Men: The boy you buried still hurts. Grieve him, keep your vow to never repeat the pain, and let Jesus hold him close. From Saturday's devotional. đđ ïž
#MensMinistry #TraumaAndFaith #BreakTheCycle
Men: The boy you buried still hurts. Grieve him, keep your vow to never repeat the pain, and let Jesus hold him close. From Saturday's devotional. đđ ïž
#MensMinistry #TraumaAndFaith #BreakTheCycle
Facing the Past, Walking in Grace: A Manâs Guide to Healing
1,271 words, 7 minutes read time.
Scripture Anchor: âThe Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.â âPsalm 34:18 (NIV)
When the Past Wonât Let Go
Letâs cut the crap: family can hurt. Badly. And itâs not always obvious. Sometimes itâs fists or yelling. Sometimes itâs quiet poisonâthe gaslighting, the twisted stories, the manipulation that leaves you doubting your own memory. You grow up thinking maybe you imagined it. Maybe you deserved it. Maybe itâs just your fault.
Hereâs the brutal truthâsometimes the people who caused it donât want the truth out. They want the âsinsâ of the past buried, rewritten, polished. Your pain? Thatâs inconvenient. Your memories? Thatâs a threat. They want a clean story, a family narrative that looks flawless while you carry the scars.
And it gets worse: the abuse you survived doesnât stay in your past. It leaks into everything you do. The man you try to be, the father you hope to raise, the spouse you want to loveâchildhood trauma doesnât vanish. It shapes your anger, your patience, your fears, your sense of worth. If you donât face it, if you let it simmer in silence, it can infect your relationships, repeat the patterns, and leave you unknowingly passing the pain to the next generation.
If that resonates, I see you. That tension in your chest, the rage, the self-doubtâthese arenât flaws. Theyâre echoes of what you survived. And God sees it all. Psalm 34:18 says, âThe Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.â Heâs not just watching from a distanceâHeâs in the mess with you, seeing what no one else will.
Face It or Keep Getting Played
Hereâs a hard truth: you canât heal what you refuse to confront. The patterns, the anger, the shameâthey wonât disappear. Theyâll follow you into your marriage, your parenting, your work, your friendships. Thatâs the vicious cycle of unresolved trauma.
Some memories are ugly. Some truths are messy. Pretending they donât exist is cowardice. Youâll keep getting played by the ghosts of your past until you grab the truth by the throat and refuse to let it run your life.
Pastors are vitalâthey can pray, counsel, and guideâbut theyâre not trained to untangle deep, layered trauma. If what youâre reading here applies to you, resonates, or describes patterns in your life, seek professional help beyond what the church or your pastor can provide. Therapists, counselors, and trauma specialists are trained to help men process abuse, repressed memories, and the long-term effects of trauma safely. Asking for help isnât weaknessâitâs war strategy. Itâs reclaiming your life and breaking cycles that could otherwise carry on to the next generation.
Some of this work will piss people off. It will make your family uncomfortable. They may resist or deny the truth. Good. That just means youâre doing it right. Freedom doesnât require their acknowledgmentâit requires your courage to face the truth and refuse to let their lies control your life.
Gaslighting, Lies, and the Fight for Freedom
Abuse often comes with an accomplice: deception. Theyâll gaslight you until you doubt everythingâyour memory, your instincts, your reality. Youâll replay every word, every action, wondering if youâre losing your mind. Thatâs the point.
Freedom starts with naming it. Saying, âI see what you did. I see the lies. I see the manipulation. And I will not let it control me anymore.â John 8:32 says it plainly: âThen you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.â
You wonât do this alone. God is with you, yesâbut He also gives allies: trusted friends, mature men, counselors. People who hold the mirror steady when your family tries to gaslight you back into silence. The lies are loud, the pressure is heavy, but youâve got a choice: live under their story, or reclaim your story and break the cycle.
Healing Isnât PrettyâItâs Tactical
Healing isnât some soft, feel-good exercise. Itâs tactical. Brutal. And it takes guts.
1. Write your story. Every fragment counts. Even rage. Even shame. Own it on paper. Seeing it outside your head takes power from the hidden lies.
