responsive-lightbox domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/sundre5/ducts.sundresspublications.com/content/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114This is the story my mother told me, when she thought I was old enough to understand:<\/em><\/p>\n Once, there was a young and beautiful girl who came from a distant province to study in the city. In her first year in college, she was a success with her teachers as well as the student body, who admired her enough to crown her as a beauty queen. There, she met a man not much older than she was, but full of bravado and charm. She could not resist his easygoing manner, boisterous sense of humor and large hands, and agreed to his invitation to attend a party. There, he gave her drink after drink and, not wanting to seem ignorant, the girl emptied glass after glass, until she fell into a deep sleep. She woke up when he violated her, unable to scream because she was afraid of throwing up, her confused concerns about shame trumping her present reality. After he had his way with her, the handsome man took the girl back to her dormitory and told her that, because of what had happened, they were destined to be together. That night, she wept in silence, anxious not to disturb any of the women who shared her room. And she thought about how things can change so violently, how he now possessed her, and how she could \u2013 or if she even should – keep everything a secret from her parents. But most of all, she thought about how she now needed to marry him, for there were no other choices left for her to consider. She was one week away from her eighteenth birthday.<\/p>\n They married immediately, both leaving their studies behind for a new life. He told her three things: that he would find work, that getting married was right thing to do, and that he loved her anyway. On their wedding night, he insisted that she do what a wife should do, before throwing her down on the bed. That was the first night she fought back, curling her fingers into a fist like her father had taught her in the province; she struck him in the face, but he just laughed. He displayed his growing excitement and overpowered her. This would continue almost every night for as long as their marriage lasted. The man would demand satisfaction, she would resist, and he would take her in whatever position she landed in, on the bed, on the floor, on a table, in the bathroom. Her tears were an aphrodisiac, the screams he muffled with his large hands intoxicating.<\/p>\n When she learned she was pregnant, she told him, thinking it would deter his desire. It did not. When the girl miscarried, she blamed him, adding the death of her unborn child to his litany of sins.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n This is the story I told myself, when I was a little boy:<\/em><\/p>\n Once, a handsome soldier and a beautiful girl met at a ball. He wasn\u2019t a prince and she wasn\u2019t a princess, but when they danced together it was as if they were. They knew immediately that their love was strong and true, and their magnificent wedding was the talk of the town for a long time. They were blessed with a baby boy whom they showered with love. The man held him in his large hands and taught him the name of things, laughing as he held the little boy against his broad chest. The woman taught her child how to read, coaxing sound and meaning from pages and pages of countless books, offering him the comfort of her soft embrace.<\/p>\n One day, the soldier was called to war. He told his wife that he had to go, his warrior\u2019s heart brimming with courage. With tears in her eyes, his wife told him that his duty to his country was greater than his duty to her or to his son, and that they would wait for his safe return. The man took his son in arms, kissed him on the forehead and promised him he would return.<\/p>\n That is the reason they continued to wait and wait, both believing that the next day would be the day of his homecoming. Because a husband\u2019s vow to his wife was just as true as a father\u2019s promise to his son.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n This is the story my father told me years later, when I was a father myself:<\/em><\/p>\n Once, a man met a beauty queen in college. He took stock of what he possessed -dark good looks, towering height and large hands \u2013 and took the next possible opportunity to get to know her. They became immediate friends and soon their friendship transformed into something deeper, something that could only be expressed through intimacies. Because they were both young, they mistook the attraction for love and left a crowded varsity party for a quiet room, moving quickly to consummate their passion. He tried to be a gentleman, expecting nothing more than to feel her softness through her clothes. The girl, however, wanted more. And so he gave her what she longed for.<\/p>\n Afterward, she surprised him with angry tears, accusing him of robbing her of her innocence. She threatened to tell her parents, her friends, the school administrators and the police, if he did not do the right thing. His sense of honor admitted him no option and so he agreed to marry her, though he knew it was an act they would both regret.<\/p>\n The man\u2019s mother did not take kindly to his new bride, who took pains to tell her that she was the first woman in the man\u2019s life now. She forbade the man from inviting his mother to visit them. Three months later, the woman began to exhibit her growing belly, and grew more and more unreasonable until the day of the miscarriage. The man tried to comfort his wife, but she pushed him away. She had scarcely recovered from her loss when she demanded that he give her a child. He did, and once again her belly grew, and once again she miscarried, and once again she demanded that he give her a child. This time, she gave birth to huge baby boy covered in black hair. She did not permit her husband to hold the child, and claimed only she had the right to love the little boy.<\/p>\n Cast aside in his own home, the man decided to join the military, where at least he would be of service. In his heart he loved the child, and would always regret leaving him behind. But he felt nothing but sorrow toward his wife, who, in three years of marriage, had transformed from a beauty queen to a beautiful monster, who had no love for him.<\/p>\n The day he left, he made no plans to ever return.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n This is the story my mother told me, on the day before I was married:<\/em><\/p>\n Once, there was an abandoned woman who had to support her young child all on her own. Her husband, whom she married for all the wrong reasons, had decided to join the armed forces and found ways to be stationed oceans away. Part of her was relieved, because she no longer had to endure his unquenchable lust. But part of her was angry, because he had left her with nothing, except for a mother-in-law who took it upon herself to act as her grandson\u2019s protector. The woman, whose strength had grown through her husband\u2019s previous nightly violations, would have no interference, and ran away with her little boy. She found distant relatives who were willing to put the pair of them up for weeks at a time, while she sought work of any sort, hampered by the missing college degree she had traded for what she mistakenly had thought was the right thing to do. What little money she earned as a waitress, dishwasher, temp, clerk and assistant, to anyone who have her, she gave to whichever relatives she was living with, to help take care of her son. This went on for a few years, until she had exhausted every relative\u2019s kindness.<\/p>\n