“It is so ordered.”

My best friend is gay. The first thing I did when same-sex marriage became legal in France was sending him a text: You should get married in Paris. I promise I will be there. 

My best friend will not be able to get married in our country. Not in 20 years, not in 50 years, maybe not in a million years. He will not be able to walk hand-in-hand in public nor kiss in front of their little house. They will face some great consequences should they have enough guts to make one of their biggest dreams come true: adopting a child. But in some parts of the world, they are as equal as any human being could be.

They recently made a plan to travel to the U.S. and tonight, as my eyes were glued to the screen when the Supreme Court announced marriage equality in all of America, my heart swelled with joy. People cast stones to them here but their love is respected and celebrated where they are going. My best friend and his lover will be able to kiss and walk hand-in-hand in all 50 states in the U.S.—although I doubt they will travel THAT long.

I couldn’t be happier for them, because that’s how it should be. Love triumphs. Love surpasses any superficial boundaries and obstacles.

Congratulations, America. Today you show us, the rest of the world, that love conquers all.

Love wins.

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Picture by @alice_correa

My Father is One of the Biggest Jerks Alive and This is How I Forgive Him

I made my first conscious decision when I was seven years old. My biological father was (and probably still is) an alcoholic and an abuser. My mother got pregnant six times, only two survived. A relative revealed that my mother was severely abused and beaten up when my father found her pregnant. It was never clear why he got so upset with the pregnancies. The worst abuse took place shortly after my mother gave birth to my sister. My father accused her of having an affair (which wasn’t true) and beat her up, leaving her in hospital care with bruises literally all over her body and face. After she got out of the hospital my mother escaped the continuous torment with my sister but somehow left me behind. When she was strong enough, my mother fought back and lost the case—the judge granted my father the custody of me. My mother was left with no financial security—not even a dime, my sister and bruises that never healed until she passed away.

I stayed with my father for one year before I decided enough is enough. A man pointed a gun to my face to make the nanny reveal my fathers hiding place during a raid, but that wasnt why I wanted to leave. My father used to sneak into my room at midnight and steal my piggy bank, but that wasnt the reason I left. It was really simple: no one in my class went to school in a Mercedes with a bodyguard. Believe me, its very far from cool when youre seven. My father believed my mother would kidnap me and closely monitored every inch of my move. I could not talk to my mother on the phone. I could not play with my best friend after school. I wasnt allowed to play outside. I could not attend birthday parties. I could not do things kids my age did. Other kids made fun of me. I fought them and lost. Going to school became a constant torture. I had tons of dolls and toys at home that I barely touched. I had everything a kid would have ever wanted, except love. I wanted my mother. I wanted to see my baby sis. I craved for human touch and affection that nanny and maids could never provide.

My father developed a habit of coming into my room once a day, around 4-6 oclock in the afternoon, sitting on my bed and with a soft tone asked me two questions: 1) Do you love me? 2) Which one you love best, your mother or me? Sometimes he added the third question: Are you sure? My answers remained the same. Until I had enough.

He received a slightly different answer one day. Yes, I loved him, but I loved my mother more. He asked why. I did not answer. Instead, I told him I wanted to live with my mother. I kept repeating the same answers for days. It took him less than a month to send me off. After that I only saw him once or twice a year since and strangely enough, I did not miss him. We talked on the phone every day before I started to resent him—he always called in the afternoon while I was playing with my sister and cousins. We talked less and less. I was in junior high school when my mother told me that he had stopped sending money for my education. My father got married two more times. He came to my mothers funeral half drunk, grinning like a fool and talking nonsense. He was arrested the day my little sister got admitted to a hospital for appendectomy. He publicly disowned us a few years later. We never saw him again.

I honestly thought the pain from everything he did would never heal.

I spent precious years of my life hating him. Blaming him for my miseries (and for the losers that I dated). Asking unanswerable questions. Why he had to be such an asshole. Why he treated my mother the way he did. Why he made our lives miserable. Why this and why that. I could not find it in my heart to forgive him. I tried. I failed. Maybe, just maybe, forgiveness was not something thats meant to be.

Until the day I finally saw him—truly saw him—from a completely different point of view. I might not be able to call him father anymore but that doesnt make him less of one. That was when I got it. The awareness and wisdom I never knew existed.  Something I had never understood before, when I saw him from a wounded childs perspective: A father that lost.

Im not sorry for leaving him. It was one of the best decisions in my life. Im sorry that he lost me, a daughter who at only seven years of age firmly chose not to be with him. Im sorry that he lost my sister. Im sorry that he never got to see us grow. Im sorry for his pain as much as Im sorry for the pain he had inflicted upon us.

I paved my way towards healing with the understanding that he, too, has suffered. As a human being.

And thats how I forgive him.

Happy Father’s Day, Pap. Wherever you are.

The Wingless Angel

She was exhausted and slightly ill from a long yoga training. She slept the whole day, woke, got ready and rode her scooter to watch my silver screen debut, sat on hard cement floor and stayed until the movie finished. She apologized for coming just in time for the movie and not before to accompany me. She offered to take my backpack when I was called to the front. She sat in the same spot watching me and following the whole discussion even though she barely speaks Indonesian.

She waited until I finished talking with everyone. She asked if I was hungry and drove me to a restaurant. The restaurant was almost closed so she held my helmet while I ran down the street to find some food. I ate my food, bumped into some friends and chatted some more. She waited until we’re done talking. She drove me to the place where I parked my scooter, then she went home. She checked if I got home safe.

That wasn’t the first time she went the extra mile to be there for me. Cheering me all the way, supporting me, reminding me that I am loved. She uses the words ‘brilliant’, ‘amazing’, ‘beautiful’ more than I can remember. Because sometimes it’s hard for me to love myself.

When you have friends like that, keep them. Keep them in your heart and soul and never let them go. You don’t call them besties or sisters. They are wingless angels sent from above because Someone up there knows how difficult it could get sometimes.

They are here to remind us that we are loved. Massively.

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