it’s not surprising that I turned to boys for love so early. I needed appreciation. I needed to feel worthy. Most of all I needed support.
I had my first boyfriend in eighth grade, nothing serious but very exciting. He turned my cheeks red and made me giggle. I became a silly little girl around him. We were only dating for a few months, but because some of my girlfriends were sexually active I felt pressured into wanting to get rid of my virginity, too.
A year before that, I barely knew what sex was. Now, suddenly, here I was pushing my boyfriend to do what we had just learned not to do in sex education. If Mean Girls had come out a little earlier I would have learned, “Don’t have sex because you will get pregnant and die.” Honestly, that might have been enough to scare my naïve self. But as it was, the little knowledge I had just made me curious and experimental, not frightened.
My inexperience shone brighter than the sun that spring. The April weather was still a little shaky, just warm enough to allow teens and wildlife to come out from hibernation. There are very few stimulating events in rural Pennsylvania, so we did what most bored teenagers do—got into trouble in our pursuit of something remotely interesting to do.
As young kids, we had no cars or empty apartments to have privacy in, so we pretty much hung out on the streets of our neighborhood. One night, as my friends rounded the
corner, my boyfriend and I hung back. The concrete sidewalk had no summer warmth. It was a cold reminder we were still a couple months shy of sun bathing. Suddenly, my pants and underwear were pulled down while my shirt stayed on. Our movements and his touch were unromantic. What should have been natural felt stiff. The instinctual was off. The worst part was my friends knew what we were up to.
The sun seemed to set and rise in my head, when in reality the big moment was over in a couple of minutes. Why does losing your virginity have to be so weird? I barely had any inclination then as to why, but in retrospect it is so obvious. I was too young to understand that I wasn’t ready—physically or emotionally—for sex. I believed then that I had to have sex to keep up with my friends, so I just wanted to get the embarrassing virgin sticker off my forehead. Now, I wish I hadn’t ripped it off so quickly. Virginity isn’t a band-aid. There’s no wound. In fact, as a virgin you’re unscathed in those terms.
Once it was over, I was relieved to cover myself up and run home, blood trickling down my leg. Sex education didn’t warn us girls about all the blood. They should have been clearer. I wasn’t expecting a second monthly gift from Mother Nature, yet it sure seemed like she was being extra generous. Either that or Mean Girls was right: I was dying.
I didn’t feel any humiliation because there was no one at home to question my appearance. The lights were out, so I changed out of the evidence in darkness. Now that it was over, I was relieved. I was actually comforted by the thought that I was somehow a “new” girl. In the end, my first boyfriend and I were together for a year, which is a lifetime if you’re in the eighth grade. The few more times we had sex, it was still awkward and strange. The extremely uncomfortable nature of these experiences convinced me that this kind of intimacy should be reserved for long-term relationships only. However, although I wish I had reserved my first time for someone very special, I refuse to regret something I can’t change now.
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