The Search for the Self and Self-destruction through Drugs
THE LIFE OF CHRISTIANE F.
For the first six years of her life, Christiane lived in the
country on a farm, where she spent the whole day with the
farmer, fed the animals, and "romped in the hay with the
others." Then her family moved to Berlin, and she, her sister,
who was a year younger, and her parents lived in a two-and-a-half-room
apartment on the twelfth floor in Gropius City, a
high-rise housing development. The sudden loss of a rural setting, of
familiar playmates, and of all the free space that
goes with living in the country is in itself hard enough for a child,
but it is all the more tragic if the child must come to
terms with this loss all by herself and if she is constantly faced with
unpredictable punishment and beatings.
I would have been quite happy with my animals if things with my father
hadn't kept getting worse. While my mother was at work, he sat around at
home. Nothing had come of the marriage agency they wanted to open. Now
he was waiting for a job to turn up that was to his liking. He sat on
our worn-out sofa and waited. And his insane fits of rage became more
frequent.
My mother helped me with my homework when she came home from work. For a
while I had trouble telling the letters H and K apart. One evening my
mother was taking great pains to explain the difference to me. I could
scarcely pay attention to what she was saying because I noticed my
father getting more and more furious. I always knew exactly when it was
going to happen: he went and got the hand broom from the kitchen and
gave me a trouncing. Now I was supposed to tell him the difference
between H and K. Of course, by that time I didn't know anything anymore
so I got another licking and was sent to bed.
That was his way of helping me with my homework. He wanted me to be
smart and make something of myself. After all, his grandfather had had
loads of money. He'd owned a printing company and a newspaper in East
Germany, and more besides. After the war, it had all been expropriated
by the GDR. Now my father flipped out whenever he got the idea I
wouldn't make it in school.
There were some evenings I can still remember down to the last detail.
One time I was assigned to draw houses in my arithmetic notebook. They
were supposed to be six squares wide and four squares high. I had one
house finished and was doing just fine when my father suddenly came and
sat beside me. He asked me where the next house should go. I was so
scared I stopped counting the squares and started guessing. Every time
I pointed to the wrong square, he pasted me one. All I could do was bawl
and couldn't answer at all anymore, so he went over to the rubber plant.
I knew very well what that meant. He pulled the bamboo stick supporting
the plant out of the flowerpot. Then he thrashed my behind with the
stick until you could literally peel off the skin.
I was even scared at mealtimes. If I spilled anything, I got smacked for
it. If I knocked something over, he tanned my behind. I hardly dared to
touch my glass of milk. I was so scared that I did something wrong at
almost every meal.
After supper I'd ask my father quite sweetly if he wasn't going out. He
went out quite often, and then we three females could finally breathe
deep sighs of relief. Those evenings were marvelously peaceful. Of
course, then when he came home late at night, there could always be
another catastrophe. Usually he had had something to drink. Then any
little thing sent him off on a rampage. It might be toys or clothes we
had left lying around. My father always said the most important thing in
life was to be neat and tidy. And if he found any untidiness when he
came home, he'd drag me out of bed in the middle of the night and give
me a beating. My little sister got the tail end of it, too. Then my
father threw our things on the floor and ordered us to put them all away
again neatly in five minutes. We usually didn't manage it in that short
a time and so we got another licking.
My mother usually stood at the door crying while this was going on. She
hardly ever dared to stand up for us, because then he would hit her,
too. Only Ajax, my dog, often tried to intervene. He whined shrilly and
had very sad eyes whenever one of us was being given a beating. He was
the most likely one to bring my father to his senses, because he loved
dogs, as we all did. He yelled at Ajax once in a while, but he never hit
him.
I somehow loved and respected my father in spite of it all. He towered
above other fathers in my eyes. But more than anything else I was afraid
of him. At the same time I found it quite normal that he was always
hitting us. It was no different at home for other children in Gropius
City. Sometimes they even had a black eye, and so did their mothers.
Some fathers would lie on the street or the playground in a drunken
stupor. My father never got that drunk. And sometimes on our street,
furniture would come flying out of the high-rise windows, women would
cry for help and the police would come. So we didn't have it all that
bad....
Probably what my father loved more than anything else was his car, a
Porsche. He polished it almost every day that it wasn't in the shop. I
don't think anyone else in Gropius City had a Porsche. Anyway, there
definitely wasn't anyone else with a Porsche who was out of work.
