BOOK EXCERPT
		
		'Real Teens, Real Stories, 
  Real Life'
		
		By T. Suzanne Eller 
  Guest Writer  
		
		 
		 
      CBN.com  I 
        thought I was losing my mind, going psycho. I never told people what was 
        going on inside of me. I only shared the surface stuff that was evident 
        for all to see. I skipped classes in school because I didnt see 
        the point in going. I laid in bed and blocked my door so my mother couldnt 
        come in. She eventually gave up, but I had already given up on myself. 
      While I was at home, I started cutting myself. It made me feel better 
        in some weird way. I wrote things in my arm with a razor as if my flesh 
        were a billboard for all to see my craziness. My mother freaked out when 
        I came out of my room with my arms covered in bandages, swaddled under 
        my long sleeves. Then I moved to my stomach because there was more room 
        to write.  
      My mind swerved from thought to thought, plans of hurting myself to pay back 
    those I loved with pain. I hoped they would realize what they lost and that 
    others would look down on them for not being there for me.  
  My only outlet during this time of my life was art. It was a passion, and 
    I painted and created projects on the potters wheel. Ceramics was the 
    only reason I attended school. 
  Some days I loaded up my easel, paper, paint, and water bottles and drove 
    far away to a wooded area. I walked so deep into the woods that I lost myself 
    in the scenery. Though it was only 40 degrees outside, I sat and painted in 
    the middle of nowhere. I was content to be alone with my art. It was calm 
    and no one knew I was there. I could paint and listen to the stillness that 
    surrounded me. 
  It was my secret place and there I could be happy. Not full happiness, not 
    like laughing, but peaceful. If I wanted to scream, I could. I could yell 
    and cry as loud as I wanted, and I didnt have to explain why. 
  I became a hermit. Though I didnt talk much before, my silence became 
    ridiculous. The strange thing is that I continued to be involved in school. 
    I was in the marching band. I was in the Guard, and I took it very seriously. I 
    practiced for hours, building up my strength and tolerance. 
  I had friends, including my best friend, Christina. I shared with her the 
    details of my life and she couldnt believe it, but I understood. I had 
    trouble accepting it myself.  
  At the end of my senior year, I enrolled in college to study art. I traveled 
    to St. Louis with big plans, imagining how I would arrive at this new place 
    and how everything would be great. I believed that my life would be different. 
   
  It didnt take long to realize that moving did not solve my problems. 
    I had very few friends. I hated my job and school wasnt what I 
    expected. I was terribly homesick, not for the "home" part but for 
    the woods, my place of peace. I drove four hours to Bloomington every other 
    weekend and then four hours back to St. Louis just so I could be in my special 
    place for a few hours each week. 
  I was miserable at school. I quit my job. I started skipping classes and 
    closed myself away from others again.  
  Same old, same old. Back to my previous life. 
  One night I was writing a term paper. As I sat in front of the computer, 
    I thought about how lame it was that I was doing nothing. I decided to see 
    a movie, so I drove to "The Loop," which is a downtown area in St. 
    Louis.  
  I decided to burn time while I waited for the movie to begin. I was walking 
    down the street when I saw two girls in front of me. A man stood on the sidewalk 
    and held out a flyer. They pushed it away. I marched up and took the flyer 
    since those two girls had acted so rudely to the guy. I figured that 
    he was promoting a band or something. I took the flyer from him and started 
    to walk away when he said, "May I ask you a question? What is your relationship 
    with God?"  
  I stared at him, and then I laughed because his question sounded really funny. 
    I didnt understand how anyone could have a "relationship" 
    with God! The guy said his name was Jamie, and then he introduced me to another 
    person named Chuck. More of their friends joined us. For the next two hours 
    I stood on the street and we talked about God. 
  I couldnt believe it. I was raised as a Christian, but I never felt 
    about it as I did this night. I looked at each one in the group of people 
    and studied them, wondering what it was that intrigued me about them. There 
    were about six or seven people standing in the cold talking about God. They 
    each seemed to have a beautiful attitude, peaceful and caring. 
  Jamie rubbed his hands together and warmed them. "Brooke, do you want 
    to accept Christ?" he asked. 
  "Stop talking to those guys!" someone shouted and interrupted our 
    conversation. I stared at a guy that I knew who stood not far away. He had 
    walked by earlier and asked me to come and hang out with his friends. He was 
    not a good person, and I definitely didnt want to spend time with him 
    and his friends. When I said no, he had waited close by and listened to every 
    word that Jamie spoke.  
  "Do you want to accept Christ?" Jamie asked again.  
  Chuck joined him. "Its up to you, Brooke." 
  "You dont have to listen to them," the guy shouted. His friends 
    joined in and started mocking Jamie and Chuck. My natural response was to 
    yell at him to shut up, but I actually felt sorry for him.  
  I nodded. "Yes, but will you pray with me?" I asked.  
  The whole time that I prayed, the guy and his friends cursed me out. I clenched 
    my eyes shut and peace flooded me. The words of those who stood in the background 
    and mocked me helped me to understand what I was walking away from. I thought, 
    They are still stuck, but I found my answer. 
  Soon after I was saved, I found a project I had created titled "Butterfly 
    Man." It was an assignment for my graphic arts class. "Butterfly Man" had 
    the body of a butterfly, but the face was a composite of several different 
    graphic files of mens features. As I studied it, I almost dropped the 
    piece. The face looked like Jamiethe man who had stopped to share his 
    faith with me on the street. Same goatee. Same face shape and coloring.  
  Was God reaching out to me even before I met my new friends?  
  I took the portrait to Jamie and he framed it. "Isnt it awesome, 
    Brooke?" he said. "Butterflies are a symbol of new beginnings." 
  There are still reminders of my past. Sometimes if Im really cold, 
    or if Ive just come out of the shower, I can see the faint outline of 
    the word "Why?" that I carved on my forearm. That was a question 
    I asked when I had no answers. 
  Today it is a reminder that my scars are healedin more ways than one. 
   
   
           The 
            above story, "Butterfly Man, " is by Brooke Shewmaker as told to T. 
            Suzanne Eller and is excerpted from the book Real 
            Teens, Real Stories, Real Life (RiverOak Publishers) by T. 
            Suzanne Eller.  
      T. Suzanne Eller is a speaker and author of Real 
        Teens, Real Stories, Real Life. Her second book, Real 
        Teens, Real Issues - What Teens Say They Need from Parents in Today's 
        World was released in 2004. You can find out more about Suzie 
        at http://daretobelieve.org 
        or email her at tseller@daretobelieve.org. 
       
  
  
  
		  
 
 
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