Father’s Day
June is always a difficult time for me.
Father’s Day usually falls on the third Sunday of the month. I dread this particular day. I’ve never had a great relationship with my dad and this Father’s Day will mark almost six years since I last laid eyes on him.
My brother has been insisting for months now, that more than enough time has passed and that I and I alone will have to make the effort to “break the silence”. I respond to his haranguing by telling him, “Why bother? I don’t have a father”.
I’ve felt that way for years.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It’s Sunday, June 17th.
I woke up at 3:15 that morning after a less than restful night. Even trying to sleep at that point would’ve been a farce, so I sat up in bed and thought about Father’s Day. What would it hurt to visit my dad? Why not? It would be easy enough to make the effort to visit with the man who, as my mother always said, “was merely present for my conception”. That’s the role he always played; a part well cast by rage and bitterness.
I made the long drive to the country. It was pleasant—more so than I remembered. Daddy always liked it here. When he was younger, he loved being outdoors, especially in this part of South Texas. I also spent some time here growing up. Michael and I loved playing in the barn and swimming in the river. I’d have to agree with my father; there was something about this land. Gently, rolling hills. Rich farm land as far as the eye could see. Pine trees dotted the landscape. It was nice. Quiet. Peaceful. I was stressing over having to visit my father, but the sheer tranquility of the countryside was having an amazing effect on me. I was starting to relax.
I drove up to the gate which leads to his property. I remembered it being larger for some reason. It was locked, as usual, but Dad always said we should come right in. The combination was easy to remember…. it was Michael’s birthday. Never underestimate the relationship between a father and his only son. I got back in the car and drove over the iron cattle guard; it had a jarring effect on my car. I’d forgotten how that felt.
Memories.
I parked the car, got out and walked over to him. Would he recognize me? Would he know I’d even stopped by?
I started the conversation immediately.
” Hello Daddy. I know it’s been a while since I was last here to see you. I guess an apology is in order, but things have been crazy at home.”
I was talking fast, hoping to avoid any awkward silence.
“You remember Robert, don’t you? Well, he was just promoted to partner in his firm and the kids are growing like weeds.”
I reached for my my purse; I was going to show him pictures, but thought against it. He was never close to his grandchildren.
“Teddy reminds me of you, Daddy. He has your hazel eyes and your love of fishing. In fact, he and Robert went out in the Gulf a few weeks ago and they caught seven huge Red Snapper. And Kate is my baby. You last saw her when she was five. Well, believe it or not, she’ll be 12 in October and in seventh grade next year. Daddy, she’s so pretty and so smart. She made all “A’s” last semester. Sometimes, I wonder if she’s really my daughter!”
I chuckled.
Silence.
The wind blew my hair in my face. I brushed it away and decided to plow through our conversation.
“I suppose you’re wondering why I’m here today after all these years. Well, it’s Father’s Day and I felt I should be here. I felt that I had to make the effort”.
I looked down and kicked a few stones with the toe of my shoe. I could feel emotions welling up inside me.
I took a deep breath.
“Daddy, I’m also here because I can’t deal with this any longer. There’s so much I don’t understand. I need to know why you left the family. I want to know why you left me! I’ve always wanted to know the answer to that question. I wish you’d answer it now”.”
My voice was cracking and tears were beginning to sting my eyes.
“I was just 11 when you walked out and I didn’t understand the dynamics of marriage or divorce, for that matter. All I knew was that you left. You walked out one night without an explanation or telling me goodbye. Do you have any idea what that did to me? The precedent that set?”
I looked away, not wanting my tears to tell my story. The sun broke through the clouds and there we were, bathed in the warm Texas sunlight.
I took another deep breath. “Daddy, I believed for years that men leave and that love is expendable. If you get bored with your marriage or if you fall out of love, no biggie, just leave..exit. To hell with making the effort or fixing the problem, just go out and find a newer, younger, thinner model. Find a new family, too. See Daddy, I learned all of this from you! I learned that men leave and when they do, they leave broken people in their wake. I was broken for years. I never knew how to love. Daddy, I never knew how to be loved, either! It was horrible. I naturally assumed that my boyfriends were going to leave me because that’s what boyfriends do. Almost every one of them walked out because I pushed them out. It was a pre-emptive strike, I suppose. I’d leave them emotionally. I’d zone out. That made things easier to deal with when they physically left. And they always left”.
I decided to sit down on nearby bench. The breeze was blowing through the pine trees. It created a hum…an odd discord actually that somehow, seemed fitting.
Discord had always been the soundtrack of my life with my father.
I wiped away another tear.
