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Woman Married Her Father

Lewis

Member
Secret revealed: Ohio woman unknowingly married father



updated 10:50 PM EDT, Fri September 21, 2012



It was a dark secret. The kind that destroys lives, devastates families and decimates faith. Nobody shared it with Valerie Spruill while her husband was alive. For years after his death, she heard bits of the story. It was something about an absentee father, something about her husband.


None of it made sense, she said. That's not until her uncle finally told her what no one else had: She had unknowingly married the father she never knew.
"It is devastating. It can destroy you," Spruill told CNN late Thursday by telephone. "It almost did."
Spruill, 60, of Doylestown, Ohio, went public with her story this month, first published in the Akron Beacon Journal, with the hopes that it would help others facing what seem like insurmountable problems.
It's a story that has gone viral, attracting attention as faraway as Australia and India where the questions are always the same, she says: How could that happen?


WCPO: How a woman unwittingly married her father
It's a question that Spruill said she has been grappling with since she first learned the truth in 2004, six years after her husband Percy Spruill died.
"I don't know if he ever knew or not. That conversation didn't come up," she said. "I think if he did know, there is no way he could have told me."
She confirmed that her husband was indeed her father through a DNA test, hair taken from one of his brushes.
The aftermath of the secret was devastating emotionally -- and physically, Spruill suffered two strokes and was diagnosed with diabetes.


All of it, she believes was brought on by learning the family secret.
"Pain and stress will kill, and I had to release my stress," Spruill said. "I'm just telling the story to release my pain."
She has a deep, abiding faith in God, who she believes has guided her through the experience -- and others that have shaped her life.
"You have to have faith," she said. "If God brought me this far, he's not going to leave me now."
Spruill met and married her husband-father in Akron and settled in Doylestown, a working class suburb of about 2,300.


It was her second marriage. Spruill was a nice man, a good provider. He was kind to her three children from her previous marriage.
"We had a good life," she said.
She initially struggled with anger, with hating Spruill for what happened.
But therapy taught her what happened wasn't her fault. Her faith taught her to forgive.
Initial response to her story has been mixed: "More positive than negative," she says.


In recent days, she has been in contact with a couple who found out after they were married that they were brother and sister.
They told her, she said, that her story is helping them deal with their own experience.
"They are trying to be friends now," Spruill said.
Others, though, have been less kind.
"They've said things like 'Some secrets should stay secrets,'" she said. "I can't do anything about what they think. I just know what I think. God is always mighty, and he teaches you to tell the truth no matter what."


Spruill knows not everybody tells the truth. It's a lesson she learned as a child the hard way.
By all accounts, Spruill's mother got pregnant as a teenager while dating her then 15-year-old father.
She was 3-months-old when she was sent to live with her grandmother and grandfather, who she initially believed as she grew up was her father.
Spruill said at about age 8 or 9, she discovered that the woman who often visited the house was not a family friend but her mother.


But nobody, she said, talked about her father.
There's nobody left to give her the answers about her husband-father. Her mother, Christine, died in 1984. Her grandparents have long since passed. So, too, have a number of Percy Spruill's relatives.
Spruill knows her mother worked as a prostitute and even got caught up in the 1980 high-profile corruption scandal surrounding James Barbuto, a probate judge who was convicted of intimidating investigators and gross sexual imposition for attacking a courthouse clerk in his chambers.


"My mother showed me lots of love. All said and done, I have no regrets in my life at all," she said.
She believes she has siblings or half-siblings from Spruill's previous relationships, including the one with her mother.
She said she wants to find them and let them know they are not alone.
Spruill, herself, has three children and eight grandchildren. She struggled with telling her children that the man they believed was their step-father was their grandfather.


A therapist "advised me to tell my kids," she said. "I told them about two years ago. They are remarkable. They are handling it better than I am."
In recent days, shortly before the news broke, she also told her grandchildren.
"They have been so supportive. They are telling me they love me, telling me they will do whatever I need," she said.
In her spare time, since retiring from the accounting department where she worked for 34 years at Goodyear, she has been writing down her story with the hopes of publishing it.


"I thank God that he gave me a chance to live through all of this," she said. "It is nothing short of a miracle that I'm still here. I want people to know that they can survive something like this."
 
She would have been better off never finding that out.
I don't know about that, this is a hard one, a very, very hard one. It is a wonder tha t she is not on drugs and alcohol over finding that out. Finding something like that out is enough to make you go crazy. She will carry this hurt to her grave for sure.
 