2. Name your triggers. People, places, wordsâwhatever sparks the old pain. Awareness is your first weapon.
3. Get professional support. Counselors, therapists, trauma specialistsâthese are not optional. They know how to walk a man through the ugly truth without breaking him further.
4. Ground yourself in Scripture and prayer. Psalm 34:18 isnât a feel-good verse; itâs a battle cry. Speak it. Claim it. Wrestle with it. God wonât let go.
5. Set boundaries. Protect your mental, emotional, and spiritual space. If your family resists your truth, create distance until you can face it safely. Healing isnât about making anyone else comfortableâitâs about reclaiming your life.
The process will be messy. Anger will flare. Tears will come. Thatâs normal. God is steady. Psalm 34:18 is a promise: Heâs in the trenches with you.
Hope Beyond the Pain
Hereâs the raw truth: your family might never admit it. They might resist. They might actively fight your progress. That sucks. Itâs unfair. But they donât get to control your healing. God does.
Even crushed, broken, silenced, and doubted, you can be saved. Psalm 34:18 says it bluntly: He saves those who are crushed in spirit. That includes you, your anger, your shame, and your past they want buried.
And part of hope is practical: professional help, counseling, therapyâthese arenât concessions. Theyâre weapons God gives you. Donât be a macho idiot and try to âman upâ alone. Take the tools. Take the help. Take your life back. And break the cycle so the next generation doesnât carry the same hidden chains.
This is your story. Not theirs. Not sanitized. Not rewritten. Yours. God wants you whole. And itâs time to fight for it.
Closing Prayer
God, Iâve carried the weight of family lies, abuse, and silence for too long. Iâm done letting rewritten history run my life. Give me courage to face the truth, strength to seek help, and wisdom to set the boundaries I need. Heal what they broke, reclaim what was stolen, and help me to break the cycle for those I love. Amen.
Reflection / Journaling Questions
Call to Action
If this devotional encouraged you, donât just scroll on. Subscribe for more devotionals, share a comment about what God is teaching you, or reach out and tell me what youâre reflecting on today. Letâs grow in faith together.
D. Bryan King
Sources
Psalm 34:18 â NIV
John 8:32 â NIV
Isaiah 61:1-3 â NIV
2 Corinthians 1:3-4 â NIV
Psychology Today â Trauma and Relationships
American Psychological Association â Trauma
Courageous Conversations on Trauma & Abuse
Focus on the Family â Men and Emotional Healing
Cloud & Townsend â Boundaries Resources
National Counseling Resources â Finding Professional Help
Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.
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5,834 words, 31 minutes read time.
Ethan Harper sat on the edge of his porch, the late afternoon sun burning low across the field behind his house. At fifty-five, he had learned that time has a way of loosening memories, sometimes revealing them in fragments, sometimes hiding them altogether. He had spent decades running from the storms in his head, from the anger that bubbled up at the slightest insult or perceived slight. But now, in the quiet that only comes when most of the world had turned away, he could hear it allâfaint echoes of fists, belts, harsh words, and betrayed trust.
He remembered the fights with his older brother, memories he had buried so deep they had almost faded entirely. Tommy had been two years older, stronger, and cruel in ways that Ethan could never fully name as a boy. He remembered the time Tommy had pulled a knife, his own little hand trembling as he tried to back away, and the way fear had carved itself into his chest like a permanent mark. Their father had never intervened, not in that moment and not in the countless times Tommy had pushed Ethan around. Ethan had learned early on that survival meant keeping quiet, swallowing the sharp edges of his anger, and smiling when it was safest to do so.
It wasnât just the private moments of fear that shaped him. There were times when they would play softball, basketball, or football with other children in the neighborhood, and Tommy would build himself up as the star player by tearing Ethan down. A missed catch, an airball, a strikeoutâTommy made sure everyone saw it, punctuating each mistake with sarcasm or a sharp remark that left Ethan flushed and small. Tommy was not exceptional at these games; in fact, Ethan often outperformed him when he tried. But that was the problem: Ethanâs skill threatened to shift attention away from Tommy, and he could not tolerate it. So he undermined Ethan at every opportunity, publicly humiliating him to reclaim the spotlight.
