3.2.1. Joseph’s Struggles with Spiritual Coping Mechanisms
In the wake of spiritual violations, one must learn to cope. Drawing again on the wisdom of
Harper and Pargament (
2015), spiritual coping mechanisms are generally delineated as either positive or negative. Positive spiritual coping mechanisms “generally reflect a secure connection with the divine, oneself, and others”, while negative spiritual coping mechanisms “are generally associated with conflicts with the divine, oneself, and others about sacred matters” (
Harper and Pargament 2015). As we will see, Joseph employed primarily negative coping mechanisms.
Harper and Pargament (
2015) further discussed how both positive and negative spiritual coping mechanisms aim to address the same “five key coping functions: (1) finding meaning, (2) gaining mastery and control, (3) increasing comfort and closeness to God, (4) enhancing intimacy with others and closeness to God, and (5) achieving life transformation”. The main difference is that, while exceptions exist, positive coping mechanisms generally increase people’s ability to heal from trauma, whereas negative coping mechanisms typically exacerbate posttraumatic distress (
Harper and Pargament 2015). The results of Joseph employing negative spiritual coping mechanisms is evident in his distress and enmity toward God.
Park et al. (
2017) support these findings in that “Attributions about an angry or vengeful God [negative coping mechanism of appraisals of causation] tend to be associated with higher levels of distress, whereas those about a loving or purposeful God [positive coping mechanism of appraisals of causation] tend to be associated with less distress” (
Park et al. 2017).
Learning and developing positive spiritual coping mechanisms, like spiritual beliefs, play “a crucial role in how humans make sense of life events and cope with challenging situations”, as is asserted by Ca Trice B.
Glenn (
2014) in her
Journal of Spirituality in Mental Health article “A Bridge Over Troubled Waters: Spirituality and Resilience with Emerging Adult Childhood Trauma Survivors”. Without them, people struggle to make sense of life and cope with trauma and loss, as we see in Joseph’s experience. Yet, when external supports fail,
Dill (
2017) shows that positive spiritual coping mechanisms serve as internal sources of resilience. In “Religion, Spirituality, and Posttraumatic Growth: a Systematic Review”,
Shaw et al. (
2005) further affirm that spiritual beliefs as a positive coping mechanism can assist people in their psychological recovery and in their personal development and growth following trauma. According to Melissa Balgobin’s research, in addition to developing these positive coping mechanisms, people who develop the ability to modify their spiritual coping strategies when in the wake of trauma “have shorter spiritual struggles and exhibit a higher likelihood of growth” (
Balgobin 2021). Conversely, when people succumb to negative spiritual coping mechanisms, they are more likely to experience higher levels of distress (
Balgobin 2021), often manifesting as extended spiritual struggles and, as relayed by
Bjorck and Thurman (
2007), “worsened psychological functioning”. We see this in Joseph’s story.
More than 19 years after the forced separation, at the time of this writing, Joseph still remembers looking out the back window of the station wagon that carried him away from the tears streaming down his would-be mother’s face. That was the day Joseph resolved to never love anyone again. Ever. Not even God, because if God loved him, He would not have hurt him like that again. Joseph did not know at that time that this experience was the beginning of a hardening of his heart. Within a year, he was diagnosed with oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) and emotional detachment disorder (EDD) by the first therapist Joseph felt actually cared about him. Naturally, Joseph rejected the therapist’s diagnoses and thought him to be one more well-meaning white man who had no idea who Joseph was on the inside. Sadly, the doctor was correct on both counts. Joseph was deeply wounded spiritually, and that damage manifested itself psychologically and behaviorally. Looking at the emotional and behavioral symptoms criteria put forward by the Mayo
Clinic (
1998–2021) for a diagnosis of ODD (angry and irritable mood; argumentative and defiant behavior; and vindictiveness), the contributing factors thereof (problems with parenting that may involve… inconsistent or harsh discipline, or abuse or neglect), as well as the risk factors (a child who experiences abuse or neglect, harsh or inconsistent discipline, who lives with a parent or family discord or has a parent with a mental health disorder), Joseph now sees how easy it was for his therapist to reach this conclusion.