Well, that should put the fear of God into any woman who thinks it's OK and normal to marry any man that much older (when the other way around is considered abnormal at best). After all, even if it was not her father, it would be someone's father, and she would be like someone's daughter. How comfortable do you think that the father-in-law might even be younger than the husband?

Probably as a rule of thumb I'd say the age difference should not be more than an older brother-younger sister or older sister-younger brother in a relatively normal spread of 2 -3 sibling family (as opposed to someone who had 8 kids through their lives and spread them apart say, 20-25 years). From the pragmatic end of things, if one marries too great of an age difference, at the very least they come from two different generations and backgrounds and oftentimes have a different, and sometime conflicting, view of things.
 
Well, that should put the fear of God into any woman who thinks it's OK and normal to marry any man that much older (when the other way around is considered abnormal at best). After all, even if it was not her father, it would be someone's father, and she would be like someone's daughter. How comfortable do you think that the father-in-law might even be younger than the husband?

Probably as a rule of thumb I'd say the age difference should not be more than an older brother-younger sister or older sister-younger brother in a relatively normal spread of 2 -3 sibling family (as opposed to someone who had 8 kids through their lives and spread them apart say, 20-25 years). From the pragmatic end of things, if one marries too great of an age difference, at the very least they come from two different generations and backgrounds and oftentimes have a different, and sometime conflicting, view of things.

dna tests should be required again. that said. my wife is old enough to be my mother.my grandfather married his wife whom was 20 years younger. i asked why the gap. he said death in child birth was common and it was encouraged in the 1920's to marry women that young while you were that old.
 
Well, that should put the fear of God into any woman who thinks it's OK and normal to marry any man that much older (when the other way around is considered abnormal at best). After all, even if it was not her father, it would be someone's father, and she would be like someone's daughter. How comfortable do you think that the father-in-law might even be younger than the husband?

Probably as a rule of thumb I'd say the age difference should not be more than an older brother-younger sister or older sister-younger brother in a relatively normal spread of 2 -3 sibling family (as opposed to someone who had 8 kids through their lives and spread them apart say, 20-25 years). From the pragmatic end of things, if one marries too great of an age difference, at the very least they come from two different generations and backgrounds and oftentimes have a different, and sometime conflicting, view of things.

While that is a good point, my parents are more than 15 years apart in age in age--my step-dad is in his early 60's, old enough to be my grandfather--and I can't bring myself to think that their marriage is wrong.
I definitely agree with a DNA test, though.
 
I don't know about that, this is a hard one, a very, very hard one. It is a wonder tha t she is not on drugs and alcohol over finding that out. Finding something like that out is enough to make you go crazy. She will carry this hurt to her grave for sure.

You are so right Lewis. I just don't know how I would have handle that.:sad
 
Woman meets man:

Man: "I had a baby once. She would be exactly your age and she would look like you. But, she was put up for adoption."

Woman: "I was adopted."

Man: "How 'bout them Yankees?"

Good man? I don't think so. The woman knew, too. That's why she had the DNA test.
 
She was in touch with a Brother and Sister who married and did not find out until after. And as far as the age goes, it is normal for older men to marry younger women, and it has always been that way from Bible time up to now.
 
While that is a good point, my parents are more than 15 years apart in age in age--my step-dad is in his early 60's, old enough to be my grandfather--and I can't bring myself to think that their marriage is wrong.
I definitely agree with a DNA test, though.

Well, 15 years is on the border end of what I said, but still more in the sibling range as 15 years old is generally not old enough to be a parent. I'm thinking over 20 years for sure, though. I'm 53. What would I want with someone under 33? I'd be thinking that such a woman would look nice --- for my kids! :lol
 
Well, that should put the fear of God into any woman who thinks it's OK and normal to marry any man that much older (when the other way around is considered abnormal at best). After all, even if it was not her father, it would be someone's father, and she would be like someone's daughter. How comfortable do you think that the father-in-law might even be younger than the husband?

Probably as a rule of thumb I'd say the age difference should not be more than an older brother-younger sister or older sister-younger brother in a relatively normal spread of 2 -3 sibling family (as opposed to someone who had 8 kids through their lives and spread them apart say, 20-25 years). From the pragmatic end of things, if one marries too great of an age difference, at the very least they come from two different generations and backgrounds and oftentimes have a different, and sometime conflicting, view of things.
"""""""""""""""HUH""""""""""""""":confused
 
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