When you fall down, no one rushes to your side, hugging you and carrying you into the house for a band-aid. When your mother dies, no one asks how you are doing, or gives you special treatment, or puts you into therapy. When you are abused, everyone looks the other way - after all, it's just the way it is. When everyone in your family has died or is dying, lying skeleton-like on their beds, everyone whispers that they are cursed, or have the flu, or "certain illnesses". You are taught to not think about it, to push it away, and to go on. Crying will get you nowhere, except maybe told to stop crying, what is wrong with you?
I am now raising several children who were at one time, essentially raising themselves. It is interesting to see them when they first come to our family - they often show very little emotion, even if they are just consistently happy all the time. Khutso was one of these. Since his father died when he was just a baby, his mother had to go away to work as a domestic servant for a rich Afrikaaner family, only visiting her children in their mud house every month or two. He was left his 13 year old sister, who pretty much just let him go on his own way.


He looked at me then, wide eyed.
"and you are big," he said seriously.
"yes," I told him, "I am very big."

Addy is a brilliant child, and is often quiet. You can sometimes just see her thinking, processing things in her head. She is one of those kids who doesn't say much, but you can see something in her dark eyes that tells you something isn't right - it's like a reflection of pain that you can only see when she thinks no one is looking. Things run deep with her, but sometimes it as though things are buried so deep, she doesn't know how to get to them or get them out.
When she came back home to us after her aunt died and she was moved yet again (around Christmas time), you could see that pain in her eyes, but for the most part, she just became a bit quieter, and less silly and talkative. She didn't mention anything that was going on with her family, and I didn't push it - just told her I loved her like my own daughter and would always be here for her. Then one night a few days in I put her to bed - she'd been cheerful enough when we read a story and prayed...but just about a minute after I said goodnight and turned off the lights, I heard her start crying hysterically. The other kids got really alarmed, as she's never done that before - I told them to go to bed and pray for her, and I would sort it out, but I knew what the problem was. I sat on her bed and held her as she cried so hard she could hardly breathe, gasping and wailing - it was actually so heartbreaking that I couldn't stop the tears from filling my eyes too. There is something so different in a child crying from deep grief and emotional pain than a child cryin

Addy has never been an attention-seeker or very dramatic at all - it was just that she had been carrying so much pain around since the loss of her mother, then moving, then losing her aunt to the same illness, then moving again and facing abuse. I don't believe she had ever actually cried during any of this, instead just quietly facing whatever was next, and being as brave as she could for her little brother Mack, who she protects fiercely. The pain and loss this seven year old was carrying was probably more than I've faced in my entire life. And it was as if she knew she was finally somewhere safe, finally somewhere she would be listened to - and all that pain just exploded as if it was the first time she had felt it, as if it all happened yesterday. Her grief was so real that I could tell it was the first time she had allowed herself to feel it.
She is finally learning to talk about her pain, and to tell me about what she is going through. Though I don't have legal custody, I have spent a lot of time talking to her father about what she wants, and have gotten her to tell him also - I think soon she will be living with me all the time, and not having to return to this place that is causing her more pain, but rather stay at the place that has always been consistent, and that she has known since she was small. When we ask her about this, she just smiles quietly and nods her head once, one big nod, face to the sky and then tucking her chin back into her chest.

(all photos by Lauren Stonestreet, Elle Effect Photography)