Writings from 11/02 to 3/05. |
12/10/02 I grew up in a single-mom household. I learned to be "the man of the house." I also learned never to ask for much; there wasn't much to choose from, growing up on welfare and food stamps. Saw my dad on occasion. I remember waiting for him when he'd never come, or when he was late, or when he stiffed us one Christmas, or on all the child-support court fights my mom would rail against him about. When I finally tired and left her to move in with him, it was at my stepmother's request and for all accounts, she's an angel. He was unimaginable. He sets examples still, to the day, and once in awhile I catch a glimpse of me as my father's son. Stereotypically. Homogenic and pasteurized. I never asked for that much., I just wanted a place within me that I could call my own. One where I would be the one to hold myself responsible for who I was to become. I didn't need a family tree and I sure didn't want genetics telling me the way things would be. If this is my life and he took no say before, then who is he now, being just a dad but not a father, to try to compromise anything I choose? Time and patience have eased into some forgiveness, but when I sit down and write in the big book that is my life, who am I sparing by leaving out the earnest details? I've got nothing to hide, dear dad; your past more checkered than mine. But this detail, obvious now more than ever, sticks out. The connotations of words, their meanings and they way they're said will always haunt me. The smallest lack of love ever shown, dad, forgetting child support, Christmases and uninvolvement, is in the way we look at each other, dad, my sharing namesake with the man who also shares the name that you refuse to have contact let alone final conflict with, is that you've never called me son. |