Of course, in those days I didn't have any idea of what was wrong with
my father and why he was always going on a regular rampage. It only
dawned on me later when I used to have talks with my mother about my
father. I gradually figured out a thing or two. He simply wasn't making
it. He kept trying to get ahead and was always falling flat on his face.
His father despised him for it. Grandpa even warned my mother against
marrying such a good-for-nothing. My grandpa had always had great plans
for my father.... My most fervent wish was to grow up quickly, to be
grown-up like my father, to have real power over other people. In the
meantime I tested out what power I did have....
Nearly every day [my girl friend and I], together with my little sister,
played a game we had learned. When we got out of school we collected
cigarette butts from ashtrays and trash cans. We smoothed them out,
stuck them between our lips, and puffed on them. If my sister wanted to
have a butt too, she got her hand slapped. We ordered her to do the
housework--to do the dishes and dust and whatever else our parents had
told us to do. Then we got out our doll carriages, locked the apartment
door behind us, and went for a walk. We kept my sister locked in until
she had finished the work. [ Christiane F.: Autobiography of a Girl of
the Streets and Heroin Addict]
Christiane, who is beaten often by her father for reasons she does not
understand, finally begins to act in ways that give
her father "good reason to beat her." By so doing, she improves his
character by making an unjust and unpredictable father
into one who at least punishes justly. This is the only way she has to
rescue the image of a father she loves and idealizes. She
also begins to provoke other men and turn them into punitive
fathers--first the building superintendent, then her teachers,
and finally, during her drug addiction, the police. In this way she can
shift the conflict with her father onto other people.
Because Christiane cannot talk with her father about their conflicts or
settle them with him, she relegates her fundamental hatred for him to
her unconscious, directing her hostility against surrogate male
authority figures. Eventually, all the child's bottled-up rage at being humiliated, deprived of respect,
misunderstood, and left alone is turned against herself
in the form of addiction. As time goes by, Christiane does to herself
what her father had done to her earlier: she systematically destroys her
self-respect, manipulates her feelings with the use of drugs, condemns
herself to speechlessness
(this highly articulate child!) and isolation, and in the end ruins body
as well as soul.
When I read Christiane's account of her childhood, I sometimes was
reminded of descriptions of life in a concentration camp. The following
scenes are two examples:
At first we did it to harass other kids: we'd grab a kid, shut him in an
elevator, and push all the buttons. We held on to the second elevator so
the first one had to jiggle its way up to the top, stopping at every
floor. They often did the same thing to me, especially when I was coming
back with the dog and had to get home for supper on time. Then they
pushed all the buttons, so it took forever to get to the twelfth floor,
and Ajax got terribly nervous.
It was mean to push all the buttons when someone was in a big hurry. He
would end up peeing in the elevator. But it was even meaner to take a
kid's wooden spoon away from him. All the little kids always took a long
wooden soup ladle out with them, because that was the only way we could
reach the elevator buttons. Without the ladle, you were completely
helpless. If you lost it or the other kids took it away from you, you
had to walk up the eleven flights of stairs. Of course, none of the
other kids ever helped you out, and the grown-ups thought you just
wanted to play in the elevator and make it break down.
One time one of my [pet] mice ran into the grass, which we weren't
allowed to walk on. We couldn't find it again. I was a
little sad, but I was comforted by the thought that the mouse would like
it much better outside than in the cage.
My father picked that evening to come into my room and look into the
mouse cage. He asked in a funny voice : "How come there are only two?
Where's the third one?" I didn't even notice there was anything wrong
when he asked in such a funny way. My father never did like the mice and
he kept telling me I should give them away. I told him the mouse had run
away outside on the playground.
My father looked at me as though he had gone crazy. Then I knew he was
going to go on one of his wild rampages. He shouted and started right in
hitting me. He kept on hitting me, and I was trapped on my bed and
couldn't get away. He had never hit me like that before, and I thought
he was going to kill me. Then, when he started letting my sister have it
too, I had a few seconds to get free and I instinctively tried to get to
the window. I think I really would have jumped from the twelfth floor.
But my father grabbed me and threw me back on the bed. My mother was
probably crying in the doorway again, but I didn't even see her. I
didn't see her until she threw herself between me and my father and
started pummeling him.