Ethan carried the lesson with him like a silent contract: never excel too openly, never make others feel overshadowed, and always hide the frustration that bubbled up inside. He learned to mask his skill, to soften his edges, and to accept that recognition often came at the price of ridicule. Every ball missed under Tommyâs watchful eye, every sneer aimed at him in front of the neighborhood kids, was another brick in the wall of restraint and quiet fury he would carry into adulthood.
And then there were the flashes he had long buried, the moments his mind had tried to forget. One of them came back to him unexpectedly at a flea market decades later. He had been scanning a vendorâs booth, the smell of old books and brass trinkets thick in the air, when he spotted itâa red glass ashtray, the exact shape and color of one that had sat on the living room table when he was ten. Something in him tightened. He remembered then, suddenly, the day it had shattered across his head, heavy and brutal, thrown by his mother during one of her fights with his father. He had not seen it coming, had not known how to dodge it, and even though the glass had bruised and cut him, leaving a scar he still carried, his mind had tucked the memory away, as if it were too sharp, too unfair, too much to bear. The ashtray at the flea market wasnât the one that had hit himâthat one was still somewhere at his parentsâ houseâbut the sight of it brought back a clarity that was both painful and necessary.
And yet, despite the beatings, the whippings, the relentless pressure to perform, there had always been the family mantra: âWeâre broke. We canât afford that.â Yet Ethan remembered the trucksâdump trucks, dozers, backhoesâand even the lowboy trailer parked out back. He remembered the horse they owned for a season, the new cars that seemed to arrive without warning, and the endless parade of boats, hunting gear, and camping equipment that lined the garage and shed. His father had been a carpenter, proud of his trade, and the shop had gleamed with the newest, best tools money could buy: precision saws, routers, drills, chisels, clamps, levels, the kind of equipment that made a craftsmanâs work sing. On weekends, Ethan had watched his father polishing shotguns, checking ammo, and tinkering with reloading equipment, preparing for hunting trips that would last days. The house smelled of sawdust, gun oil, and leather, a scent that stayed with him into adulthood.
Ethan had worked his entire young life, scraping up cash for school, for his own living expenses, only to watch the money vanish, swallowed by family claims of urgent âneedsâ or âemergencies.â College loans he had taken in good faith had been co-opted, a car he barely could afford had been purchased under pressure, leaving him to shoulder debt he hadnât truly agreed to. Even before college, the pattern had been set. During high school, he spent his summers working construction alongside his father, learning the trade but also learning the rules of control and endurance in the harshest ways. On one job, his father refused to allow the lumber yard to deliver a load of shingles to the roof of a two-story house, forcing Ethan to carry each ninety-pound bundle up a rickety ladder, despite knowing how much Ethan struggled with heights. His heart would pound, legs shaking with every step, and his father would bark instructions from below, impatient and unyielding.
And the moneyâany cash he earned was never truly his. On Fridays, after a week of grueling labor under the hot sun and the constant weight of expectation, he would finally hold his paycheck in his hands, tasting the small victory of independence. By Saturday, it was goneâborrowed back by his father for some sudden âemergency,â never returned, never explained, as if Ethanâs effort and autonomy were meaningless. He learned early on that no matter how hard he worked, no matter how carefully he tried to hold onto what was his, control would be wrested away, and anger, no matter how justified, was never safe to show. The lesson was brutal, physical, and financial all at once: survival meant obedience, endurance, and quiet resignation, even when it felt like life itself was conspiring against him.
He had enlisted in the Army shortly after high school, not out of patriotism alone, but out of desperation. He signed a fourâyear commitment because four years sounded like distance, like a clean break, like a stretch of time long enough to finally become someone his family could no longer reach or control. The Army promised structure, clarity, and rules that made sense. It promised that effort mattered, that rank was earned, and that a manâs worth was measured by what he could carry and how well he carried it. For the first time in his life, the expectations were written down, and no one could move the goalposts on a whim.
Training was brutal, but it was honest. Pain came with purpose. Yelling had a reason. When he failed, he knew why, and when he succeeded, it was visible. He slept harder than he ever had, ate like his body finally needed fuel, and felt something close to calm settle into his bones. For the first time, anger had a direction. It wasnât explosive; it was contained. Useful.
