Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Nation & World

An interview with Michelle Theer: Her early life

By Edward T. Pound
Posted 12/10/05

Q. The early days?

A. Well, my dad was in the military, the Air Force, and we moved around a lot. I was born in Abilene, Texas, but we moved, I think about a year after I was born, to Little Rock, Ark., and we were there for just a couple of years, and we moved somewhere in England, about three years. . . When we came back, we lived in Charleston, S.C., and that is where my brother [Tommy] was born. And I went to school. . . first, second, and third grade, in Charleston. I have a lot of good memories from Charleston. . . we lived on the base, and they had woods back behind our house. I remember having a treehouse, and there was a little stream that ran back through the trees. . . That is the part of my childhood where I can remember riding bikes with my friends, and playing in the treehouse.

Q. You were 7 or 8 years old at the time.

A. Yeah. That's kind of that time in my life when I can remember those wild tomboy years, playing outside until the very last moment possible when it was getting dark and my dad having to come out and whistle for me to come in. . . Then we moved to Colorado Springs, Colo. . . . We were in Colorado Springs, I think, fourth, fifth, sixth grades, for three years, and my sister [Angela] was born there. . . . The tone of those years was darker. . . I thought at first it was OK, my sister was born, and my parents were happy then, but my dad went overseas for a year to Korea, and my mom put me in this private Christian school that was very. . .

Q. Strict.

A. Yeah. I don't like the use word fanatical, but really that's what it was. And when my dad got back from Korea, my parents were starting–they did start having problems. . . .

Q. What was your dad in the military, a mechanic?

A. Yeah, he was a heavy-equipment mechanic.

Q. You moved from Colorado Springs to Denver?

A. Yeah. When he came back [from Korea], he got transferred to Lowry Air Force Base, and my parents were having problems, and he was moving in and out, back and forth, and that went on for about a year. . . .

Q. When you talk about the darker days, it was the trouble between your parents?

A. It was the trouble between my parents, and it was the school and the church we were going to. It was a very oppressive religion, very. . . It was Southern Baptist. . . . We had always gone to church. But when I think about that church, and that particular school, I think about the image of a very angry, unforgiving God, a very punishing God who is standing over you and just watching every mistake that you make. And you are going to make mistakes, and you are going to burn in hell for them, you know what I am saying. . . . At the time, it made me very fearful. And I think that their goal was to make you, to scare you into obedience, to scare you into memorizing Bible verses, and at that particular time, that is what it did, and it did for several years. It scared me into obedience. . . .

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