Reflections Magazine Issue #71 - Spring 2010 | Page 10

Feature Article At age 11 and illiterate, children’s welfare workers finally rescued Milligan from his abusive environment. But the trauma of that experience lingered. A ward of the state, Milligan began a nomadic existence that included living with a combination of family, foster parents—even pastors—in his struggle for acceptance and a better life. After attending four high schools in as many years, Milligan managed to graduate—no small feat. However, even his own family didn’t believe he was college material. But Siena Heights was willing to give him the chance—maybe his only chance at the time. And he made the most of it, graduating with honors. Milligan now has a successful career, and last spring, his son also graduated with honors from SHU. “At the age of 11 it was very embarrassing to be reading this children’s book, so I would hide the book if I was reading it in the library,” he said. “When checking the book out, I would pretend it was for my youngest sister.” He spent most of the rest of that summer in the library desperately trying to catch up to children his age. “I had a thesaurus and a dictionary at my side and was forcing myself to look up the words and understand what they meant,” Milligan said. “At the end of the summer, my reading level was still far behind seventh-graders.” Another motivating factor was his involvement in athletics. He joined the junior high track team and experienced “a spirit of accomplishment I never felt before.” Learning the Basics “It was the first time in my life I was ever exposed to a library,” Milligan said. The first book he attempted to read was Dr. Seuss’ “Green Eggs and Ham.” He liked it because the pictures helped tell the story. 10 Reflections Spring ’10 After “squeaking by” junior high, Milligan entered high school barely able to read—but the fires of learning had been lit. Because of his unquenchable desire to learn and be accepted, Milligan said “something amazing happened.” “I was deprived of love and affection for the first 11 years of my life,” he said. “No one had an interest in what I did. When I raised my hand and I knew the answer and the teacher was very positive, that began to drive that craving for affection that I never had.” Although he can’t forget his past, he now uses it as an example of how anyone can overcome abuse and illiteracy to become a productive member of society. Unable to read, tell time—or even tie his own shoes—Milligan went to live with his eldest stepsister, who first introduced him to the idea of learning. “Something Amazing Happened” Calling his learning process “exponential,” Milligan said his grades went from Ds in junior high to As during the early years of high school as he experienced the positive reinforcement from his teachers. Learning was no longer a chore, but a passion. Last fall, after a nearly 10-year writing and editing process, he authored the book “A Beautiful World,” that detailed the abuses of his childhood. His triumph over his past has allowed Milligan to become a powerful advocate for child abuse prevention, and his message has even attracted the attention of national media. By the time state children’s welfare workers arrived and finally removed Milligan from his abusive surroundings, what they found was an 11-year-old boy who felt total isolation from the rest of the world. Emotionally scarred from years of physical and sexual cruelty, Milligan said he often felt “a feeling of dread” and even experienced what he called “hysterical paralysis” while trying to cope with what was being done to him. He called junior high a painful and humiliating time, with Milligan barely clinging to a D average while trying to hide his deficiencies from the rest of his classmates. He remembers spending eight hours trying to solve just one algebra problem. Despite his struggles, that determination and development of “severe study habits” would pay dividends later. “When I raised my hand and I knew the answer and the teacher was very positive, that began to drive that craving for affection that I never had.” “Just like academics, the more praise I received, the harder I tried and the harder I trained,” said Milligan, who eventually made the high school varsity track team. “Literally, it was just the absolute craving to be accepted. At the core was the need to be normal. I was abnormal, and I knew it. The elation I felt when I was treated like all the other kids was by far the greatest compliment I got because it was normal. I just wanted to be accepted.”