Then, while he was still in training, the country declared war.
Everything shifted overnight. The tone changed. The urgency sharpened. Jokes dried up. Drills took on a harder edge, and names of places he had only seen on maps were suddenly spoken with gravity. Within a year, he was sent to the war zone. He didnât panic. He didnât hesitate. In fact, part of him felt steadier than he ever had. There was a clarity in knowing where he was supposed to be and what was expected of him. He adapted quickly. He learned routines, read people, watched the ground, and listened more than he spoke. He would have signed up for another tour without hesitation. For all its dangers, the war zone felt less chaotic than home had ever been.
Five months into a sixâmonth tour, everything collapsed.
One day he was there, counting time in weeks, thinking about reenlistment and the future. He had been assigned to his unit in the war zone for five months, and the more he learned, the more he felt himself fitting into a rhythm he had never known at homeâa rhythm that made him feel capable, disciplined, even alive. For the first time, he could see a path forward. When his initial six-month tour ended, he had every intention of signing up for a second. He wanted to stay. He wanted to finish what he had started. The idea of coming home now, leaving the work unfinished, felt like betrayalânot just to the Army, not just to the country, but to himself.
Then it happened.
He was pulled aside by a sergeant who didnât make eye contact. The words came slowly, almost apologetically, though Ethan could hear no real apology in the tone. His father had contacted his commanding officer. There had been an âemergency.â Medical issues. Something about an accident while building a house. Ethan never got the details straight from the source. He never saw the call. He never saw the paperwork. All he knew was that the story was enough to pull him out, to cut short the tour that he had poured himself into.
The anger came firstâhot, uncontrollable. His chest felt tight, his fists clenched before he even realized what was happening. He wanted to fight, to yell, to tell the world that no one, not even his father, could take this from him. But he had learned too young that there were limits he could not cross, and that resistance often came at a price far too high.
So he went home.
The shame settled in like a second uniform, stitched tight around his shoulders. He had wanted to prove himself in uniform, to show the discipline, the courage, the loyalty he had always felt he needed to prove. And now that chance was gone, stolen by the same family that had belittled him, manipulated him, and drained him of agency for as long as he could remember. He could not reenlist for a second tour. Not now. Not ever.
When he tried to articulate it to himself, to rationalize it, all he could feel was betrayal. Betrayal that twisted into anger that had nowhere to go. He had survived the heat of a war zone, the monotony of training, the constant tension of life and death, and yet, in the end, the hand that stole his purpose came from home. His father had done what no enemy in a foreign land could: taken away the one thing Ethan had chosen for himself, leaving him hollow, furious, and confused.
He left the war zone with unfinished business and a knot in his chest that never fully loosened. Other men stayed. Others rotated forward. He went home.
The shame came quietly at first. No one accused him directly, but he felt it anyway. He had been there five months. Five out of six. Close enough to taste completion, close enough to feel like it mattered. He told himself it wasnât his choice, but that didnât stop the humiliation from settling in. He had wanted to stay. He would have stayed. He would have reenlisted. But that chance was gone, stolen in the same way so many other decisions had been quietly taken from him.
Back in the States, after leave, he returned to his command, trying to pick up the thread of his life where it had been cut. But home had a way of closing in. The family pressure started immediately. Obligations. Expectations. Guilt dressed up as responsibility. He was told how much they needed him, how much he owed them, how everything would fall apart without his help. It was the same voice heâd grown up with, only louder now, reinforced by the idea that he was no longer deployed, no longer âneededâ elsewhere.
The Army had given him structure. Home dismantled it piece by piece.
The pressure didnât come as one dramatic confrontation. It came in phone calls, in comments, in constant reminders that family came first, that he was selfish for wanting anything else, that he couldnât just disappear into a uniform and pretend he didnât belong to them. Slowly, the walls closed in. Sleep became shallow. Anger flared without warning. The discipline he had built began to crack under the weight of old patterns he thought he had escaped.
At some point, the thoughts turned dark. Not loud at first. Just quiet questions. What if he stopped fighting? What if he didnât wake up? What if the only way to end the pressure was to disappear entirely? He didnât tell anyone how bad it got. Men like him werenât supposed to say those things out loud. He told himself it was temporary, that he just needed rest, that he could muscle through it like everything else.
