This documentary explores how a leather strap hanging on a peg behind a bedroom door for 18 years shaped a child's psychological development, demonstrating that visible symbols of discipline can create lasting internalized fear and control mechanisms that persist into adulthood, even after the physical object is removed. The narrative reveals that such objects become psychological anchors that children internalize, transforming external threats into internal alarm systems that affect behavior, self-perception, and relationships long after the original context has ended.
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The Strap Hung on a Peg for 18 Years (Amish Documentary)Added:
The strap hung on a peg behind my parents' bedroom door for 18 years. I walked past that door hundreds of times every morning, every night, every time I needed my mother's help with a button or a braid or a question I was too afraid to ask my father. The door was always slightly ajar in the daytime, just enough that you could see the edge of the peg, the curve of the leather, the way the strap hung straight down like a sleeping snake. It was made from an old horse harness. My father cut it himself before I was born.
He told me this once when I was seven, not as a warning or a threat, but as a fact, the same way he might tell me the barn was built in 1972.
That strap outlived three dogs, two barns, and my childhood. This is what it means to grow up with a piece of leather waiting for you. I want you to imagine a piece of furniture that is not furniture. A peg on a door. A leather strap. Nothing more. But that peg and that strap organized every single day of my life from the time I could walk until I was 26 years old. I knew where it was at every moment. When I woke up, it was there. When I went to bed, it was there.
When my parents went to town and I had the house to myself, I would stand in their bedroom doorway and stare at it. I never touched it. I was too afraid. But I looked.
I always looked.
It was the most honest thing in our house.
More honest than the prayers, more honest than the smiles at church. The strap never pretended to be anything other than what it was. My father did not hide the strap. That was important to him. He believed that a child should know that discipline was present even when it was not being used. He said it kept us honest.
And he was right. It kept us terrified.
But terror is not honesty. Terror is just terror wearing a mask of respect. I learned to walk quietly past that door.
I learned not to run because running would look guilty. I learned to keep my eyes straight ahead, but my peripheral vision always caught the leather.
Always. Even when I tried not to see it, I saw it. The strap was made from three layers of harness leather stitched together with heavy thread. My father showed it to me once when I was eight. He held it out flat on his palm.
"Feel the weight," he said. I touched it. It was heavier than I expected. The leather was smooth on one side from years of use, though at that point it had only been used for eight years, and rough on the other. The striking end was split into two tails. "That's from use," he said. "Not wear, use. A good strap breaks the skin less than a new one. The splits soften it." I did not understand what he meant. I nodded. Later, I understood completely. The peg itself was just a wooden peg, like the ones in the barn for hanging harnesses. My father had carved it himself. He had sanded it smooth and oiled it. It was not an afterthought. It was a deliberate piece of furniture. Everything about the strap's placement was intentional. It was not in the kitchen where guests might see it. It was not in the basement where it would be out of sight. It was behind the bedroom door because discipline, my father said, is private, between parent and child and between the child and God. But privacy is also a shield. Behind a closed bedroom door, there are no witnesses, and without witnesses, anything can be justified. I learned the geography of that door, the way the light hit the strap in the morning, gray and soft, the way it looked in the afternoon, black and sharp, the way it looked at night, just a darker shape against the dark wood. I could find it in the dark. I tested myself once. I was 12. I woke up in the middle of the night, walked to my parents' bedroom door, and reached out my hand. I found the peg. I found the strap. I did not take it down. I just touched it. Then I went back to bed. I never told anyone about that night. It felt like a secret between me and the leather. The strap knew I was afraid of it, and I knew it would never stop waiting. 18 years is a long time to live with an object that terrorizes you, longer than a marriage for some people, longer than a prison sentence for others. I was not in prison, but I was not free, either. That strap was my warden. It did not need locks or bars. It just needed to hang there, visible every day, reminding me that my body was not my own, that my will was dangerous, that love came with a leather tongue. Let me tell you about the first time I remember seeing the strap used. I was 4 years old. My older brother, Samuel, was 6. He had taken a cookie without asking. My mother told my father. My father called Samuel upstairs. I was sitting on the living room floor with a wooden puzzle. I heard the footsteps. I heard the bedroom door close. I heard the thud. One thud.
Samuel did not cry. A minute later, the door opened.
Samuel came downstairs, his face pale, and sat on the couch. He did not look at me. I did not know what had happened, not really, but I knew something had happened. And I knew that the thing on the peg had left the peg and come back.
That night, I dreamed about the strap.
In the dream, it was a snake. A black snake hanging from a tree branch. I was standing under the tree, looking up. The snake was not moving. It was just hanging there, watching me. I woke up crying. My mother came in and asked what was wrong. I said, "The snake." She said, "There are no snakes in your bed."
