Read the full story of Oakland's Caheri Gutierrez in Until You Bleed, available for $0.99 from Amazon Kindle Singles.
Caheri in 2013 in Oakland |
Loss
It
was that face, its wide cheek bones, dark, expressive eyes and full
lips, that she'd been counting on to be the foundation of a modeling
career. Once a gifted student and athlete, in the past year Gutierrez
had been been kicked out of two high schools. She'd fought with her
family, smoked too much weed. More and more she'd come to rely on her
beauty for attention, and for her future.
After
nearly dying that night, after waking up to find her self jawless and
toothless and deaf in one ear, and after a month in the hospital,
Gutierrez had gone home to East Oakland, only to find her struggle
for recovery haunted by fear of the street, by nightmares, by a
growing anger and an incipient grief for her lost identity.
This
is where victims of violence find themselves, in a lonely place where
no one around them knows how to help. The victim feels helpless and
so do the victim’s loved ones, coworkers, neighbors and friends.
Many are afraid even to approach that dark place full of fear and
confusion and anger where the victim exists.
Help
Tammy
Cloud makes a career out of it. Cloud is an Intervention Specialist
in the Caught in the Crossfire program, out of an Oakland non-profit
called Youth Alive.
She provides practical and emotional support to young victims of
Oakland's troubles, usually starting right at their hospital
bedsides. Many of Oakland's shootings and killings are retaliatory;
part of the job of Cloud and her Caught in the Crossfire colleagues
is to try and diffuse that urge, to calm angry family members, or
sometimes gang members already armed.
She
had been assigned Gutierrez’ case.
“I
woke up in the hospital one day,” says Gutierrez, “and I was by
myself, and I never liked to be by myself, and I see this woman, and
I’m like, ‘Who is she?’ I couldn’t talk, but she introduced
herself to me. It was Tammy Cloud, my angel, my guardian angel.”
Gutierrez
recognized the name of the organization, Youth ALIVE!. They had been
a big help to her brother when he'd been shot two years earlier. Now
it was her turn.
Soon
after Gutierrez had re-gained consciousness, Cloud asked her what her
plans were once she got out of the hospital, and what kind of help
she might need. There is business to take care of, life to get back
to, even for the grievously wounded, especially for the
wounded.
For
her part, Gutierrez insisted she was going to be just fine, thanks,
she didn’t think she’d be needing much help.
“I
didn’t think that it would hit me, all the feelings that I had, all
the emotions,” says Gutierrez.
“I
knew it was gonna hit her hard,” says Cloud. “Because of where
her injuries were, what she was doing prior to her injuries, the rep
she had in the community. I could tell she was trying to make heads
or tales of ‘what am I going to look like now?’ She’s still
gorgeous, but I knew she was thinking, ‘I was this model and
gorgeous, and everybody looked up to me for my looks, and now here I
am, disfigured.’ So I knew that that was going to be very, very
traumatic.”
A
Plan & A Second Brain
All
during the long days and weeks of Gutierrez’ recuperation Cloud
kept coming around. She’d listen, chide, advise, help take care of
business. She took Gutierrez out in her car, took her to medical
appointments, to physical therapy.
“She
was like a second brain,” says Gutierrez, and for a traumatized
victim not always thinking clearly, an experienced second brain might
be the most important service Cloud and Caught in the Crossfire
provides. Depressed and exhausted, victims are bound to make
mistakes, to make poor decisions, to neglect themselves and the
business of life.
And
Cloud had a plan. The first thing to do was to get a home school
nurse to help with the recovery and to get Gutierrez on track to
graduate. The other important thing: therapy. Of course, Gutierrez
said she didn’t need therapy. She’s sheepish about that claim
now.
“I
thought I was going to be cool, I didn’t think I needed therapy.”
She sounds almost amused by how naive she was. “I thought that
Tammy was thinking that I was crazy or something. And I was, but I
just didn’t know it.”