“Life, post divorce, was was so hard for us, Daddy. It was a struggle in every way, but your absence was what hurt the most. I wanted you to be there when I got braces, when I had my first date…the proms. My graduation. I would’ve loved to have talked to you about the time Jake Shelton broke my heart in eighth grade, but you weren’t around. I hated that you weren’t there. But then again, you missed all of those things, too. And don’t even get me started about college! It was horrible and so were my twenties. What a waste!. I got involved in all these lousy, dead end relationships. All were abusive in so many ways. I drank too much….did everything too much. But I guess I can’t completely blame you for my screwed up life. Your leaving was probably impetus for everything evil in my life, but no one put a gun to my head, either. I chose to live a wild life because running wild was easier than being responsible. Then again, you know a little about bucking responsibility don’t you, Dad? Your lack of it constantly forced me to remind myself that I had a father!”
I choked back a sob and replaced it with anger.
“Allow me to break down what life was like for Mom, Michael and me after you left. “
I was getting agitated.
“We had no money and moved from that five bedroom home into a cramped two bedroom apartment. Mom practically lost her mind. She’d never worked before. She was the wife of a successful businessman, she never had to work. You never wanted her to. She was 39 years old when you left and she had nowhere to go and no money to take her there. She took menial job after menial job trying to support two children. She’d cry for hours sometimes, never leaving her room, except to retrieve another bottle of Vodka. God Daddy, back then, I always thought Mom was such a silly, spineless woman because she wasn’t handling the reality of your leaving very well. I would always say to her, “Come on, Mom. He left and he’s not coming back! Get your shit together!” I had no idea what she was going through; I didn’t know hard her life really was until I lived it myself after Joe left me”.
A large truck with a broken muffler drove by and broke my concentration. Another breeze blew a strong whiff of the truck’s exhaust in our direction. It was odd how that mixed with the scent of some nearby flowers. I breathed in both and realized that life–especially my life–would always be like that; both sweet and acrid and often, at the same time.
I kept my head down.
“Did you ever know why Joe and I broke up? You probably don’t, I never told anyone the real reason. History repeated itself, Daddy. Like you, he cheated on me. With a woman who worked in his building. According to Joe, she was everything I stopped being—thin, young, sexual and apparently, she was willing to put up with his shit. Imagine, that’s what he liked about her. Her tolerance? Well, by telling me that, he was damn sure right about one thing…she definitely did things I wouldn’t do! I wouldn’t put up with his crap. I kicked him out of the house the night he told me that. I wasn’t going to give him the satisfaction of leaving on his own accord. In the end my defiance didn’t matter. He had the last laugh, I suppose. The bastard married her the day our divorce was final”.
I shifted my weight on the bench and continued the one-sided conversation.
“Men break your heart and Daddy, you broke mine. No two ways about it. When you walked out that door, I stopped feeling safe. In some ways, I still don’t. It didn’t help that you wanted nothing to do with me or Michael after you remarried”.
I brushed my hair out of my eyes then folded my arms across my chest. Suddenly, a bright, sunny June morning in South Texas, turned cold.
“Christmas after Christmas went by. Thanksgiving and Easter did too and we never heard from you. For my 14th birthday, all I wanted was a picture of you because I’d forgotten what you looked like. Of course, Mom didn’t have one to give me. She ceremoniously burned everything you left behind, including pictures and her wedding dress. She put everything into a metal barrel, doused it with lighter fluid and lit a match. You, your memory and all your stuff went up in a ball of fire that really, was fueled more by anger, than anything else. We roasted wieners over the flames. Mother called it her “rebirth”; a second baptism, this one by fire. I understood the symbolism involved and felt if that helped her move on, great. But for years after that, every hot dog I ate–regardless–tasted like burned taffeta”.
I winced at the memory.
The only response was the breeze rustling through the pines.
I took a deep breath and looked around me.
“Well Daddy, the kids want to take Robert to brunch this afternoon and I’ve got get back into town for that”.
I sat there and felt weighed down by my emotions.
“But I’m glad I came here today. I think we both needed this, at least, I know I did”.
And that’s when I lost it. Admitting that released a floodgate of emotion. I started sobbing.
“Being here makes me realize how much I miss you, but I do! I miss you. It wasn’t that I couldn’t forgive you–I did–years ago. I just couldn’t forgive myself for thinking that I hated you as much as I did, but in reality, I never hated you, Daddy. I just didn’t understand. And no one bothered to explain. Mother made the fatal mistake of talking so badly about you in front of Michael and me. We heard about what a bastard you were day in and day out! She negated our existence by damning you and in our minds, that made you the enemy. To hear Mom wax about what happened, it was as if you stole her money, her youth and her dignity. It was as though you all but murdered her. But in some ways maybe, you did. You killed her spirit, anyway”.
I shook my head.
“Even so, I’m mad at Mom too, because for the longest time, she knew I thought I was the reason you left and she never made any attempt to correct it. Why did she do that? She let me think it was all my fault. I agonized over this. I thought if I would have made all A’s or if I would’ve won all my tennis matches or cleaned my room better, you would’ve stayed. The little girl that still lives in the woman I’ve become is only now beginning to fully grapple with everything. I mean, can you blame me? You represented my very first relationship with men. What happened with you set the tone for every relationship that followed. And my God Daddy, you never had any idea what you left behind. Look at your legacy. It’s represented by disappointment and abandonment. And all that pain. I stupidly thought if I failed as a daughter, I’d surely fail as a girlfriend and wife and I believed that. Ultimately, I ended up perpetuating my own myth!”