But she did not ask what snake. She knew. She always knew. By the time I was six, I had seen the strap used on Samuel four or five times. I had started to notice patterns. The strap came down on Sundays more than any other day. It came down for lying, for backtalk, for what my father called a proud look. It never came down for accidents.
Spilled milk was safe if you said sorry immediately. But if you tried to hide the spill, or if you blamed someone else, the strap would come off the peg.
The rule was confession before punishment, but confession did not prevent punishment. It only reduced the number of strokes. I learned to confess quickly. "I did it. I'm sorry. I was wrong."
I would say the words even before my mother finished telling my father. I thought if I confessed fast enough, maybe he would change his mind. He never changed his mind, but the strokes were fewer, three instead of five, four instead of six. That was mercy in our house.
Fewer welts was love. I believed that for a very long time. Before I begin, I want to be clear.
This story is inspired by real themes and experiences shared by former Amish community members. It is not a report of a specific real person, but a fictionalized narrative for educational and cultural understanding. The strap had a smell. I want you to know that.
Leather, sweat, oil, and something else.
Something metallic, like old pennies. I think it was blood. Not fresh blood, but the residue of years of small cuts where the split ends broke skin. The smell was strongest right after a punishment. My father would hang the strap back on its peg, and for an hour afterward, the whole bedroom smelled like that metal leather smell. I would hold my breath when I walked past. I did not want it in my nose, but it always found its way in.
When I was seven, I asked my mother why the strap had to hang where we could see it. She was washing dishes.
She did not turn around.
She said, "So you remember to behave." I said, "I would remember even if it was in a drawer." She was quiet for a moment.
Then she said, "Your father knows best."
That was the end of the conversation. I never asked again, but I thought about it constantly. I imagined the strap in a drawer, in the barn, in the trash. I imagined my father cutting it into pieces. I imagined burning it. These were my secret fantasies, the only rebellion I allowed myself. I would lie in bed at night and picture the strap turning to ash. And then I would feel guilty. Because the strap was God's tool, wasn't it? The rod of correction.
The gift of discipline. Wanting it gone was the same as wanting God's protection gone. So I prayed for forgiveness. Lord, help me accept the strap. Help me be grateful. I was 7 years old. Praying to love the thing that hurt me. That is what the peg and the strap did. They turned a child into her own jailer. The geography of our house was organized around that bedroom door. The door was at the top of the stairs. You could not go to the bathroom without passing it.
You could not go to the girls' bedroom without passing it. You could not go downstairs from the second floor without passing it. It was the gateway to everything. And the strap on the peg was the guardian of that gateway. Every time I walked past, I felt a small flutter in my chest. Not fear exactly.
Anticipation.
A low hum of alertness. Is today the day? Did I do something wrong? Will I be called? Most days, the answer was no.
Most days, I walked past without incident. But the possibility was always there. That is what sustained the strap's power. Not the frequency of its use. But the certainty that it could be used at any moment. My father did not need to punish me every day to control me. He just needed the strap to hang there. I controlled myself. I policed my own behavior. I confessed my own sins before anyone discovered them. I was a perfect child on the outside. And inside, I was a knot of fear and shame.
I remember one summer when the strap was not used for 6 weeks. 6 weeks of peace.
I started to relax.
I started to think maybe it was over.
Maybe my father had changed his mind.
Maybe the strap would just stay on its peg forever, a decoration, a relic.
Then, on a Sunday in August, I left my shoes in the yard. My father stepped on them in the dark.
He did not fall. He was not hurt, but he was angry. He called me upstairs. The strap came off the peg. I received four strokes. The welts lasted a week.
The message was clear. Peace is temporary. The strap is eternal. Do not forget. I did not forget. I never forgot again. My younger sister Anna was born when I was eight. She was a colicky baby. She cried constantly. One night, when she would not stop crying, my father came into the girls' bedroom. He did not have the strap. He just stood in the doorway and said, "If that baby does not stop crying, I will get the strap."
Anna was 4 months old. She could not understand words, but I understood. I picked her up and rocked her and whispered, "Shh, shh, please stop.
Please."
She kept crying. My father left.
He did not get the strap, but I never forgot that he had threatened it. A strap for a 4-month-old.
That is when I first realized that the strap was not about discipline. It was about control. And control does not care how old you are. When I was 10, a neighbor girl named Rachel came to our house with bruises on her arms. Not from a strap. From a broom handle. Her father had lost his temper. My mother saw the bruises.
She said nothing to Rachel, but that night I heard her whisper to my father, "Jonas went too far."
My father said, "It is not our place to judge another man's discipline."
My mother said, "A broom handle is not the rod."
My father was quiet for a long time.
Then he said, "I will speak with him." I do not know if my father ever spoke to Jonas. Nothing changed. Rachel continued to come to our house with bruises. And the strap stayed on its peg. The broom handle stayed in Jonas's kitchen. The silence stayed in all of us.