At
home, Gutierrez finished her GED work even before her high school
class had finished their school year. With Cloud’s help, she signed
up for classes at Chabot College in Hayward. She started playing
volleyball there. Her self-esteem began to climb. I’m ugly, I’m
whatever, but I’m thee best volleyball player.
An
Idea
In
the meantime, Tammy Cloud was starting to formulate an idea, one that
just might be a magnet toward a new normal better than the old
normal. Cloud had noticed something about her client and, now,
friend. “Something about the way she presented herself, her aura,
her person,” she says.
Of
course, Caheri's story was a profound one. And, as slowly she emerged
from the physical trauma, it was only becoming more powerful. This
young woman who, like so many others, had squandered her academic and
athletic talents, and who had been shot and almost killed, was
rediscovering her inner strengths. Cloud thought hearing the story,
and meeting Caheri, might get the attention of young people, never
easy to do. It might make them think, might help prevent the same
things that happened to Gutierrez from happening to them.
She
mentioned the idea of speaking, of talking to some Oakland students.
“Yes,”
said Gutierrez. “I really, really, really would love to do that.”
“I
think I still had my imitation jaw. But at the same time, I knew that
that was one of the reasons why I really wanted to talk to them, to
show them: ‘Look, this is real, and this is intense and this can
happen.’”
Cloud
had reached inside the chaos of a traumatized soul to find its purest
urge.
When
a job opened up at Youth Alive, in their program called Teens on
Target (TNT), Cloud suggested Gutierrez apply. TNT identifies East
Oakland high school students with leadership skills and helps them
develop presentations on violence -- domestic violence, dating
violence, gangs and guns -- on how to deal with it, how to avoid a
life of it, even if you are surrounded by it, even if it is all
you’ve ever known. They learn to tell their own stories, to explain
what life is like in East Oakland, the good and the bad. Then they
take these presentations to middle school kids around the city. It’s
a municipal conversation, unpleasant perhaps, but necessary.
A
Job to Do
Gutierrez
got the job with Youth Alive, but that brought new worries. She would
have to tell her story. Despite lingering nightmares and fears, she
would have to return to East Oakland, where she'd been shot. But
that's where Oakland's problems are, so it's where YouthAlive! does
much of its work. It was time to begin her new life, with the old
mask gone and the new one uncertainly in place, time to confront her
loss in a whole new way.
“I
was like, ‘I have scars, no one’s gonna want to listen to me,’
like they’re gonna make fun of me, they’re going to judge me. I
don’t know if I can do it,” she said. “I don’t want to scare
the kids away.”
That
sounds crazy when you are with Gutierrez, who is warm and upbeat and
who, despite the visible scars that remain, is beautiful again.
Indeed,
when you watch her work with the TNT students, it's clear that, far
from being "scared away," they are drawn to her and her
story. It is the kind of experience, the kind of story of pain and
survival that in Oakland gives you authenticity, authority. There are
places in Oakland where a scar, physical or emotional, speaks louder
than a badge, louder than a college degree, louder than a pulpit.
Tammy
Cloud understood this. Gutierrez does, too.
Most
of the kids in the TNT program are African American. With them
Gutierrez shares growing up in East
Oakland
under a constant cloud of potential violence.
Recently
she spoke to a group of Latino students.
“I
said ‘Listen, this is a true story, and it could happen to you
guys, and it hurt me soooo much, and it could happen to you, not just
physically but mentally.” She sounds inspired.
“I
saw some little gang bangers and a lot of pretty girls,” she says
one day three years into her new life, “and I was really
connected.”
Telling
the story and talking to the students about their lives seems to pull
Gutierrez up from her grief, at least temporarily. When she's working
with them, the wounds on her face seem the farthest thing from her
mind.
Read more about Caheri, violence prevention, and life in Oakland in Until You Bleed, at Amazon Kindle Singles. "Mesmerizing." -VisionHispana. "Gutierrez is an unforgettable subject." -San Francisco Chronicle
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