I bit my bottom lip and just stared at the ground.
“Please Daddy, just let me finish. I’ve got to say this”.
I was emphatic.
“I’m not giving you a “get out of jail card” here. What you did was wrong, you deserted us and devastated me, but we can’t go on like this. I certainly can’t. I can’t go on living like this”.
I sat there for a moment. “Want to hear something odd, Daddy? There’s a part of me that’s looking for a Genie. Yeah, a Genie and I want him to grant me one wish. That’s all I want…one wish. I’d ask him to give us more time. See, I don’t want more time, I need more time. But I can’t have that, can I? Time is my biggest regret. So many years went by and we hardly spoke to each other. Geez, why was there so much anger, Daddy? Were we really that mad at each other? Were we? Or was I more mad at you? I guess so because I wouldn’t respond to your letters and I wouldn’t even answer the phone when you’d call”.
And then it hit me. My moment of truth.
“But that would mean….that meant you…you did try, didn’t you? You really did make an effort! But Mother said you didn’t ca……”
I couldn’t finish the sentence.
“I was so poisoned by mother’s rage and anger that I was myopic. I had blinders on. Oh my God! And then I used it to my advantage. You were my excuse and remaining a victim suited my agenda. That was easier than admitting my culpability in my own unhappiness. Pointing fingers at the son of a bitch father absolved the wounded daughter from all blame”.
I buried my face in my hands “Oh no…no…no!”.
I slowly rocked back and forth. All I heard could hear were my sobs. The reality of what I was coming to terms with was almost unbearable.
I sat on the bench, shaking. But I composed myself enough to ask my father one last question.
“Daddy, I have to know if…if you can forgive me? Please? I can’t go on without knowing we’re OK. Do what I never could or would do for you–please release me, liberate me from this heartache! Free me from all the pain I’ve been festering in my soul. It’s kept me from living my life”.
I eventually stopped crying after a while and when I did, I noticed it was there again. The silence. No words were spoken. At that moment, nothing needed to be said.
Deliverance.
I don’t know how long I’d been sitting there. I looked up. The breeze felt cool against my tear-stained face. The sun caressed my entire body. I shivered in it’s warmth. It was incredible. I felt very much alive.
Electrified.
Re-animated.
I stood up, emotionally drained and weak physically, yet strong in my resolve. History would begin again.
“Well, I’ve got an hour long drive ahead of me, so I better go now if I want to make brunch”.
I paused.
“Daddy, before I go, I want you to know that I miss you. I think about you all the time and please know that I love you, in spite of everything. I wasted so much time harboring all this pain, but I didn’t know what else to do! Hurting was the norm and I’m so sorry for feeling that way. More than you know. I’ve squandered so many years because of it, so please….help me try to get a few back if I can….let’s start over, OK? Today, let’s begin again. We’ll do that by visiting more. I’ll come back soon. I promise. I mean, after all, you are my daddy, right?”
I stood there for a second, allowing the moment to imprint on my memory. I wanted to remember everything. Every detail. I mustered a smile and whispered, “Happy Father’s Day, Daddy”.
I placed a small bouquet of flowers beside his headstone and touched it briefly before walking back to my car.

I am so with you (sob) and I can’t stop crying. That was such a beautiful, brittersweet story and such wonderful way to let go the pain that exists between a child and her father! Wow. It was great. God Bless!!
Wow.
Touching, and downright fantastic. I can truly say no more.
That was moving and brilliantly worded. The last sentence made me choke up a bit.
I’m glad you have the courage to work through a trying relationship. You are obviously a very strong and kind person to attempt to find solace and reconciliation.
I hope everything works out for you and Father’s Day finds you in a better place. Thanks for sharing.
I sincerely hope that this June ends up one of the best for you, and that this Father’s Day will find a calm in your soul.
Thank you for sharing. It was humbling to read.
Peace,
JD
great stuff.greater ending.
Powerful.
And then some.
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pity
Dear Laurie,
I was really moved by this story. I thought especially of how kind you were to leave a nice comment on my blog about my dad.I can’t begin to understand but I want you to know that I’ve read it. Every last word of it. And I cried with you…because my mother felt the same about her mom when she walked out on them when she was eight. To this day she says: My mother stole my youth…
Dear Laurie,
I just read this post in its entirety and was moved to tears. Wonderfully written, powerfully expressed and deeply moved by your own insight and wisdom.
Living here in The Woodlands, Tx, we visit the hills often and we too love the scerenity and peacefulness there.
I wish for you that you will truly find peace of heart and mind. Thank you for sharing this with us.
Bille Joe Armstrong
Man, i love reading your blog Laurie, interesting posts. I feel such raw emotion with your stuff. I laugh and I cry, sometimes almost simultaneously.
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