I started to notice things after that.
The way my father gripped the strap. Not tight, but firm. The way he would run his thumb along the split end before a punishment, testing it. The way he would sometimes pause mid punishment and say a short prayer under his breath, "Lord, give me wisdom." Not, "Lord, give me mercy." Wisdom. As if the only question was how hard to swing, not whether to swing at all. The strap was on its peg for 18 years. That means it was on its peg for 6,570 days. Approximately 1,000 Sundays. I was punished on maybe 200 of those Sundays.
200 times the strap came off the peg.
200 times I bent over the bed. 200 times I said, "Amen" to the prayer that followed. The other 6,370 days, the strap just hung there. But I lived every one of those 6,570 days as if the strap was already in my father's hand. That is the true weight of the peg. Not the days it fell. The days it waited. I want to describe the exact sound of the strap coming off the peg because it was a specific sound and I learned to recognize it from any room in the house. The peg was wooden, smooth from years of use.
The strap had a hole at the handle end that fit over the peg. When my father lifted the strap, the leather made a soft scraping sound against the wood.
And it is safe. Followed by the small thump of the peg settling back against the door. That sound was the overture.
After that, there was silence. Then footsteps. Then my name. I could hear that shhhk from the basement. From the yard.
From the barn. My ears were trained for it the way a deer's ears are trained for the snap of a twig. When I heard it, my stomach would drop. My mouth would go dry. I would stop whatever I was doing and wait.
Sometimes the footsteps would go past me.
Sometimes they would stop at my siblings' room. Sometimes they would come to me. The waiting was worse than the walking. The not knowing was worse than the knowing. One time, when I was 11, I heard the shhhk while I was doing dishes. I stood at the sink with my hands in the soapy water. I heard my father's footsteps.
He walked past the kitchen.
He went to the boys' Then I heard the thud of the strap.
Once.
Twice.
Three times. Four. Five.
Six.
Seven. I counted to 11. Then silence.
Then a long, low cry. Not loud, but broken. It was Samuel. He was 13. I stood at the sink and kept washing dishes. My hands were shaking. The water was hot. I did not stop. I could not stop. Stopping would mean admitting what I was hearing. And admitting would mean I had to do something. And there was nothing I could do. After that punishment, Samuel came downstairs. He walked past the kitchen without looking at me. I saw the back of his shirt.
There was a small dark spot near the hem. Blood. The split end had broken the skin. I went back to the dishes. I scrubbed a plate until my knuckles were white. I did not tell anyone about the blood. No one asked. The next day, the spot was gone. My mother had washed the shirt. The strap was back on its peg.
Everything was normal. But I was not normal. Something inside me had cracked that day. Not broken, cracked. A small fissure that let in a sliver of doubt.
This is not right. The thought was so foreign, so dangerous, that I pushed it down immediately. I buried it under chores and prayers and the endless repetition of daily life. But it did not die. It just waited, like the strap. The strap was not the only object of discipline in our district. Many families had paddles or switches. Some used a wooden spoon. One family used a razor strop, a wide leather belt used to sharpen straight razors. I saw it once.
It was thicker than our strap, stiffer.
I was grateful for our strap. That is how twisted my thinking was. I was grateful for the leather because it was not a razor strap. I was grateful for the splits because they reduced the risk of breaking skin, even though they still broke skin sometimes. I was grateful that my father did not use a broom handle like Jonas. I was grateful that he did not use his fists. I measured my safety against worse horrors and I called it mercy. That is what the peg and the strap taught me, to be grateful for the lesser evil, to thank God that I was not beaten more, to see love in the fact that I could still sit down after 3 days instead of 7. My gratitude was a cage and the strap was the key that locked it. I remember asking my grandmother once, when I was 12, about when she was a girl. She was old, nearly 70. She had grown up in a different Amish district, one even more conservative than ours. I asked her, "Did your father have a strap?"
She looked at me for a long time. Then she said, "He had a willow switch. He cut a fresh one every week."
I asked, "Did it hurt?"
She said, "It hurt enough." Then she changed the subject. I never heard her mention it again, but I noticed after that conversation that she flinched when my father raised his voice. She flinched and then smoothed her apron. Old habits.
The strap stays with you long after you stop being the one who bends over the bed. The strap hung on its peg for 18 years, but the peg itself was older. My father had carved it when he was a young man, before I was born, before he married my mother.
He had hung it on the door of his own childhood bedroom. The peg had belonged to his father and his father's father. I do not know how many generations that peg had been in our family. At least four. Probably more. When my father moved into the house he built for my mother, he took the peg with him. It was the only thing he took from his parents' house after they died. Not a Bible. Not a clock. A peg. I learned this when I was 14. My father was in a rare talkative mood. We were shelling peas on the back porch. He pointed to the bedroom window and said, "That peg has been in our family for over 100 years."