The same is true for the therapist’s conclusion of EDD. As shared by Danielle
Dresden (
2020), “Children may have a greater chance of developing attachment disorders and emotional detachment if they experience difficult circumstances in early life, such as: experiencing significant loss, such as the death of a parent or separation from a caregiver; having traumatic experiences; growing up in an orphanage; experiencing emotional abuse; experiencing physical abuse…”. Furthermore, at that time, Joseph was clearly exhibiting the warning signs that accompany EDD, which include “changes in sleeping habits; bad moods that do not seem to go away; mysterious or vague physical ailments; angry outbursts; social withdrawal; poor performance at… school; run-ins with the authorities; substance abuse; thoughts of suicide” (
Dresden 2020). By the time Joseph turned twelve, he had already been smoking cigarettes off-and-on for almost four years in an effort to soothe the spiritual ache for which he had no language or metaphysical salve. His time with the loving Canadian family was a refuge not meant to last, and the rupturing of that bond confirmed for Joseph that, due to what Judith
Herman (
2015) calls his “innate badness”, he did not deserve love or peace in this life. For if he did, God would have made it happen. Rather, Joseph had internalized his early abuse as something he deserved.
3.2.2. Joseph’s Experience with Interpersonal Aspects of Spirituality/Spiritual Coping
Although spiritual choices and perspectives are unique to each person,
van den Blink (
2012) asserts that “spirituality also calls for participation in a community of those committed to a similar journey, regular spiritual practice, and help from others who have been on the path, usually in the form of spiritual direction or friendship”. Joseph needed human connection in a way that was largely absent in his life. One of the “five key coping functions” posited by
Harper and Pargament (
2015) is “enhancing intimacy with others and closeness to God”, wherein “a person may seek support and reassurance from clergy, congregation members, and others in the community who share one’s religious or spiritual faith”. However, this interpersonal aspect of spiritual coping can also manifest in negative ways, where a person may harbor discontentment toward their faith community or express confusion and dissatisfaction with clergy or others associated with the traumatic experience (
Harper and Pargament 2015). Seeing what he perceived as the hypocrisy in those who professed to be Christians led to Joseph’s distrust of people in that faith community entirely. For better or worse, one’s spiritual journey “is not a solitary journey and cannot be engaged in half-heartedly but requires our best efforts, the support of spiritual friends, and compassion and outreach to others” (
van den Blink 2012).
God did not create human beings to be independent, but inter-dependent. According to
Lyon (
2010), people are created to be “relational beings who act both as the presence of God and the presence of evil to one another”. As Joseph would come to learn, one person’s spiritual walk can directly impact another’s. This is true for both individual relationships and how one relates to their community (
Balgobin 2021). The interpersonal connectedness a person experiences and chooses to share can include family, friends, romantic partners, faith community members, or others (
Aldridge 1991). The choice belongs to each individual whether the interaction and interconnection is “destructive or healing” (
Lyon 2010). Joseph’s general distrust of people brought about more destruction than healing.
Following his emotional departure from the Canadian family, Joseph spent the next two-and-a-half years living in a home where he became what Judith
Herman (
2015) calls “a superb performer”, an identity he has donned at various times in his life. However, this identity carries with it an inherent duality of self: on the outside, as relayed by
Hylton (
2021), Joseph was “a consistently happy young man with an easy smile and a kind word always at the ready”; on the inside, he saw in the mirror an ugly, worthless half-breed who would only amount to something if the white men let him. Maintaining this charade in his new foster home and other environs led people to feel close and connected with Joseph, whereas (with one notable exception) he lived with a perpetual feeling of disconnection, loneliness, and isolation. Therefore, the appreciation of others simply confirmed his conviction that no one could truly know him, and that if his secret and true self were recognized, Joseph would be shunned and reviled (
Herman 2015). Upon his reflection, it is no wonder that Joseph’s inner self could not support this façade under the extreme duress that would follow. He still had no firm spiritual foundation upon which to build self-confidence and resilience.