But the weight didnât lift.
Eventually, it was noticed. Not the family pressureâthat remained invisibleâbut the strain it caused. The Army didnât see a man being pulled apart by a lifetime of control and obligation. It saw a soldier no longer fit to carry the load. He was released from service, not with ceremony, but with paperwork. Another ending he hadnât chosen. Another door closed quietly behind him.
He left the Army with anger he didnât know how to name and a sense that something vital had been taken from him before he could decide who he was meant to be. The discipline remained, but the purpose was gone. And the fury that followed him into civilian life was no longer contained or useful. It was raw, directionless, and hungry, and it would shape the decades that followed in ways he wouldnât understand until much later.
The anger followed him everywhere. At work, he snapped at colleagues over minor mistakes. At home, he lashed out over trivial inconveniences. It didnât matter whether the offense was real or imagined; his body, trained for fight or flight, recognized disrespect and fear with equal ferocity. Proverbs 15:1 had been a verse he glanced at in passing: âA gentle answer turns away wrath.â He had read it, nodded, and ignored it, convinced that gentleness was weakness, and weakness could not survive in a world that had taught him from childhood that survival required steel.
He remembered the night he drove home from work, hands gripping the wheel, chest pounding, after yelling at a coworker who had âdisrespectedâ him in a meeting that in hindsight wasnât even about him. The sky was dark, his headlights slicing through the winter fog, and he replayed the event in his mind over and over, each time justifying his anger, insisting that he had been right, that the world had failed him once again.
And then he remembered another fragmentâa smaller, older memory of his brother and father, a single afternoon when he had been twelve. Tommy had cornered him in the barn, fists clenched, eyes wild. Ethanâs heart had hammered in his chest as he tried to back away, remembering the knife. Their father had appeared after what seemed like an eternity and landed a whipping so severe it left bruises not just on his skin but in his mind. And when Ethan had tried to explain the fear, the threat, the knife, he had been told he needed to be tougher, to stop crying. âYouâre a boy. Youâll toughen up,â his father had said. Ethan had learned that anger could not protect him; compliance was the only safe path.
Ethan had carried these lessons into adulthood like armor, only to discover they were double-edged. Anger was not protectionâit was a prison. He had become a man who could not trust easily, who flinched at authority even as he demanded respect from others, who hid love behind sarcasm and gritted teeth. He had tried therapy once, but words were inadequate for the weight of memories he had never allowed himself to fully feel.
Financial betrayal had reinforced the lesson that family could not be trusted, and that survival meant self-reliance, no matter the cost. He had taken loans for college, believing in his own determination, only to have those funds claimed by family members who insisted they were in dire need. The car, bought under pressure, became a symbol of compromise, a tangible reminder that his agency had been hijacked again and again.
Despite it all, there were moments of reflection, rare glimpses of clarity when Ethan allowed himself to remember without the accompanying rage. He remembered a Sunday morning, years ago, when he sat alone in a small chapel, hands folded tightly in prayer, and finally whispered the words he had never been able to say aloud: âGod, Iâm tired. I canât carry it all. Help me.â In that moment, he felt something shift, a softening, a glimmer of understanding that perhaps anger was not the only path to survival, that he could hand over burdens he had carried for decades.
Yet understanding did not erase history. He still remembered the trips to the bank with his father, being told the family was âbrokeâ as he watched checks disappear into accounts he would never control. He remembered the shiny trucks, the dumpers, the backhoes, the lowboy, the horse grazing peacefully in the sun, the spotless workshop brimming with the latest carpentry tools, the hunting rifles, reloading equipment, the boats lined up by the lake, the stacks of camping gear. Each memory was a reminder of manipulation, of deception, and of how a manâs labor could be quietly co-opted. And he still remembered the sharp edge of his brotherâs knife, the sting of the belt, the humiliation of public punishmentâechoes that had shaped him as much as any lesson, any love, or any discipline ever could.