I said, "The strap." He said, "No, the peg. The strap gets replaced when it wears out, but the peg stays."
I asked him why the peg mattered. He looked at me like I had asked why the sky is blue. "Because it's where the strap belongs," he said. "A tool needs its place. If you don't have a place for discipline, you won't use it when you need it."
I nodded. I shelled another pea. Inside I was thinking, "The peg is older than the house. It has outlived children. It will outlive me." That thought became a kind of haunting. I would look at the peg and imagine all the children who had seen it before me. My father as a boy.
My grandfather.
My great-grandfather.
Each of them had walked past that same peg. Seen that same leather strap hanging in the same place. Each of them had heard the shhhhhk of the strap coming off. Each of them had bent over a bed or a chair or a hay bale. Each of them had learned to say amen to their own correction. The peg was a thread connecting generations of pain, and it was still there, smooth and solid, waiting for the next child. When I was 15, I had a dream about the peg. In the dream, the peg was not made of wood. It was made of bone, human bone, a finger bone, long and white, sticking out of the door. The strap hung from it. I woke up sweating. I could not look at the peg for a week without feeling sick, but I had to look. I passed it every day, so I trained myself not to see it. I looked at the floor when I walked past. I looked at the wall. I looked anywhere but at the peg and the strap. I became very good at not seeing. That is another thing the strap teaches you, how to make things invisible by refusing to look.
But, invisibility is not freedom. It is just denial with better posture. The strap was still there. The peg was still there. And one day, when I was 23 and married with a child of my own, I found myself standing in my own bedroom, holding a peg I had just carved. Jacob, my husband, was in the barn. He had asked me to carve a peg for the strap he had cut. I had done it. I had sanded it smooth. I had oiled it. And now I was holding it, and my hands were shaking because I knew what I was doing. I was continuing the line. I was hanging the strap for my own children. I did not hang it that day. I put the peg in a drawer. I told Jacob I had not finished carving it. He believed me. For 3 months, the strap lay on the top shelf of our bedroom closet, hidden. No peg, no daily reminder. But Jacob kept asking, "Where is the peg? We need to hang the strap where the children can see it. It keeps them honest." One night, I took the peg out of the drawer.
I sanded it one last time. I oiled it. I walked to the door and I hung it. Then I hung the strap. It looked exactly like my father's door. Exactly. I stood there and stared at it. Then I went to the kitchen and made supper. I did not cry.
I had forgotten how. That peg stayed on my door for 3 years. 3 years of watching my son walk past it. 3 years of hearing the shhh when Jacob took the strap down. 3 years of telling myself it was different because Jacob was gentler than my father. He was. But the peg was the same. The leather was the same. The theology was the same. And my son was learning the same lessons I had learned.
The peg was patient. It had outlived generations. It would outlive me unless I stopped it. I want to tell you about the Sunday I decided to take the peg down. Not the strap, the peg. The strap I could burn. The peg was different. The peg was the symbol of continuity. The strap could be replaced. A new strap was just a piece of leather. But the peg was the thing that said, "This belongs here.
This has always belonged here. This will always belong here." To take down the peg was to say, "No. The line ends with me." It was a Sunday afternoon. Jacob had taken the children to his parents' house. I stayed home with a headache, a lie, but a useful one. I stood in my bedroom and looked at the peg. The strap hung from it. I had not used it on my son yet. Jacob was the one who disciplined, but I had held it once.
Just once. I had taken it down to feel the weight. It was heavier than I remembered. Or maybe I was just weaker.
I had put it back. But that day, I did something different. I took the strap off the peg. I carried it to the wood stove. I opened the iron door. I fed the strap into the flames. It smoked.
It curled. It smelled like death.
I stood there until the last piece turned to ash. Then I went back to the bedroom. The peg was still there, empty.
I looked at it for a long time. Then I got a hammer from the barn. I put the claw of the hammer under the edge of the peg and pried. The wood creaked.
The peg was old. It had been in that door for years. But it came out. Slowly splintering, it came out. I held the peg in my hand. It was smooth on one side, rough on the back where it had been glued and nailed into the door. I turned it over. There were dark stains on the wood. Oil, sweat, something else? I did not want to know. I carried the peg to the wood stove. I opened the door. The fire was still hot from the strap. I threw the peg in. It did not burn quickly. It was solid wood, a hundred years old or more. It lay there smoking, turning black at the edges. I closed the stove door. I did not watch it burn. I could not. When Jacob came home, he noticed immediately the bedroom door looked wrong. Empty.
He said, "Where's the strap? Where's the peg?" I said, "I burned them." He stared at me. "You what?" "I burned them. The strap and the peg. Both."
He did not yell. He was not that kind of man. He just looked at me with something I had never seen before. Confusion, yes, but also fear. He asked, "Why?" I said, "Because I cannot watch our son learn to be afraid of a piece of leather."
