I opened my eyes for the first time in this country on a cold drab day in 2013, having fled torture, abuse, detention and a cruel husband in my home country in Africa.
I had been stripped of every human right, and set foot in the UK a broken, suicidal person. It was the coldest March in ten years. I had never experienced such cold. I had read about it, and heard about it, but the actual experience was like falling into a freezing pond. My sister was working as live-in carer, so I was all alone with no one to show me around.
When I put in my asylum claim, somebody from my home country introduced me to Freedom from Torture. This amazing organisation offered not only counselling, but therapeutic groups. Having grown up on a farm, I was immediately attracted to the gardening group.
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One day, the coordinator of the writing group, Write to Life, came and explained the healing power of creative writing. They were about to hold their summer party, so I went along. There, I heard a group member read one of her pieces: Looking and listening to her, a woman no longer young, who like me had suffered torture and yet now was standing up in public, and reading her work confidently and with obvious pleasure, I thought: “I’d like to do that!” I was hooked.
It turned out to be the best decision I ever made. In the first session, we were asked to write about our families. I had never shared anything like this with anybody before. I had lost two brothers to war, I’d lost my precious Grandma. It felt like a sharp knife thrust into my heart. But as I continued to write, slowly and carefully, the writing sliced through the layers of confusion, insecurity and worthlessness that had built up during my persecution and flight.
The group introduced me to a whole world of possibilities. At every workshop, we start by eating, exchanging small talk about what’s been happening in our lives. While we eat, memories are shared, friendships blossom and laughter bonds us.