Ethan realized that much of his anger had been rooted in fear: fear of loss, fear of humiliation, fear of being powerless. That fear had been dressed up as pride, as control, as righteous indignation. He had justified his outbursts countless times, insisting that anyone would do the same, that anyone in his shoes would have snapped. But now, sitting on the porch, he saw the truth: his anger had been misdirected, aimed at the wrong people, even at himself.
He thought about the biblical texts he had ignored for so long. James 1:20: âHuman anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires.â He had understood those words in college but only now felt their weight. Anger had never delivered justice. It had only fed isolation, fueled regret, and kept him from seeing the people around him with clarity or compassion.
And still, he did not remember everything. Some days he would find himself staring into the fog of the past, grasping for memories that refused to form, events that had been buried so deep that even now they were only half-glimpsed. But he had learned that partial memory could coexist with partial peace. He did not need to recall every moment to begin forgiving, to begin letting go, to begin living.
Ethan took a deep breath and felt the cold wind press against his face. He thought of the men and women he had served with, the colleagues he had yelled at, the friends he had pushed away. He thought of his brother, still alive somewhere, and his father, gone but never truly absent from his consciousness. And he understood something he had never known as a boy: survival was not about dominance, not about proving yourself, not about holding onto every hurt and injustice. Survival was about learning to release what you cannot change, to accept the fractured, messy truth of your past, and to carry forward with whatever fragments of peace you could grasp.
Ethan took a deep breath and felt the cold wind press against his face. He thought of the men and women he had served with, the colleagues he had yelled at, the friends he had pushed away. He thought of his brother, still alive somewhere, and his father, gone but never truly absent from his consciousness. And he understood something he had never known as a boy: survival was not about dominance, not about proving yourself, not about holding onto every hurt and injustice. Survival was about learning to release what you cannot change, to accept the fractured, messy truth of your past, and to carry forward with whatever fragments of peace you could grasp.
The sun dipped below the horizon, casting long shadows across the field. Ethan stood slowly, stretching muscles stiff with years of tension. The anger would never vanish entirely, the memories would never be complete, and the questions would never all be answered. He wondered if his brother remembered things the same wayâor at all. He wondered what his father would have said if he had ever admitted the truth. He wondered how much of himself had been lost, or if it had been there all along, waiting to be claimed.
For the first time in decades, he felt a fragile sense of calm. He had lived with the fury for so long that letting it go, even partially, felt like stepping into sunlight after a lifetime in the dark. But as the wind swept across the field, he realized that some questions might never be answered. Some memories might never return. And maybe that was how life worked: the answers werenât as important as the act of continuing forward, carrying both the weight of the past and the sliver of calm that remained.
Authorâs Note:
I put off writing this story on anger, irritability, and explosive reactions for as long as I could. This story hits close to home. It draws on the very real experiences that I, and many other men, faceâstruggles that are often hidden, misunderstood, or dismissed. Anger doesnât exist in a vacuum. Itâs a signal. Itâs a flare. Itâs a message screaming that something deeper is broken, something stolen, something left unresolved. For Ethan Harper, the wounds of childhood abuse, financial manipulation, and betrayal didnât stay in the pastâthey followed him into adulthood, shaped his relationships, his work, and the man he became.
Letâs be honest. Men are taught from the start to swallow our painâsometimes through words, sometimes at the end of a paddle, a belt, or some unjust, brutal punishment. Donât cry. Donât complain. Handle it yourself. Be strong. Endure. Survive. And when that pain comes from the people who are supposed to protect youâyour parents, your siblingsâit doesnât just hurt; it breaks something inside you. It leaves a mark. It shapes the anger you carry, the fear you hide, the defensive walls you build around your life. Anger becomes a survival tool, a shield, a weapon, and sometimes the only thing that reminds you youâre still alive.
And it doesnât stop there. Financial betrayal, manipulation, stolen opportunitiesâthose things sink deeper. When you work your ass off to pay for school, only to watch the money disappear, or when youâre pressured into a debt you didnât choose, it doesnât just teach you unfairnessâit teaches you mistrust. It teaches you that even when you give everything, itâs never enough. That life, and the people closest to you, will bend it all against you. That betrayal isnât just a memoryâitâs a weight, pressing down on your chest for decades, even when you try to forget.
