Break the Chains... Be Free...
I have spent three days trying to write about my father. Why him?
Well, because I am working on becoming a better me, loving myself more, and my
deeply rooted issues with my father have everything to do with that. I cannot
move forward until I deal with it, with him. I cannot learn to breathe and love and
live again until I have given life to truth and by speaking it and death to
pain by forgiving. Until I do so I will forever be a prisoner of my past hurt, watching
people live and love through these prison bars.
I don't believe
fathers really understand the affect their presence, or lack thereof, has on
their children. More importantly I don't believe they know the effect it has on
their daughters. Some of a father's main goals as a parent are: being an
example of how a man is supposed to carry himself, showing what a healthy
relationship between a man and a woman looks like, and ultimately showing his
daughter the love she deserves, should expect, and demand from a man. It is
impossible to fulfill these goals as an absent father. Hell, some men have a
hard enough time accomplishing that while they're present in their children's
lives.
My father never
afforded me the opportunity to know what he was like as a parent. If he
did, I was too young to remember and it wasn’t meaningful enough to leave an
imprint on life. There are a few moments however, that did. I remember my
mother and father arguing outside one night when I was young and when I went
outside I remember my father holding a beer bottle in his hands as if he was
going to hit my mother upside the head with it. That’s one of the few childhood
memories I have of my beloved father.
The crazy thing about my relationship with my father is that I
love him unconditionally no matter how wrong he is or how wrong he’s done me.
That is also the problem. Through my relationship with my father I have learned
to accept things from men that I shouldn’t. I have learned that no matter how
messed up a person treats you it’s okay to still love them, still want to be in
their presence, still want to prove yourself to them. I’m like a baby crying
out for his love and attention and he isn’t even paying me any mind. I have
taught myself to go out looking for the love I couldn’t get from my father in
other, most times older, men. I realized that I don’t necessarily value myself
like I should because I’ve never felt loved, never felt like I was worth
anything to anyone. Because of this I have allowed men to talk to me and treat me
in ways they never should have been able to. I’ve learned to have expectations
and expect to always be met with heartaches and heartbreaks. I’ve learned to
overextend myself and my love for people who will never appreciate it.
I’m tired of living like this. I am tired of letting myself be
devalued when the reality of it all is this: I am priceless. Living in my pain
left me angry, bitter, alone, resentful, and dangerously guarded. Living in my pain
turned me into a depressed shell of myself who didn’t care about who she hurt
or the fact that she herself was hurt. All I cared about was my momentary satisfaction no
matter who I had to use or what I had to do to get it.
The biggest issue I feel has come from my relationship with my
parents, my father more than anything, is my fear of abandonment. When I was still a newborn I was sent to
live with my father in the Virgin Islands. The only thing was, I wasn’t living
with him, I was living with my grandparents. I don’t remember that time in my
life. I stayed until I was five and then I was back in New York City. One
Christmas vacation I went to visit the Virgin Islands with my mom and my little
brother and my mother left us there. I don’t remember a good-bye or even an
explanation. I just remember her being there one day and gone the next. We
stayed with my father this time, but he might as well have not even been there
because his girlfriend was the one who took care of us or we were left with my
uncle’s girlfriend at the time who managed a hotel and had a nanny for her
daughter while she was at work. I have no memories of him then either. He’s
always been one of those parents who was there, but wasn’t there. My mother
came back for us a few weeks or months later as magically as she had left.
Back in New York other than the one other vacation we spent at my
father’s where he wasn’t really too much present then either. Back in New York
my father because a voice I heard on birthdays and holidays. He was like an
appointment that you knew about when it came around, but you weren’t always
sure about the time. Kind of like the wizard behind the curtain in the Wizard of
Oz. You knew someone was there, but you couldn’t see him. Except for a vaction once during high school that I less than vaguely remember, I didn’t really see my father again until I turned eighteen.
It was crazy, when I first moved to St. Croix. My father seemed to
actually be happy to have me around. Either that or he was just enjoying
showing me off to his friends. That is at least until he felt as though I
wasn’t worth showing off anymore. Living on that island six years was an
emotional rollercoaster. My father cared for nothing that I was going through
and caused some of it himself.
As a daughter, you expect that when you’re going through something
with a man you’re dating that your father is going to come to your rescue when
things get crazy. That’s not always the truth. I remember when I was dating a
guy and we got into a physical altercation. I called my father and he was so
unconcerned. He didn’t ask me if I was okay or anything. Never did, even to
this day. I wouldn’t have been in that predicament in the first place had my father
not forced my hand to moving in with him after changing the locks without my
knowledge and essentially kicking me out of the only home I knew. For at least
a year, if not longer, my father would pass me on the streets and not even
speak to me or look at me. It was as though I was nothing to him. Not worthy of
even a passing glance. All the while I still loved him, even though I hated the
way loving him through his treatment of me made me feel. Unwanted, unworthy,
just down right worthless. How could I love myself when the one man I loved
more than anything treated me like I was a nothing?
Somewhere at some point I cannot recall things got better. Not great, just
better. I feel like it was more for show than anything else. We still barely
spoke. To this day I barely speak to my father. I won’t hear from him unless I
call first. He doesn’t tell me he loves me. Well, he does if I say it first,
but you can hear how empty and hollow his words are. These days I’ve learned to
just live with it and move one. I’ve learned not to expect a single ounce of
genuine love, acceptance, or care from my father because it will continue to
lead to disappointments. I refuse to let myself continue to live like this.
Waiting for something that will never come…
I am at a place in my life where I am just ready to let go of all
the hurt, pain, unhappiness, abandonment, and loneliness I have felt over the
years. I am tired of building walls around myself and my heart to keep people
out knowing that’s not what I want. I am tired of not being able to be totally
and completely open with someone. I am tired of allowing myself to let myself
be devalued because of my past, because of a man who probably NEVER really
loved me and more than likely never will. I am tired of feeling like and letting
myself be treated like and option and an obligation. I am a PRIORITY. I am
ready to break free from my past and just start genuinely loving and living my
life.
What a story and I believe you and support you when you say it's time to move on from this pain and hurt. One can only take and do so much. Healthy love I believe should be an exchange, not necessarily do for do but a mutual commitment, a choice to be in someone's life. We can't make people stay in our lives, but you have demonstrated an effort to stay in his despite the mental anguish. It is a shame that he has yet to realize the power that is in you or maybe he does and is afraid to accept it. Nevertheless it is his loss and to move on I believe that's the frame of mind you must have until he is ready to make amends for neglecting, rejecting and failing in his God duty responsibility of raising his daughter.
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