Jacob said, "It's discipline. It's what we were raised with." I said, "I know.
That's why I burned it." That night, Jacob slept in the living room. The next morning, he went to the barn and cut a new strap. He carved a new peg. He hung them on the bedroom door while I was at the bakery. I came home and saw them.
The new strap was lighter in color, not yet darkened by oil and sweat. The new peg was rough, not yet smoothed by years of use. But they were there. The line had not ended. It had just taken a breath. I left 3 weeks later. I did not burn the new strap.
I did not take the new peg. I just packed a bag and walked to a payphone and called a number I had been saving for 2 years. I left my children behind.
I left Jacob behind. I left the new peg and the new strap behind because I could not burn them fast enough. They would just get replaced.
The only way to end the line was to leave the line entirely. The original peg, my father's peg, my grandfather's peg, was ash in a wood stove in a house I no longer lived in. But the new peg was still there. And somewhere, probably, Jacob has hung another strap on another peg. And my son walks past it every day. He is 10 years old now. I wonder if he has learned to hear the shhhhhk.
I wonder if he has learned to count stairs. I wonder if he has learned to go to the small quiet room in his mind. I wonder if he has learned to say amen to his own breaking. And I wonder if he will ever forgive me for leaving him there with a peg. Let me tell you about the first time I saw a door without a peg. I was 28, two years out of the community. I was at the home of an English friend, a woman named Carrie.
She had a small apartment. I needed to use her bathroom. I opened the bedroom door by accident. Wrong door, and saw her bedroom. White walls, a bed with a colorful quilt, a window with plants, and on the back of the door, nothing. No peg, no strap, no paddle, no reminder, just a plain wooden door. I stood there for a full minute, staring. Carrie came up behind me. "You okay?" I said, "Your door. It's empty." She looked confused.
"Yes? What's supposed to be there?" I did not know how to answer. I said, "Nothing. Nothing is supposed to be there." And I started to cry. I had not cried in years. But I cried then, because I had never seen a bedroom door that was not a threat. I had lived in the world for 28 years, and I had never once seen a door that was just a door.
Carrie did not understand.
She hugged me anyway. She said, "You're safe here. No one is going to hurt you."
I believed her, but my body did not. My body kept looking at the door, waiting for the strap to appear, waiting for the shhhhhk, waiting for footsteps, waiting for my name. The door was empty, but my mind had already filled it with a hundred years of leather. That was the moment I realized that the peg was not just on my father's door. It was in my head. I had internalized it. I had become my own peg, my own strap, my own door. Even in a safe place, I was waiting for punishment. Even when no one was angry, I was preparing to be hit. Even when I had done nothing wrong, I was confessing. The peg had outlived its physical form. It had moved inside me.
My therapist calls this introjection.
The voice of the abuser becomes your own voice. The threat becomes your own alarm system. The peg becomes a part of your internal architecture. You carry it with you everywhere. You cannot leave it in a wood stove. You have to burn it out of your mind, one Sunday at a time, one therapy session at a time, one small refusal at a time. I have been working on this for eight years. I am better than I was, but I still check doors.
When I go into someone's home, I glance at the back of every bedroom door. Not consciously, it's a reflex, a flick of the eyes, looking for the peg, looking for the strap. Most of the time, there is nothing, but sometimes, in older homes, there is a peg. Just a peg. No strap. Just a peg left over from a previous owner. And when I see that empty peg, my heart still jumps. Because the peg does not need the strap to be a threat. The peg is the threat. The peg is the promise that something could hang there. I have thought about going back to my parents' house. Not to see them, to see the door. To see if the peg is still there. To see if my father replaced the strap I never burned. His original strap, the one that hung for 18 years. I left it on its peg when I moved out at 26. I never burned it. I was too afraid. So, it is probably still there.
Still hanging.
Still waiting. My father is 70 now. He does not use it as often. But, it is there because the peg does not retire.
The peg outlasts everyone. One day, my father will die. My mother will die. The house will be sold or passed to one of my siblings. And someone will open that bedroom door and see the peg and the strap. Maybe they will leave it. Maybe they will take it down. Maybe they will burn it. I will not be there. I will not know. But, I will imagine it. I will imagine the sound of the peg being pried off the door. I will imagine the leather turning to ash. And I will whisper, "Finally.
Finally." Until then, I live with the peg in my head.
I am learning to ignore it.
Some days, I succeed. Other days, I hear the shhhhhk in a dream and wake up reaching for a quilt that is not there. But I am still here. I am still walking past doors. And every door I open that has no peg, no strap, no leather, every single one of them is a small victory. The peg does not own me anymore. It is just a piece of wood. And wood can burn. I want to tell you about the last time I saw my father. I was 26.
I had not left yet. That would come 3 months later, but I had already decided.