And then there are the memories your brain refuses to face. The ones that donât fade so much as get buried. The things that were too big, too painful, too confusing to process when you were young and had no power, no language, no escape. Repressed memories arenât weakness. Theyâre survival. Theyâre your mind saying, You canât carry this yet. Put it down. Weâll come back for it later. The problem is that âlaterâ always comes. It doesnât ask permission. It doesnât care if youâre ready.
Sometimes it comes through a smell. Sometimes a sound. Sometimes itâs something small and stupid that shouldnât matterâbut does. Thatâs how it hit me.
It was Sunday, October 5, 2025, at the Flat Rock Speedway Flea Market. We were already heading out, walking past the last vendor set up along the track, when I saw it sitting there on the table. A left-handed youth bow. Bear Archery. Twenty-five pounds pull. I picked it up without thinking, and the moment it settled into my hand, my chest tightened. Not emotionally at firstâphysically. Like something inside me had been yanked awake.
My hands knew it before my mind did.
I was ten years old again. Christmas morning. The weight of that bow. The way it felt to draw. The quiet pride of owning something that was mine. Not borrowed. Not shared. Not conditional. It wasnât just a toy. It was one of the few things in my childhood that felt personalâlike it belonged to me, not the family, not the system, not the constant reshuffling of control.
I stood there too long, staring at that bow, confused by the surge of feeling it stirred up. And then the questions started. Slow at first. Then louder. What happened to mine? When did it disappear? Why couldnât I remember it leaving?
The truth landed heavy and ugly. I was ten when I got that bow. And nine years laterâwhile I was gone, while I was trying to build a life, while I trusted that my things were safeâit was sold. No conversation. No asking. No warning. Just gone. Either my brother or my father decided it was theirs to turn into cash. Like so many other things. Like it had never belonged to me at all.
That realization didnât come with tears. It came with anger. The old kind. The familiar kind. The kind that burns cold and steady and makes you want to put your fist through something. And then it came with grief. Because it wasnât just about the bow. It never is. It was about the pattern. The quiet thefts. The way my life had been treated like a resource pool instead of a human being.
Once that door opened, more things started coming back. My first two computersâgone. Unaccounted for. Disappeared somewhere along the way. Sold off. Absorbed. Forgotten by everyone except the kid who built himself around them. It took nearly thirty years for those memories to surface. Thirty years of wondering why anger showed up out of nowhere. Why I overreacted. Why lossâeven small lossâfelt like betrayal.
Thereâs another kind of memory loss thatâs harder to explain and harder to ignore. Itâs not about forgetting a single incident. Itâs about entire stretches of life that should be thereâand arenât.
In the late 1970s, my father built a house less than two hundred yards from the trailer we were living in. I would have been around eight years old. Two hundred yards. Close enough to see it every day. Close enough to hear it. Close enough that I should remember what the land looked like before the trees were cut, the road carved up the hill, the culvert installed so the creek could run underneath. I should remember the blasting of rock for the footer, the noise, the dust, the machinery moving in and out.
But I donât.
What makes that absence impossible to dismiss is this: I remember those exact details from a neighborâs house that was built a few years later, after we had already moved in. I remember the land before it was cleared. I remember the road cut, the culvert, the blasting. Those memories are intact. Clear. Sharp.
For my own familyâs houseânothing.
For decades there was just a blank space where those memories should have been. No images. No sounds. No sense of place. Just absence. And absence like that isnât neutral. It doesnât happen by accident. You donât forget something that close, that constant, that formative, unless something inside you decided it wasnât safe to hold onto it.
Only recently did a fragment surface. The house with just the second-story walls standing. No roof. No detail. Just a skeletal frame. And even that memory feels fragile, like it could slip away again if I press too hard.
Thatâs what repressed memory often looks like. Not dramatic flashbacks. Not clean, cinematic scenes. Sometimes itâs missing time. Missing context. Missing pieces of your own history that should be obvious but arenât. And when those gaps finally show themselves, they donât bring comfort. They bring unease. Because they force a question youâve avoided your whole life: What was happening around me that my mind decided I couldnât afford to remember?