One month before his seventeenth birthday, Joseph watched his foster mother of more than two years die of a massive heart attack while he was on the phone with the 911 dispatcher. Having never learned how to deal with grief and trauma in a healthy manner, Joseph repressed his emotions, cared for his younger foster brothers, and carried on living without her. It was when Joseph’s biological father drew his last breath with Joseph standing by his bedside, after supporting his mother through the last weeks of his father’s life, that the totality of Joseph’s traumas caught up with him and sprang forth from his eyes in the midnight hours. His father’s death came on the one-year anniversary of Joseph’s foster mother’s death—one he had yet to grieve. Joseph cried and cursed God for taking from him the mountainous abusive father of his youth, leaving only a husk of a man for Joseph to forgive and care for at the end of his life.
Adding to the traumatic experience of wrestling with the love, hatred, and resentment that Joseph held toward his father were his plaintive cries for death as his cancer progressed. Seven years after his last beating, Joseph was again at home, this time to care for his abuser in his last days. The dutiful and forgiving son, waiting on his every need and eager to make his passing as painless as possible. Yet, the shame of needing that care led Joseph’ father to plead with him—and to beg God—to end his suffering. Due to his father being diabetic, Joseph knew an insulin overdose would do the job. The night before his death, Joseph attempted to grant his father’s dying wish. He loaded up the needle with insulin while the hospice nurse was in the bathroom, lifted up his father’s T-shirt to reveal the rise and fall of his round belly, and inched the needle closer. Joseph’s hesitant hand caused the needle to brush his father’s skin, making him flinch in his sleep. Joseph realized he could not do it. Just then, the toilet flushed and he walked away. Neither malice nor mercy could get Joseph to take his father’s life. At that moment though, Joseph could not know that his father’s disease would run its course the following afternoon. After he died, those frozen moments plagued Joseph constantly: he almost killed his father.
Following this traumatic experience, Joseph drank often. He smoked cigarettes heavily and marijuana daily. He was in constant search of the next party and opportunity for meaningless sexual encounters with women whom he may or may not have known. Anything to run from or numb the pain he could no longer hold at bay. Joseph was done with God. No more crying out; no more begging for forgiveness; no more seeking His comfort; no more caring about His judgment. Joseph became selective with his “performer” identity (
Herman 2015); he saved that for the people he wanted to charm. Instead, Joseph started allowing the inner darkness, the ugly traumas of his life, to show through in his speech and actions. Wherever he went, Joseph had a knife in his front pocket, a red bandanna protruding from his back pocket, and a hope in his heart that he would have an opportunity to brandish the blade to anyone who thought they were tougher than him. This was the state of ugliness and spiritual confusion in which Joseph chose to move in with his elder foster brother, David, the son of his dead foster mother. David was family; he was facing prison time for a burglary he committed the previous year, and Joseph felt guilty for being the one who had let David’s victim into his apartment to find the stolen safe in his foster brother’s closet.
3.2.3. Connection between Spirituality and Mental Health in Joseph’s Life
As we saw in Joseph’s dual diagnoses of ODD and EDD, and supported by
Salazar et al. (
2013), traumatic events adversely affect a person’s mental health. When trauma is seen as a spiritual violation, it becomes apparent that secular experiences, following
Harper and Pargament (
2015), are “connected to the divine and… events that disrupt sacred aspects of life can have a significant impact on posttraumatic recovery, for better or worse”. On the “for better” side, when people have the ability to exercise positive spiritual coping mechanisms, this is a strong predictor of posttraumatic growth (
Harper and Pargament 2015). Spirituality serves to comfort people, assuage anxiety, and increase feelings of security, also boosting confidence in oneself and/or in what Harold G.
Koenig (
2009) calls “Divine beings”. Though Joseph would not experience this in time to spare himself or others, positive spiritual coping is also “robustly associated with posttraumatic growth”, as is shown by
Shaw et al. (
2005). In extant literature, spirituality is shown to predict psychological well-being for adults who have experienced childhood trauma (
Balgobin 2021), leading to less depression, suicide, anxiety, and substance abuse (
Koenig 2009).
