Susan Sparks
6 min readApr 25, 2019

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SPARKS SPEAKS OUT™ — Four Brides and a Train

The ride of your life. Which one would you choose?

By Susan Sparks — Abuse Survivor, Advocate, Charity Founder, and exhausted ex-wife.

Many days I give advice. Many days I direct you towards help. Today I thought I’d tell you a story. I promise you’ve never heard this one before. And, I promise you will never look at another bride on her wedding day the same, ever again.

Four beautiful brides are standing on a train platform on their wedding days. Each of them dressed as lovely as the other. Long white dresses. Veils flowing down their backs. Trains of white satin cascading as they take each step toward the tracks. Each of these brides arrived from different stations. And when they leave they will depart on separate trains.

When you look at the brides you can’t tell too much about them, don’t all brides resemble one another on their wedding day? Is anyone college-educated? Ph.D., perhaps? Is someone straight out of high school? Is anyone a career woman who waited to get married? Are any of these brides famous? Did one of them come from money? Did one grow up in poverty? You really can’t tell. They are all ethereal visions in white gowns — appearing almost heavenly as they stand to wait.

In a moment four trains will arrive at the station at the exact same time. The brides will be told that each train has only one seat left. They will have to make a decision and commit to it. All four trains will have signs on the front that say Destination: Happiness. Because honestly, on their wedding days, what else are they expecting?

The brides will see train tracks reaching out as far in front of them as possible until the ground meets with the horizon. They will be asked to pick their train and begin their journey. It’s the happiest day of their lives. We see them getting on board — long white satin trailing behind them as they climb in each of the four separate trains. Pulling their dresses up as the doors close, and taking their seats.

We watch the trains take off at the exact same place and in the exact same direction. Each is moving in a straight line as they vanish from our sight. We wait to see what happens next, but they drive out of our view. They drive to their first stop: Behind Closed Doors. They are told that what happens there stays there, and it is up to each of them to manage the rest of their journey. Each bride agrees, and the trains start moving again.

Two of the brides continue on. They travel a path that is not always easy, not always straight, and oftentimes, very bumpy. They eventually arrive safe and sound exactly where they expect, Destination: Happiness.

The other two brides have some problems with their trains, and each makes a detour that they do not expect. They stop off at a place called Psychological Aggression. It is terrifying from the moment they arrive. They were expecting Happiness, they were looking for Happiness, and they have no idea how they got here. But, 50% of all women end up in Psychological Aggression and they are the two. They never saw it coming. So thrown from the change in plans, they keep quiet while they try to figure out what to do next.

And then the fourth bride’s train starts moving again. She is feeling the most confused because she was told that Happiness was just a short drive down the way. And during her journey, she is seeing things out the window that she did not expect to see. She took the last seat on the train, she knows no one else, and so she sits and waits to see what will happen next.

She’s sleeping when something loud and terrifying jolts her awake. There is dark smoke and a lot of dust and she looks up at the destination sign. It said Happiness the last time she looked up. The sign now says Domestic Abuse. Domestic Abuse, she thinks to herself. What the hell am I doing in Domestic Abuse? I didn’t ask to come here. This wasn’t my plan. I was heading towards Happiness. What just happened?

The doors open and she slowly exits. There is a large sign sitting on the platform that reads:

BE CAREFUL WHO YOU TRUST.

BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU SAY.

DON’T LEAVE WITHOUT A PLAN.

ONLY 25% WILL MAKE IT OUT WITHOUT INJURY, AND SOME WILL DIE TRYING.

____________________________

You’re waiting for a happy ending, right? Isn’t that what we always get, a happy ending? So was I. If you haven’t “met” me yet, if you haven’t seen my blogs, or read Sparks in Love, or heard my name, let me introduce myself to you: My name is Susan Sparks and I am Bride #4.

Am I the only Bride #4? No. Of course not. There are 20,000 calls placed to domestic abuse hotlines every day in our country from Bride #4. Ten million women per year are Bride #4. No, I’m not the only one. I am one in four women who became Bride #4. I was one in four women who will become Bride #4.

If we went back to the train station and talked to all four brides before they boarded the trains, what would we learn? I can tell you. We would learn that all brides look the same on their wedding day, the same way that all victims of domestic abuse cannot be picked out in a crowd. We don’t share any certain characteristics. We don’t share any socioeconomic status, or educational level, or follow any belief system that sets us apart from you or anyone else. We did one thing and one thing only that set us on a different path: we fell in love with the wrong person.

Domestic abuse will strike one in four of us in our lifetime. If it wasn’t you, you should now understand how close you were. If it was you, then you now understand how many more are with you, with us, living the same life.

Either way, we have work to do. We have brides on trains heading towards a disaster that need our help to get off before they get there. We have brides who have already arrived whose lives are in danger and we need to get them out. And, we have single and engaged women who have yet to arrive at the train station. They have plenty of time to turn around if we can get in front of them and educate them about what lies ahead.

What would you have done if you knew where my train was going? Would you have tried to help me? Because it’s not just a story about four brides on their wedding day. It is the story of my life. And it’s too late for me not to become Bride #4. But it’s not too late for everyone else. We still have time to get to that station.

#NotInOurHomes #TomorrowIsTooLate #DomesticAbuse #DomesticViolence #EmotionalAbuse #GetHelpToday #Victims #Survivors #nonprofits #funds #funding #help #donate

The SODA Fund™ SODA® = Survivors Of Domestic Abuse

Home Should Be A Safe Place. For Everyone.™

Want to read the rest of Susan’s story and see what happened when she tried to leave? Check out Sparks in Love, on amazon.com.

You can also follow Susan’s blog on Medium(@SusanSparksSODA), and SPARKS SPEAKS OUT™ on thesoda-pop.com and thesodafund.org

Susan Sparks is a 20-year victim, and 7-year Survivor Of Domestic Abuse (SODA®). She is the author of Sparks in Love, and an Expert Blogger and Subject Matter Expert for multiple digital media sites. She works on select projects with The National Domestic Violence Hotline (thehotline.org) — donating a portion of proceeds from every sale of Sparks in Love to both The Hotline and The SODA Fund. Susan dedicates her time to raising awareness of domestic abuse in the hopes that she can prevent others from walking into abuse the way she did, and help others walk out of abuse on a safer path than the one she created for herself.

If you need help or want to help please visit www.thesodafund.org today.

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Susan Sparks

Author: Sparks in Love I Advocate I SODA®: Survivor Of Domestic Abuse I thesodafund.org I thesoda-pop.com I #NotInOurHomes #TomorrowIsTooLate #domestic abuse