Repressed memories donât stay buried because theyâre harmless. They stay buried because theyâre dangerous to a child who has no protection. But they donât die. They wait. And when they surface, they donât come back gently. They come back as fear, shame, grief, and rageâall at once. Like stepping back into a storm you thought youâd outrun.
Thatâs why anger can feel uncontrollable. Thatâs why men explode decades after the original wound. Thatâs why the past doesnât stay in the past. It doesnât forget you. It finds a way back in, demanding to be acknowledged.
Later, I found a nearly identical bow on eBay. Bought it for next to nothingâshipping cost more than the bow itself. But the money didnât matter. What mattered was the act. Reclaiming something small but true. Drawing a line through time and saying, I see it now. I remember. And you donât get to erase this anymore.
That wasnât nostalgia.
That was recovery.
That was the beginning of taking my life back.
Even Scripture recognizes this. Luke 8:17 says, âFor nothing is hidden that will not be disclosed, and nothing concealed that will not be known or brought out into the open.â Buried memories, pain, sinsâthey surface. And hereâs the thing: itâs not to destroy you. Itâs to give you clarity. To give you a chance to see what was stolen, what was silenced, what never got spoken. To reclaim pieces of yourself buried under years of fear, shame, and anger. The light doesnât destroy; it restores. Even fragments of peace, even moments of clarity, even a glimpse of joyâthey are waiting for you, if youâre willing to face whatâs under the surface.
Even the Bible tells us that joy is meant to be a source of strength. Nehemiah 8:10 says, âDo not grieve, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.â But for men like Ethan, joy is often robbed before it can even root. Abuse, betrayal, manipulation, financial exploitationâthey shove it out, replace it with frustration, resentment, and the kind of anger that simmers for decades. And yet, reclaiming joyâreal joy, even in fragmentsâis the first step toward reclaiming life. Even one moment of peace counts. Even a fraction of sunlight after decades of shadow is worth noticing, worth holding onto, worth fighting for.
As you read Ethanâs story, donât skim the surface and move on. Sit with whatâs underneath the angerâthe fear, the humiliation, the moments of powerlessness, the opportunities that never came back, the quiet betrayals that were never acknowledged. Ask yourself where anger has shaped your life. Where it has cost you relationships, jobs, peace. Where you learned to swallow pain because speaking up wasnât safe, or because no one was listening anyway.
Even when memories are repressed, the events still happened. They didnât disappear just because you canât access them on demand. They influenced how you learned to react, how you learned to protect yourself, how you learned to survive. They got folded into your personalityâyour temper, your defensiveness, your need for control, your distance, your self-reliance. You became someone shaped by things you were never allowed to fully understand.
Not every answer will come easily. Some memories may never return in full. Some questions will remain unanswered, no matter how much you want clarity. Thatâs not failureâthatâs reality. Thatâs what survival actually looks like. But noticing the patterns matters. Seeing how anger shows up, when it shows up, and what itâs guarding underneath is the first step toward taking back control. Not erasing the past. Not pretending it didnât matter. But finally understanding what youâve been carrying for decadesâand deciding, piece by piece, what you no longer need to carry alone.
If this story scratches something raw inside you, find someone to talk to. A doctor, counselor, therapistâsomeone you can be honest with, without shame, without judgment. Even a friend, a mentor, a spiritual guideâsomeone who can hold space for the storm in your headâcan help. Processing anger, trauma, and buried pain is not weakness. Itâs survival. Itâs courage. Itâs reclaiming your life, piece by piece, day by day.
This story is about survivalâbut not the kind that leaves you hardened, broken, and alone. Itâs about survival that lets you carry forward, even with scars, even with memories that cut deep. Itâs about facing buried pain, claiming fragments of joy, and moving through life on your own terms. Healing is messy. Life is messy. Not every question will be answered. Not every memory will come back. But even fragments of clarity, peace, and understanding are worth claimingâand that fight is worth having.
Call to Action
If this story struck a chord, donât just scroll on. Join the brotherhoodâmen learning to build, not borrow, their strength. Subscribe for more stories like this, drop a comment about where youâre growing, or reach out and tell me what youâre working toward. Letâs grow together.
D. Bryan King
Sources
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The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.
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