He was beside himself. He knocked my mother down onto the floor. All of
a sudden I was more afraid for her than for myself. I went over to them.
She tried to escape into the bathroom and bolt the door. But my father
was holding her by the hair. As usual, there was wash soaking in the
bathtub, because so far we hadn't been able to afford a washing machine.
My father stuck my mother's head into the tub full of water. Somehow or
other, she managed to get loose. I don't know whether he let her go or
whether she got herself free.
My father disappeared into the living room. He was white as a sheet. My
mother went and got her coat. She left the apartment without saying a word.
That was without a doubt one of the most awful moments of my life when
my mother simply walked out of the apartment without a word and left us
alone. My first thought was, Now he's going to come back and start
hitting me again. But everything was quiet in the living room except for
the television, which was on.
No one seriously doubts that the inmates of a concentration camp
underwent terrible suffering. But when we hear about the physical abuse
of children, we react with astonishing equanimity. Depending on our
ideology, we say, "That's quite normal," or "Children have to be
disciplined, after all," or "That was the custom in those days," or
"Someone who won't listen has to be made to feel it," etc. An elderly
gentleman man I once met at a party told me with amusement that when he
was a little boy his mother had swung him back and forth over a fire she
had lighted specially for the purpose of drying his pants and breaking
him of the habit of wetting them. "My mother was the most wonderful
person you'd ever want to meet, but that's the way things were done in
our family in those days," he said. Such lack of empathy for the
suffering of one's own childhood can result in an astonishing lack of
sensitivity to other children's suffering. When what was done to me was
done for my own good, then I am expected to accept this treatment as an
essential part of life and not question it.
This kind of insensitivity thus has its roots in the abuse a person
suffered as a child. He or she may be able to remember what happened,
but in most cases the emotional content of the whole experience of being
beaten and humiliated has been completely repressed.
This is where the difference lies between treating an adult and a child
cruelly. The self has not yet sufficiently developed for a child to
retain the memory of it or of the feelings it arouses. The knowledge
that you were beaten and that this, as your parents tell you, was for
your own good may well be retained (although not always), but the
suffering caused by the way you were mistreated will remain unconscious
and will later prevent you from empathizing with others. This is why
battered children grow up to be mothers and fathers who beat their own
offspring; from their ranks are recruited the most reliable
executioners, concentration-camp supervisors, prison guards, and
torturers. They beat, mistreat, and torture out of an inner compulsion
to repeat their own history, and they are able to do this without the
slightest feeling of sympathy for their victims because they have
identified totally with the aggressive side of their psyche. These
people were beaten and humiliated themselves at such an early age that
it was never possible for them to experience consciously the helpless,
battered child they once were. In order to do this, they would have
needed the aid of an understanding, supportive adult, and no such person
was available. Only under these circumstances would children be able to
see themselves as they are at that moment--namely, as weak, helpless,
downtrodden, and battered--and thus be able to integrate this part into
the self.
Theoretically, a child beaten by his father could afterwards cry his
heart out in the arms of a kind aunt and tell her what happened; she
would not try to minimize the child's pain or justify the father's
actions but would give the whole experience its due weight. But such
good fortune is rare. The wife of a child-beating father shares his
attitude toward childrearing or is herself his victim--in either case,
she is rarely the child's advocate. Such an "aunt" is therefore a great
exception, because the battered child is very unlikely to have the inner
freedom to seek her out and make use of her. A child is more likely to
opt for a terrible inner isolation and splitting off of his feelings
than he is to "tattle" to outsiders about his father or mother.
Psychotherapists know how long it sometimes takes before a child's
resentment, which has been repressed for thirty or forty or even fifty
years, can be articulated and relived.
Thus, it may well be that the plight of a little child who is abused is
even worse and has more serious consequences for society than the plight
of an adult in a concentration camp. The former camp inmate may
sometimes find himself in a situation where he feels that he can never
adequately communicate the horror of what he has gone through and that
others approach him without understanding, with cold and callous
indifference, even with disbelief,* but with few exceptions he himself
will not doubt the tragic nature of his experiences. He will never
attempt to convince himself that the cruelty he was subjected to was for
his own good or interpret the absurdity of the camp as a necessary
pedagogical measure; he will usually not attempt to empathize with the
motives of his persecutors. He will find people who have had similar
experiences and share with them his feelings of outrage, hatred, and
despair over the cruelty he has suffered.