'I was heartbroken - He hadn't even said good-bye': Difference between revisions

From Brongersma
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "[Martin E.P. Seligman (American psychologist):] Today I would be labeled a sexually abused child. Myron "molested" me every weekday for about a year when I was nine. I walked...")
 
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[Martin E.P. Seligman (American psychologist):] Today I would be labeled a sexually abused child. Myron "molested" me every weekday for about a year when I was nine. I walked four blocks to School 16. On the corner, Myron sold the <i>Times Union,/i> for a nickel. He dressed in dun-colored rags, was unshaven, and stammered badly. Today my colleagues would label him "a retarded adult with cerebral palsy." In the early 1950s, people in Albany, New York, labeled him a "bum" and a "dummy." But he and I had a special friendship. He kissed me and we hugged for a few minutes. He told me his troubles and I told him mine. Then I went off to fourth grade.<br>
[Martin E.P. Seligman (American psychologist):] Today I would be labeled a sexually abused child. Myron "molested" me every weekday for about a year when I was nine. I walked four blocks to School 16. On the corner, Myron sold the <i>Times Union</i> for a nickel. He dressed in dun-colored rags, was unshaven, and stammered badly. Today my colleagues would label him "a retarded adult with cerebral palsy." In the early 1950s, people in Albany, New York, labeled him a "bum" and a "dummy." But he and I had a special friendship. He kissed me and we hugged for a few minutes. He told me his troubles and I told him mine. Then I went off to fourth grade.<br>
<br>
<br>
One day, Myron disappeared from his corner. I looked for him frantically, and a policeman on the beat nearby told me that Myron had "gone away." I was heartbroken. He hadn't even said good-bye.<br>
One day, Myron disappeared from his corner. I looked for him frantically, and a policeman on the beat nearby told me that Myron had "gone away." I was heartbroken. He hadn't even said good-bye.<br>
Line 14: Line 14:
[[Category:Beroemdheid als minderjarige met man]]
[[Category:Beroemdheid als minderjarige met man]]
[[Category:Psychiatrists/Psychologists]]
[[Category:Psychiatrists/Psychologists]]
[[Category:Psychiaters/{sychologen]]
[[Category:Psychiaters/Psychologen]]

Latest revision as of 17:33, 7 October 2019

[Martin E.P. Seligman (American psychologist):] Today I would be labeled a sexually abused child. Myron "molested" me every weekday for about a year when I was nine. I walked four blocks to School 16. On the corner, Myron sold the Times Union for a nickel. He dressed in dun-colored rags, was unshaven, and stammered badly. Today my colleagues would label him "a retarded adult with cerebral palsy." In the early 1950s, people in Albany, New York, labeled him a "bum" and a "dummy." But he and I had a special friendship. He kissed me and we hugged for a few minutes. He told me his troubles and I told him mine. Then I went off to fourth grade.

One day, Myron disappeared from his corner. I looked for him frantically, and a policeman on the beat nearby told me that Myron had "gone away." I was heartbroken. He hadn't even said good-bye.

Five years later, I saw Myron as I got off a bus to go to the Palace Theatre way downtown. "Myron!" I shouted joyously. He took one look at me and ran away as fast as his limp allowed. A pile of unsold newspapers, flapping in the cold winter wind, remained.

Today, of course, I can fill in the gaps. A passing neighbor must have seen Myron "molesting" (i.e., hugging and kissing) me. She told my parents. My parents told the police. The police told Myron that if they ever saw him with me again, they would send him to prison - or worse (Albany was not a gentle place in the 1950s). No one told me any of this.

source: From the book 'What You Can Change and What You Can't' by Martin E.P. Seligman; www.consentingjuveniles.com/Case_Narrative?case=Martin_Seligman; Alfred A. Knopf, New York; 1994