I was raised in a violent atmosphere. Our house was not filled with the physical violence that leads to bodily injury. But there was physical violence that results in psychological trauma and much verbal and emotional abuse. It's difficult growing up knowing that one is not good enough, that one's talents and skills are not appreciated, and that who one is less important than who one might be perceived to be.
My father was an angry man. While practicing his bowling in the living room and simultaneously arguing with my mother, he "accidentally" threw his ball through the living room wall. Because he was having trouble with the Christmas tree one year, the tree was thrown through the plate glass window in front of which it was to supposed to stand. That his anger did not produce physical violence against his children is testament to my mother's fortitude. But there was always the mental abuse. All four of us kids are still trying to cope with that.
Growing up as a child, I became involved in fisticuffs exactly twice. On one occasion, I chose to protect a neighborhood lad in my school who was the target of stones being thrown by the local bully. Though the bully was bigger than I, I managed to wrestle him to the ground with me on top and gave him enough good blows to send him on his way. I did not feel good about that. On the second occasion, I was attacked by a boy who I thought was my best friend. He was himself being given a hard time for hanging out with me, the "cry baby" of the neighborhood. I got a split lip during the altercation. And yes, I went home crying.
The two incidents resulted in my conviction that violence is never the correct response for me. I could have protected the first boy by hurrying him out of distance of the stones. And the second attack only escalated when I tried to protect myself. The damage done to my soul by not choosing to refuse to fight was hard for me to bear.
I have chosen to refuse to inflict violence ever since. During the Vietnam War, I chose to dodge the draft and was successful for nearly three years until found by the FBI in Oklahoma. Since being nonviolent was not sufficient reason to keep me out of the military (the option I was given was to serve 5 years in the violent atmosphere of a penitentiary), I did do my time in the Army. But I chose to do so as nonviolently as possible. When they taught me how to kill and maim, I would spend the night afterwards trying to meditate on peace while sick to my stomach. In the end, I was lucky. I never had to hurt anyone else during those awful two years. Had they attempted to send me off to kill, my plan was to attempt to run away again. Failing that, I would have chosen to die rather than kill someone else, for killing someone else would surely have been the death of my soul and protection of my soul is more important to me than protection of my body.
The only good thing that I can see my time in the military taught me was the ability to disarm a dangerous situation without violence. I was taught to use the violent approach, to be sure, but I refused to use it. Being a military cop and a prison guard, violence did have a tendency to happen around me. But I found that words and reason could stop fights and the skills they taught me to keep from being in a situation where I could be the focus of the violence were sufficient to protect me. But I still regret learning the skills they taught me so that I could inflict damage on other people. I hope I have forgotten most of them by now.
Yes, I was raised in a suburb. But I have lived in areas where violence occurred more frequently than it should (which is never, as far as I am concerned)...in San Francisco after the Death of Hippie, in Spanish Harlem in New York for a spell, in a racially divided area of Milwaukee. But I refused to let the violence change the way I lived.
No, I do not know what it is like to be a person of color. But I do know what it is like to be attacked solely because of my appearance. It's not too hard to tell I was born male. I've been assaulted twice in while living near Little Rock and once in Menlo Park, CA, because of it, had all the tires on my car slashed because of it, and had cat feces put in my mailbox because of it. Compared to that, when I became the target of a big rock in Little Rock on another occasion because I was a dyke, I actually had the thought pass through my mind that at least the perpetrators were acknowledging me as a woman.
Don't get me wrong. I do not condone anyone's use of violence. But I figure that a violent response by me means that those who acted violently towards me have won. I refuse to let that happen.
What if someone comes face to face with me and demands my money? Then they can have my money. What if someone invades my home while I am there and wants my property? Then they can have what they want. What if someone wants to kill me? Then they can have my life . . . but they cannot have my soul.
Peace is not won easily. It is definitely not won by enacting war, either war on a large scale or war on a personal level. Certain parts of this society have much invested in keeping us divided and at each other's throats . . . divided along racial lines, economic lines, religious lines, and gender lines. Until we can refuse the fighting, they are the winners. Until we can cease being afraid of one another, they are the winners. Until we can learn that we can work together, they are the winners. Until we realize that there is strength in our numbers, they will rule.
The way we stop the violence is to stop the violence. It is a personal act in behalf of our society when we refuse to be violent. It is a public act in behalf of our society if we can teach others to be nonviolent as well.