So, my dad died yesterday. Lung cancer. I know, I know… what
a shock that several decades of inhaling tar might not be the ideal conditions
for healthy lungs, but who knew?
Okay, we all knew. For a really, really long time.
I had a dream the other night that I was taking a long bus
ride. We made a short pit stop, and for some reason my dad was there, with my
mother and sister. He was in a wheelchair, with a nurse by his side. I walked
up to him and asked him if I could help, and he accepted. He was helpless with
a sweet and gentle disposition… qualities I longed for from him as a child. The
dream wasn’t much of a stretch: I’d done home care for the ill and elderly
before, so it felt natural to change his diaper, get him dressed, stroke his
forehead and tell him he was doing really well.
When I woke up, I lay in bed with a profound sense of loss
and sadness. My own son had crawled into bed with us sometime in the night, and
lay snuggled up beside me, his eyelashes long and dark against his soft cheek.
I wonder if my dad ever woke up like that, looking at me beside him, feeling as
though his heart would burst with love. Given our strained relationship during
my childhood, I find it very difficult to imagine even in the strongest flights
of fancy.
But the feelings I felt in the dream… protectiveness, love,
tenderness… they lingered. My dad may not have liked me much when I was an
effeminate kid, never mind later on as a sissified teenager and openly-gay
adult. But I’ve seen his kindness towards others. His generosity. His humour.
His way of helping people without making them feel like a charity case. In some
ways, it made his obvious disgust towards me doubly hard to bear, but I saw it
and, I hope, learned to emulate these humane qualities.
I can’t imagine disliking my son. I can’t imagine my lip
curling in disgust at the way he speaks, or walks or cries. I can’t imagine not
looking at him, even in the midst of the worst tantrum imaginable, and feel
love for him. Not like my dad.
Like any pain or trauma caused in childhood, my dad’s
rejection of me has lingered and shaped my personality. My aversion to
unfairness, cruelty or rejection is such that I can completely disconnect from
a friend or loved one whose behaviour manifests as such. Part survival
technique, part avoidance, I think. I just move on, and I rarely look back.
Perhaps that’s a gift as well, in its own way. I don’t feel saddled with
difficult relationships, and am free of friends who are a drag on my sense of
peace and harmony.
I used to think my dad regretted kicking me out of his home.
The few times we’d see each other, I fancied there was sadness in his eyes – a
lament for his actions and the reality of our history. But last year, at the
funeral for a family friend, I realized it wasn’t regret or sadness. He just
seemed embarrassed to be seen near me. In some ways it was liberating: I wasn’t
failing in forgiving my parents, or in maintaining a separation caused so many
years ago by their hatred of gay people. They’d maintained it too.
My sister, who is very close to our parents, is handling
everything right now. She’s struggling through her own fear and sadness of
losing the dad who adored her. And she’s concerned for her own daughter, who my
dad treasured as the sports-playing, rough and tumble kid he always wanted. A
while back she asked if I wanted to see our dad before he died. I said that if
he wanted to see us, we would absolutely come. Her lack of reply told me
everything I needed to know.
My dad excluded me from his life, from his love, from his
support and nurturing. And now, surrounded by his wife, his daughter and his
granddaughter, he has passed from this world. I inquired about a funeral
service, but was tactfully told that it was to be just a small graveside
affair, as he wished. No dates, no location, no invitation.
He’s excluding me from his death as well, but in an odd way I’m
okay with that. The dusty remains of our relationship as father and son are too
fragmented to resurrect at this point. I’m relieved that he passed peacefully,
and I’m glad he had his beloved daughter and granddaughter with him. In a way,
and despite the sadness I feel at what was lost so long ago, I’m glad they were
able to give him the kids he wanted, instead of the son he had.
A friend of mine challenged me this week, remarking that she
remembered my father sometimes being nice to me, and quite nice to her. I
pointed out that she was a hot young redhead at the time, and my father was careful
to be nice in public. But she was right, in a way. My dad did do some nice
things for me. He’d give me lunch money, unasked. He’d bring home treats from
their bulk food store. He’d occasionally try to soften the fury of my mother’s
continual rage.
But his frequent expressions of disgust towards my effeminacy,
towards my orientation, towards my personality as a gay person, were the mortal
blows that killed our relationship. Enough time has passed that I can
appreciate the things he did, or attempted to do. But the sneers, the expulsion
from “his” home, the threats… they did their ugly work and they did it well.
The wounds were never healed by a making of amends, or apologies, or
explanations, or any show of remorse. There was no love given to keep it alive.
I’m sad. I feel the loss of something I never got to have.
My dad was overjoyed that he finally got the ‘son’ he wanted in my sporty,
amiable and fun niece. But I never got the dad I wanted… someone who loved me
unconditionally, who made me feel like I was of value, who protected me and
nurtured me.
Now, in my middle-age, I am reconciled that I never will get
that. But at least one of us finally got what they needed, and that’s just
going to have to be enough.
Great share. Sending love. X
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