In my heart, I had already packed the bag. I just had not found the right Sunday. My father and I were alone in the barn. He was mending a harness. I was sweeping the aisle.
He said, out of nowhere, "You've been quiet lately." I said, "I've been thinking." He said, "Thinking about what?" I said, "About the strap." He stopped working. He looked at me. Not angry, curious. "What about it?" I said, "Do you ever wish you hadn't used it?"
He was quiet for a long time. Then he said, "No. I wish I had used it more." I stopped sweeping. "More?" He nodded.
"Not on you. On myself. On my own pride.
The strap is not just for children, Miriam. It's for all of us.
We all need our wills broken." I did not know what to say. I had expected regret.
I had expected apology. I had expected anything, but I wish I had used it more.
That was the moment I understood that my father was not going to change. Not because he was evil, because he was faithful. He genuinely believed that the strap was a gift from God. He genuinely believed that he had been too lenient.
He genuinely believed that more beatings would have made us better Christians.
And nothing I could say, no tear, no scar, no testimony, would ever convince him otherwise.
His theology was airtight. The peg was not a mistake. It was an altar. I finished sweeping. I put the broom away.
I walked back to the house. I passed the bedroom door. The strap hung on its peg.
I did not look at it. I did not need to look. I could feel it. That was the last time I saw my father before I left.
Three months later, I was gone. I did not say goodbye. I did not write a letter. I just left. Because saying goodbye would have meant explaining. And explaining would have meant hearing his prayer one more time. Thank you for this correction, Lord. Break her pride. I could not say amen to that again. Not even once more. After I left, I heard through my sister that my father had taken the strap down from the peg. Not because he stopped believing in it.
Because he was saving it.
Saving it for the next generation. He told my sister, "Miriam was weak. But her children will come back someday. And they will need the strap."
I do not have children in the community anymore. I left them with Jacob, but my father still hopes. He still keeps the strap on its peg. Waiting for grandchildren he has never met.
For a chance to continue the line. That is the horror of the peg. It is patient.
It does not get tired. It does not doubt. It just waits. And the people who believe in it do not stop believing.
They pray. They hope. They wait for the next child to bend over the bed. My father is 70, but he is not done. He will not be done until he is dead. And even then, someone else will take the peg. Someone else will hang a new strap.
The line only ends when someone refuses to hang it. I have a friend now, an ex-Mennonite woman named Ruth.
She left her community 10 years before I left mine. She has no children. She lives alone. She has a small house with three doors. None of them have pegs. I asked her once, "Did your parents have a strap?"
She said, "A wooden spoon hung by the stove." I asked, "Do you have a wooden spoon in your kitchen now?"
She smiled. "I have a plastic one. It's for cooking. And I keep it in a drawer."
That is what freedom looks like. A wooden spoon in a drawer. A drawer with no peg. A child who will never learn to count the stairs. I am not free yet. Not completely. But I am getting there.
Every time I walk past a bedroom door without flinching, I am getting there.
Every time I say no instead of amen, I am getting there. Every time I remember that I am 34 years old and no one can make me bend over a bed, I am getting there. The peg is still in my head, but it is loosening. One day it will fall out, and I will not put it back.
Let me tell you about the children who never saw the strap. They exist. Even in the old order Amish, there are families who do not use physical discipline. I did not know this as a child. I thought every family had a strap or a paddle or a switch. I thought it was universal, like prayer caps and horse-drawn buggies. It was not until I was 17 that I learned otherwise. A girl in my church district, Martha, told me that her parents had never hit her. Not once.
I did not believe her. I thought she was lying. She said, "My father says the rod in Proverbs means guidance, not hitting."
I had never heard anyone interpret the verse that way. It was like hearing that the sky was green. That conversation changed something in me. Not overnight, but slowly. Because if Martha's parents could raise her without the strap, then the strap was not a commandment. It was a choice. And if it was a choice, then my father had chosen to hit me.
He had not been commanded by God. He had decided. That was a dangerous thought.
It made my father responsible in a way that theology had protected him from. I pushed the thought away. I was not ready, but it came back. It always came back. Martha and I became friends. I visited her house sometimes. Her parents were kind. They had a peg on their bedroom door, but it held a hairbrush.
No strap. No paddle. Just a hairbrush.
The first time I saw it, I stared.
Martha laughed.
"It's just a hairbrush," she said. "I know," I said, but I did not know. I did not know how to be in a house where a peg was just a peg, where a bedroom door was just a door, where the only thing that hurt was stubbing your toe. I started to notice other differences.
When Martha's little brother spilled his milk, her mother said, "Oh, that's okay.
Let's clean it up." No report to the father. No waiting. No strap. Just a rag and a kind voice. I watched this happen three times. Each time, I waited for the punishment. It never came. The boy was 4 years old. He spilled milk.
