Wednesday, 2 October 2024

Ruby reviews White Butterfly by Saoirse Prendergast

 


An extremely moving story of bereavement, coercive control and redemption.

You can’t get much more vulnerable than a young girl who believes she has failed to prevent a beloved parent’s death. White Butterfly’s depiction of a person who would then exploit such an innocent and damaged young woman is totally believable and at the same time someone you hope wouldn’t appear in real life – but they do. The media is more and more frequently reporting cases where partners have suffered long-term psychological abuse at the hands of their loved ones. The insidious nature of the abuser’s method is creeping and horrific. The bruises are on the inside. As a beacon of hope, society is becoming more aware of these dangers and help is at hand for those who can see past the gaslighting and take that extremely difficult step out of an abusive relationship.

Spoiler alert! I have to disclose some aspects of the story in order to express my opinions as a reader. If you’re happy with that then read on. Else just read White Butterfly and live Sakura’s life.

Sakura, the main character, finds herself in just the situation I described above. After the birth of their daughter, things get even more difficult. Her partner, Chris, is older, handsome, confident, a successful businessman, in control of the finances, in control of everything. She’s young, innocent and totally vulnerable. He’s a masterclass in gaslighting, a term which I didn’t really fully understand until I read this book.

As reader I came up for air when Sakura went to the women’s shelter. I was at the point of not being able to take any more of Chris, worrying that he would move on to physical abuse. In the shelter, Olivia’s support for Sakura is a lifebelt in a threatening sea of despair and it really is wonderful to see Sakura come through everything, gradually realising that not just she, but friends and family too, might and do struggle to cope with how to handle a bereavement & abuse situation like this. But the way the justice system subsequently treats Sakura in her legal dealings with the father of her child is effectively a form of institutional abuse, and today’s society should reconsider the lack of compassion embedded in how the courts operate and the strategies that the legal eagles employ.

The real awakening for Sakura herself is when she realises that, at some time in the future, she will come to appreciate / regret / be able to make use of / have to come to terms with something that is happening in the now. Partly that’s her growing as a person, without the coercion that has hindered her development. Mainly it’s the knowledge and wisdom imparted by those who help her, once she manages to escape Chris’s grasp.

It was an eye-opener for me to realise that friends and family of abuse victims might have trouble understanding and reconciling themselves to the abuse having occurred “on their watch.” They might then not be able to behave towards the victim in the best and required way for healing the situation. In hindsight, I’ve seen this in the friends and family of separated couples in the real world. They often unwittingly attach blame to the victim. Sakura finds herself not understood by those she thought were the good guys, and she can’t help but judge them for that, even though she understands why they’re behaving so. That’s her own fallible human nature. At the end of the day, this situation can have more than one victim. It takes some time for everyone to mature into the new world of freedom and to cast off the malign influence of the manipulative abuser.

I need to give special mention to Sakura’s love of horses, which is the anchor throughout her troubles. Tye, the stables owner, is a rock. The complete antithesis of Chris. Several times I thought Tye and Sakura might get together. In the future maybe, who knows?

One final takeaway for me from this book. In the cold light of day, when one partner in a relationship is stronger than the other – through age, experience, confidence or character – the stronger person really needs to be aware of the situation and ensure that they don’t behave in a coercive manner. Generations gone by have lived lifetimes being bent to the will of someone they believe loved them. Now it’s time for that to stop.

White Butterfly by Saoirse Prendergast is available on Amazon UK, dot com etc.