On the “for worse” side of having a significant effect on posttraumatic recovery, when people implement negative spiritual coping mechanisms, there is a higher chance they will experience more severe posttraumatic stress and mental health symptoms (
Harper and Pargament 2015). As we see through Joseph’s experience,
Koenig (
2009) shows that the struggles that arise from negative spiritual coping can significantly increase anxiety, wherein people feel that God is punishing them, has abandoned them, or is not able to intercede on their behalf. This was largely Joseph’s experience in relation to spirituality. Not only is this negative coping likely to lead to an increase in anxiety, according to the research conducted by
Ano and Vasconcelles (
2005), it has also shown to heighten depression, distress, and overall psychological burden to people experiencing stressful situations. So deep is the spiritual violation of trauma and the chasm created in the self, that it is likely to negatively impact the very core of one’s emotional well-being for the long term (
Park et al. 2017). In Joseph’s life, his core self was so violated that it led him down a path toward spiritual death.
Somehow it made perfect sense to Joseph’s muddled newly-18-year-old mind to go with his foster brother back to David’s victim’s home and steal the same safe, if not a bigger one. In one fell swoop, Joseph thought he could solidify the “thug” identity he was actively creating; obtain enough money to prevent his foster brother from serving any significant prison time for his previous crime; atone for being the one who (in his mind) had led to David facing prison time; and get some money for himself to start a life as a high school dropout with aspirations of joining a gang and delving into the drug trafficking trade. Joseph did not need God. He felt in complete control of his life for the first time ever and trusted that it would be a “simple” robbery where he would do some threatening, get some money, and go on with his life. Nobody would be physically harmed and the family was rich anyway, so they would be fine without the few thousand dollars of which he hoped to deprive them. Neither Joseph nor David could see the connection between Joseph’s childhood abuse and the aggressive behaviors that were now manifesting before them, a connection highlighted by
Prino and Peyrot (
1994).
Joseph had no idea his mind would break at the sounding of the home security alarm. Somehow, as soon as that alarm went off, Joseph was no longer the intruder. He became a boy trying to protect his family from anyone who posed a threat to them. David was Joseph’s family, and the innocent family whose home he was actively violating became a threat to him. They became the enemy. Neither David nor Joseph knew that, as
van den Blink (
2012) says, “Painful life experiences get encoded in our brains and bodies and can be reactivated with great intensity by the right kind of trigger decades later, even if we believe that we have dealt with them or have completely forgotten about them”. Joseph would not understand this for another five years when his mother reminded him of the heart of his father’s training, but in that moment, Joseph’s father’s voice was commanding in his subconscious: “It doesn’t matter whether they are 8 or 80, man, woman, crippled, or in a wheelchair; if anyone is a threat to your family, you take them down. Kill them if necessary” (
Hylton 2021). On this darkest of nights, that meant a 48-year-old man and his 10-year-old daughter. Joseph believes that God spared their lives, even though Joseph left them for dead as he fled from their home—without a dollar in his pocket.
After spending almost two years in county jails, spiritually lost and broken, Joseph was sentenced to 90 years in prison, with all suspended but 50 years to serve, and 16 years of probation to serve upon his release. Joseph blamed his foster brother.
If David had not stolen that safe the first time, I would never have been in a position to uncover the evidence. I would never have felt guilty for him getting caught. I would never have known how to get to the house, nor had any connection to that family at all. It was all his fault. Or so Joseph told himself. Others affirmed this false narrative as well. From the detectives who arrested him to the men with whom Joseph was incarcerated to some of the correctional officers charged with overseeing him; whoever had been subjected to the media reports or court documents assured Joseph that his crime was purely David’s responsibility. At most, Joseph was the “bullet” and David was the “gun”: if he had not loaded Joseph up and pointed him in the direction of their victims, Joseph would be a free man. It then became Joseph’s duty to hate the man he once loved so dearly. According to what Craig
Haney (
2001) calls “prison politics”, either Joseph had to kill David or vice versa; they could not both live in the same prison. One of them had to die, and while Joseph did not fear death and many times wished for and fantasized about the act of dying, he refused to give his foster brother the satisfaction of being the one to end his life; therefore, Joseph spent many of those long nights in the prison’s segregation unit plotting David’s untimely demise, while spiritually dying himself.