His mother wiped it up. He went back to playing. That was it. That was the whole thing. I went home that night and lay in bed and stared at the ceiling. "It doesn't have to be this way." The thought was small, but it was loud. I did not leave the community because of Martha. I left because of my own son, years later. But Martha planted the seed. She showed me that the Amish faith did not require the strap. That the rod could be a metaphor. That a parent could obey God without owning a piece of leather. My father had chosen the strap.
Martha's father had chosen gentleness.
Both were Amish. Both were Old Order.
Both read the same Bible. The difference was not theology. The difference was a choice. I think about that often. The strap on its peg was not inevitable. It was not commanded from heaven. It was a decision made by a man who believed he was right. And that means other men could make a different decision. Other fathers could choose a different peg, or no peg at all. Other mothers could choose to wipe up spilled milk without reporting it. The cycle can be broken, not by burning a single strap, but by choosing every day to be a different kind of parent. Martha is still in the community. She is married now with four children. She does not use a strap. She told me in a letter, we write sometimes, even though I am shunned, she risks it, that her husband carved a peg, but she threw it away. The peg is the problem, she wrote. The strap is just leather.
The peg is the promise.
She is right. A strap without a peg is just a piece of leather. You can lose it. You can misplace it. You can forget about it. But a peg on a door is a permanent invitation. It says, hang something here.
Something heavy. Something that will remind them. I have a peg in my apartment now. It came with the door. I did not put it there. It is an old apartment built in the 1950s.
The peg is small, wooden, worn. It has probably held coats, hats, scarves.
Maybe a belt. Maybe nothing. I do not know. I look at it every day. It does not scare me anymore. It is just a peg.
I could hang a towel on it. I could hang a necklace. I could hang nothing. That is the difference.
The peg does not own me. I own the peg.
And one day, I might take it off the door. Or I might leave it there empty as a reminder that pegs are just wood. They are not promises. They are not threats.
They are just holes in a door filled with something that used to matter. I want to tell you about the last Sunday I spent in the community. I was 26.
I I had already decided to leave, but I had not told anyone. I went to church that morning like every other Sunday.
Three hours of hymns, prayers, a sermon about submission. The preacher talked about Abraham offering Isaac on the altar. He said, "Abraham loved his son, but he loved God more.
He was willing to sacrifice everything."
I sat in the women's section, my hands folded, my face blank. And I thought, "I am Isaac, and the strap is the knife, and no one is sending an angel to stop it." After church, the common meal. Cold cuts, bread, pickles, pie. I ate without tasting. My father sat at the men's table, laughing at something. My mother moved between tables, refilling pitchers. My siblings talked about the weather and the hay. Everything was normal. Everything was exactly as it had been for 26 years. And I sat there, looking at the bedroom door across the room. It was visible from the kitchen table, and I saw the strap on its peg.
The afternoon light made the leather look almost soft.
I thought, "That is the last time I will see it." That afternoon, I went for a walk. I walked to the edge of the field, to the drainage ditch where I had once thrown the strap before picking it up again. I did not have the strap with me.
It was still on its peg, but I stood at the ditch, and I said a prayer. Not the kind of prayer my father taught me, a different kind. I said, "God, if you are real, and if you are love, then help me leave.
Help me walk away from the peg. Help me walk away from the door. Help me walk away from everything I have ever known.
And if you are not real, help me anyway because I cannot stay here. No answer came, but I felt something. A loosening.
A small release. Like a peg being pried out of a door. I walked back to the house. I helped with supper. I put the children to bed. I lay awake until midnight. And then I got up and packed a bag. The next morning, Jacob left for work. The children were still asleep. I left the bag by the back door. I went to the bedroom. The strap was on its peg. I did not take it. I did not burn it. I just stood there for a moment. I said out loud, "You do not own me anymore."
Then I walked out. I did not look back.
I have never looked back at that door, but I have seen it in my dreams a hundred times. The peg. The strap. The afternoon light. The way the leather hung like a sleeping snake. In the eight years since I left, I have learned that the strap was never really about discipline. It was about control. It was about fear. It was about a father's need to be obeyed without question and a church's need to keep its children quiet. And a tradition's need to reproduce itself exactly generation after generation. The strap was the tool. The peg was the promise. And the promise was, "You will never be free."
But I am free. Not completely. Not perfectly. But free enough to tell this story.
Free enough to say the strap's name out loud. Free enough to walk past a bedroom door without flinching. Some days I miss the peg. Isn't that strange? I miss the certainty of it. The predictability.
