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Running Away to Home

I came to Charlotte to outrun my old life, but it caught up with me. And I’m so glad it did

Logan Cyrus

There was not a speck of Carolina blue in the sky the day Charlotte truly became my home, eight years and one month after moving here from West Virginia. It was not the type of weather that drives people south. No, June 17, 2009, was dreary, muggy, and overcast.

It was the day my daughter, Conley, was born. She was born at CMC-Pineville, three weeks early, and by C-section because, in a trait that she comes by naturally, she stubbornly refused to abandon her breech position.

That day, my husband, Tony, and I met at my gynecologist’s office for what had become weekly pregnancy check-ups. My blood pressure suddenly spiked and my doctor sent me to the hospital.

CMC-Pineville is less than ten minutes from my doctor’s office, and it is off the same exit as our house. I was calm. However, my husband was in a complete lather. His nervous energy and protective manner were charming and endearing, but I was very thankful that we had driven separately and I had a few minutes alone in the car. As I pulled into the maternity parking area, despite the noise from the hospital expansion construction, an almost palpable feeling of home washed over me.

 

I arrived in Charlotte in May 2001—as a runaway. I had run away from West Virginia and the shame that had been the foundation of my life there. I wanted to go where no one knew my story. I wanted to blend in.

With an impossible-to-pronounce maiden name, Yokosuk, coupled with a first name that requires constant explanation in my distinctive Appalachian accent—“Oh, it’s not Sasha, it’s Sosha, like ‘so what’”—it was difficult to be like everyone else. When your name alone prompts intrigue, blending in is not exactly easy.

Who I was is as complicated and as difficult as my maiden name, which was also my mother’s maiden name. My mother, Starr, was a beautiful, blond teenager when she became pregnant with me. My biological father, Steve, was a cocky, long-haired juvenile delinquent.

In an attempt to provide a better life for me, Starr claimed that I belonged to her “cover” boyfriend, a young man from a respectable family. They were married shortly after I was born.

She would divorce him within three years, marry and divorce a Hell’s Angel the following year, and finally, she and Steve married at the courthouse when I was seven. Upon learning of the nuptials, my grandfather yelled, “I should have had him shot like a mangy dog years ago.”

My grandfather, Mike “Skomie” Yokosuk, owned a small, dingy bar on the main street of the once-bustling coal town of Welch, West Virginia. The bar was a front for his real business: He was a bookie. My grandmother, Wanda Conley Yokosuk, was one of thirteen children born to a hard-drinking Irish immigrant and a loving, nurturing farm girl. She was strikingly beautiful and very fashion-forward. I thought that she lived on coffee, toast, and Lucky Strikes.

The bar’s windows were always covered in a thick layer of dirt. I once asked, “Granddad, why are the windows always so dirty? I can’t see outside.”

My grandfather replied, “Sosha, what happens in our bar is not for everyone to know.”

Between marriages my mom and I always lived with my grandparents. The dirty-window rule carried over to our home life, too.  

Our kitchen table often contained large brown paper bags full of cash, payment from my granddad’s clients. The bags of cash were never to be talked about outside of our apartment. I aspired to please everyone, followed the rules, and I kept my mouth shut.

For the most part, Steve and Starr did not hold normal jobs. They collected welfare and scammed doctors out of prescription painkillers. They often took me with them on their “doc runs.” My mouth stayed firmly shut during the many hours I spent flipping through tattered Highlights magazines and sitting in the uncomfortable chairs of doctors’ waiting rooms.

Once they filled the “scripts,” they would crush and snort a few of the pills, pocket a few more for later, and then we were off on the “money run.” My teachers never knew that I often completed my homework in the backseat of our beat-up Chevy Nova, waiting on them as they hustled pills in desolate hollows and the HUD-funded apartment complexes that dotted southern West Virginia.

Over seven years my parents’ addiction to prescription pills escalated until the day DEA agents busted into my grandmother’s apartment, a quarter of a mile from my high school, with their guns drawn. They arrested my mother as she held my two-year-old brother, Zack, who was clothed only in a diaper, on her hip. My sister, Angie, just home from kindergarten, screamed and sobbed as she watched agents handcuff our mother and speed away with her in an unmarked patrol car.

Both of my parents were sent to federal prison for buying large quantities of the powerful painkiller Dilaudid, “drugstore heroin,” from a confidential informant. To buy the drugs, they used money from a settlement that Steve received after his right hand was mangled and rendered useless when he was a deckhand on a commercial fishing boat—a rare attempt at a legitimate job.

After the arrests, the federal government seized the rest of the money, more than $500,000. My grandmother adopted my sister, brother, and me. Our grandfather had died a couple of years earlier.

Gran became involved in a strict, fringe religion, and she insisted that we adhere to stringent rules, some of which included not celebrating holidays, attending services three times a week, and knocking on stranger’s doors on Saturday mornings to share God’s word. Rather than going to college, we were encouraged to dedicate our lives after high school to spreading the message of God.

Not only were my parents in prison, ours was the only house in the neighborhood without Christmas decorations. It was as if my family couldn’t find enough ways to stand out—in the worst possible ways. I have tremendous respect for Gran and her beliefs, but they weren’t for me. I just wanted to be normal.

So I embarked on the most wholesome rebellion in the history of rebellions. I got an after-school job at a pizza place to keep from going to the services and studied hard. I got a scholarship to West Virginia University. Gran would have preferred that I not go, but she did not stop me.

During my freshman year at WVU, I met Tony, well, actually I met Tony again. We had been friends in elementary school. In college, we fell in love and dated. After graduating and working some entry-level jobs around Morgantown, we decided to move. We wanted more opportunities and less snow.

We wanted an up-and-coming city with plenty of job opportunities and southern manners. We had visited Charlotte a couple of times during college, and we both liked it.  We did little research on the city. We just went with our guts.

We signed a lease for an apartment off of Park Road, packed up our townhouse, and moved 400 miles south. We had a whopping $3,000 in savings and no jobs. We were too young and too stupid to know any better. Fortunately, our instincts paid off.

We found jobs that we loved, and we took advantage of all that our bustling, vibrant new city had to offer. We held hands as we walked around Freedom Park; we ordered chicken and tater tots from Price’s Chicken Coop; we went to bars, concerts, and Checkers’ games. We picked our favorite NASCAR drivers. We cheered for the Panthers.

We loved Charlotte, but it was as if we were on an extended vacation. We appreciated our surroundings and enjoyed all of the fun activities, but we didn’t have the connections for it to feel like home. For years, when asked where we were from, we said West Virginia. I still didn’t belong anywhere.

 

We invite your responses and discussion. Please refrain from personal attacks, profanity, commercial promotion, or non sequiturs.

Reader Comments:
Old to new | New to old
Jun 25, 2012 12:03 pm
 Posted by  hayden1222

You should never EVER hide from your life. You are the definition of lemons into lemonade, finding the silver lining and proving that you are more than where you come from. Keep talking.

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Jun 28, 2012 11:26 am
 Posted by  NikkiC

Wonderful story about finding yourself and embracing the events that have made you who you are!

Jun 28, 2012 04:15 pm
 Posted by  LynnLK

Sosha has always been an inspiration to me and to those who have known her and watched her grow into the woman she is now. Thank you, Charlotte Magazine, for sharing her story, so it can serve to inspire and help others!

Jul 9, 2012 06:54 pm
 Posted by  DM4DOGS

If it weren't for Steve & Starr, you wouldn't be Sosha. Keep up the great work. There are more of "us" out here than "them".

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