Friday, November 19, 2010

To Mrs. Stacy McDonald


Stacy, (and whoever it may concern) I would like to present a case for quivering daughters everywhere from your own life
and words.  

For those who don't know, Stacy and James were both married, had at least one child, and divorced before their marriage
to each other.  Stacy, here are some of your own words regarding that.

"Those who have never endured the wrenching pain of an adulterous betrayal cannot fathom how truly devastating it is.
James and I have both experienced it first hand. You see, we were both married before. Though we each bear the scars
inflicted by infidelity, we also carry the indelible mark of healing that comes from the One who gave us beauty for ashes—
the One who did not leave us hopeless and forsaken; but, instead blessed us by bringing us together and choosing to use
us as a couple—as a family—for His glory. ... There is no question of whether or not we were perfect spouses—we were not!
But that does not negate the fact that we were both the “innocent victims” of adultery... it is not the victim of adultery
or desertion who has “put asunder” the marriage...Furthermore, a widow can be defined as one who has been abandoned by
a spouse, either through death or divorce...The victim of adultery or abandonment may be rightly considered simply a
'widow;' " ~Stacy McDonald in her post "Beauty for Ashes:A Testimony"

First of all, I don't claim to know what is all right and wrong about divorce and remarriage, but please, don't go
redefining the English language just so that you can justify yourself!  Honestly, I would not consider this to be a blight on
your record if it were not for your cruel judgement of women who say very similar things in regard to patriarchy.  The
hypocrisy is glaring.  It is all right for you to say that your ex-husband and husband's ex-wife were the ones in the wrong,
that they did evil, and that you were very much hurt by that, but when Hillary McFarland and others say that their parents
wronged them and it caused great pain, you say that they are just bitter, selfish, and dragging their parents through the mud
for no reason at all!

"In her mind, it seemed, the source of her depression wasn’t... clear, tangible examples of abuse (I kept waiting)"
~Stacy McDonald in her review of Quivering Daughters

"I am so sorry you had to hug him.  You should never have to hug anyone you don't want to, ever.  He told you he was a
sex addict?  And nobody listened?  He told you that God said you'd move in with him when you turned 18 - and you were
terrified, and prayed that God wouldn't?
But then you remembered that your wants are "of the flesh" and we should die to our flesh.  That it's best to get what
we don't want so that we learn godly character - how to deny ourselves.  So you secretly feared you really were going
to live with him, even though he was gross and fifty and you were eight and he drooled and his mouth was yucky and he
smelled.  And you had to help clean his house, because he lived by himself.  He kept chasing you around with his arms out.
And tickling you.
But he was a 'ministry'"  Hillary McFarland talking to Luna in Quivering Daughters

Being spanked and humiliated for accidentally taking a candy from a store at three years old, being bathed in kerosene,
sometimes only being allowed to bathe once every two weeks, not having a working bathroom or even outhouse, being
forced into hard labor all day and then made to feel guilty because you didn't have time to read your Bible and were grumpy
with the people around you, being indoctrinated for hours, being looked at "down there" and having parents and teachers
talk as if any little thing you do will get you raped, not having proper or adequate medical care, having your pets' lives
threatened and/or taken...  The stories go on and on, and they are not stories that belong only to Hillary - they belong to all
quivering daughters to some degree or another.

These are not made-up stories, nor are they insignificant.  They are stories that would tend to remind me of books written
by survivors of concentration camps.  I think of Corrie Ten Boom's account of the camps she and her family were in during
WWII in Germany.  The "medical examinations" where their privacy was needlessly invaded while being denied any true
medical care, the hard work for long hours, the strictness and severity of discipline, the filth, the angry guards who would
punish them for anything that wasn't in their exact line of plans for them. etc.  I understand that conditions were worse in
those camps, but they are comparable to some degree, and no one has the right to say that there were no "clear, tangible
examples of abuse".

So, Stacy, my question for you is this - how is it that you and your husband are innocent victims or "grace-widows" of
ex-spouses (someone you could - and did - get away from, were equal to, and had chosen to be with in the first place), and
yet we, who have been treated so horribly by those who we had no choice but to be with and who were sworn (by God-given
duty and by their own choice to bring us into the world) to protect and provide for, are simply lazy, rebellious children (forget
the fact that we are actually adults) who are sick of chores and feel a bit misunderstood?

How can you even compare loss of privileges for a 12 year old girl because she posted inappropriate pictures of herself 
on the internet to beating an adult woman because she disagrees with you - or any other number of other true abuses 
we have had to deal with?  (As you did in your post "What is Abuse?")  Are you really going to defend those sorts of actions?  
If not, then please come out and say so.  At least your followers will stop thinking you do, and some will stop treating their 
adult daughters that way. I really don't think you know what you are talking about when you speak of us and our experiences. 
Have you ever truly listened, or are you just trying to make yourself look better because the truth we present has you 
running scared?

Stacy, we do not underestimate your pain or say that it doesn't matter or comes from your sinful nature and choices.
Please do not treat us and our pain with such disrespect and distain.

4 comments:

  1. Very beautifully expressed, Sophie.

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  2. Very, very good. Thank you for writing this!

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  3. Oh, you might want to consider putting your quotes in another font or in italics. It would make it much easier to see. :-)

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  4. I'm wondering what happened to the stacy that wanted to help with reconciliation. Why is it that there is a lot of mud slinging? Great post!

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