The way I always knew where the threat was. The world outside is full of invisible dangers. Car accidents, cancer, heartbreak. The strap was visible. I could see it every day. I could prepare for it. There was a kind of safety in that. A twisted safety, but safety nonetheless. Now I have to live without that safety. I have to trust that the world will not hurt me. And sometimes the world does hurt me. But not with leather. Not with a prayer. Not with a closed bedroom door. I have not forgiven my father. I am not sure I ever will. But I have stopped waiting for him to apologize. He will not. He believes he did the right thing. He believes the peg was an altar. He believes the strap was love. And maybe in his own broken way it was. But love that requires a piece of leather is not love I want anymore. I want the kind of love that hangs nothing on the door. The kind of love that leaves the peg empty. The kind of love that says, "You are enough. You do not need to be broken."
I want to tell you about my son. He is 10 years old now. I have not seen him in 8 years. I left when he was two. He does not remember me. Or if he does, the memories are faint. A smell, a voice, a feeling. I have no pictures of him. The Amish do not allow photographs. I have only my memory of his face. Round, serious, with his father's eyes. I wonder if he has learned to count stairs. I wonder if he has learned to hear the shhh K. I wonder if he has learned to go to the small quiet room in his mind. I left him with the strap.
That is the part one cannot forgive myself for. Not the leaving. I had no choice. The community would not let me take him. But the leaving him with the strap. I knew what was on the peg. I knew Jacob would use it. And I walked out anyway. I tell myself that staying would have been worse. That if I had stayed, I would have become like my mother. Holding the door closed, saying nothing, becoming complicit. I believe that is true, but it does not make the guilt go away. The guilt is a peg inside my chest. It hangs there every day. When my son turns 18, he will be allowed to leave the community if he chooses.
He will be allowed to contact me. I have a letter waiting for him. I wrote it the day I left. I have rewritten it a dozen times. The latest version says, "I am sorry. I am sorry I left you. I am sorry I could not take you. I am sorry there is a strap on your father's door. I am sorry I did not burn it before I left. I hope you will forgive me, but you do not have to. You only have to know that I love you. Not with leather. Not with a prayer. Just with a mother's heart that has been broken for eight years.
I do not know if he will ever read that letter. I do not know if he will ever want to see me. He might hate me. He might think I abandoned him.
He might believe whatever Jacob has told him. That I was prideful. That I rejected God, that I chose the English world over my family. He might be right, but he might also understand. Someday, when he has children of his own, he might look at a bedroom door and decide.
He might hang a strap, or he might not.
That is his choice. I cannot make it for him. I can only hope. My daughter is 12 now. She was four when I left. I remember her laugh. It was high and quick, like a bird. I wonder if she still laughs like that. I wonder if the strap has taught her to be quiet. I wonder if she has learned to fold her hands and say amen. I wonder if she has learned to go to the small quiet room. I hope not. I hope she fights. I hope she screams. I hope she refuses to say amen.
I hope she is like Samuel, who would not break. But I do not know. I cannot know.
That is the silence of the shun. You are dead to them, and they are dead to you.
The peg is between you. There is an Amish saying, "Forgive and forget."
It is used to silence victims, to tell them that holding on to pain is pride.
But I have not forgotten. I remember every Sunday, every thud, every prayer, every time I walked past that door. And I do not want to forget. Forgetting would be another kind of betrayal.
Remembering is how I survived.
Remembering is how I make sure the peg does not win. I have started a journal.
I write down everything I remember. The smell of the leather, the sound of the shhhk, the weight of my father's hand on my shoulder. The way my mother's face looked when she held the door closed.
The taste of cold chicken after a punishment. The feeling of the quilt under my fingers. The count of the stairs. 12. I write it all down. Not for revenge. Not for publication. For my children.
Someday, if they come to me, I will give them the journal. I will say, "This is what I survived. This is what I left behind. This is what I could not save you from. I am sorry. I am sorry. I am sorry."
And then I will put the journal down.
And I will open a door. And there will be no peg. No strap. No leather. Just me and my children, if they come. And we will learn together what love looks like when it is not hanging on a door. The strap hung on a peg for 18 years. I walked past it thousands of times. I heard it come off the peg hundreds of times. I felt it land on my body dozens of times. And I said amen to the prayer that followed every single time. Until one Sunday, I stopped. I stopped saying amen. I stopped believing that love required leather. I stopped believing that a peg was a promise from God. I burned one strap. I pried one peg off one door. And then I left.
Not because I was strong. Because I was finally too tired to pretend that pain was holy. If you are watching this, and you still live in a house with a strap on a peg, hear me. You are not alone.
You are not crazy. You are not ungrateful. The confusion you feel, the way love and fear are tangled together in your chest, that is not your fault.
That is the peg. That is the strap. That is 300 years of silence. But silence can be broken. Pegs can be pried. Leather can burn. And you can walk out the door.
It might be behind the kitchen. It might be at the edge of a field. But it is there. Your life has always been yours, even when they told you otherwise. Go.
Walk past the door one last time and do not look back. My name is Miriam. This is the Amish Files {slash} Amish Truth.
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